07/16/2026
Third Level riders coming down centerline starting Dec. 1 of this year will face a big change in the tack permitted at the level. After a rule change proposal was passed at the U.S. Equestrian Federation’s mid-year meeting in June, double bridles will no longer be allowed. Instead, riders will be able to compete with two bits for the first time at Fourth Level.
We spoke with FEI five-star judge and USEF Dressage Sport Committee member Mike Osinski about the change. Read the article at the link in our comments.
📸 AK Dragoo Photography
07/14/2026
A real gallery show you can enter
Step inside a world of visual poetry at Milan Art Gallery in Sarasota, Florida. Discover the next art movement with stunning abstract realism. Experience beauty through innovative and expressive creations by our global artists, both online and in-person.
07/12/2026
She never set out to write a children’s classic.
She wanted to stop people from hurting horses.
By the time Anna Sewell began writing Black Beauty, she had spent decades watching them suffer. As a teenager, she slipped on a rainy road and permanently injured both ankles. The treatments of the day only made things worse. For the rest of her life, she lived with chronic pain, relying on horse-drawn carriages to get almost everywhere. Unlike most Victorians, she didn’t see horses as scenery or machines. She depended on them. She spoke to them gently. And she noticed everything.
She watched exhausted cab horses whipped through city streets. She saw animals worked until they collapsed. She despised the fashionable “bearing rein,” a leather strap that forced horses to hold their heads unnaturally high simply because wealthy owners thought it looked elegant. It was painful, unnecessary, and everywhere.
Confined to bed as her health deteriorated, Sewell spent six years writing the only novel of her life. Too weak to write for long, she often dictated chapters to her mother, Mary, who carefully transcribed them. Her revolutionary idea was simple: let the horse tell the story.
Instead of preaching, Black Beauty invited readers inside the mind of an animal. Suddenly, the horse wasn’t property. It had fears, memories, joy, exhaustion, and pain. Readers who had walked past working horses every day found themselves unable to look away.
Published in November 1877, the book was an immediate success. Anna Sewell died just five months later, never knowing it would sell more than 50 million copies, be translated into dozens of languages, and become one of the most influential animal welfare books ever written.
At her funeral, her mother made one final request: the horses pulling Anna’s hearse would wear no bearing reins.
It was a quiet tribute to a woman who changed the world simply by giving a horse a voice.
07/02/2026
Equine podiatrist Dr. Scott Morrison told attendees at The Jockey Club’s Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit that small changes in hoof angle can affect the entire musculoskeletal system — and outlined shoeing strategies to restore healthy biomechanics.
Check it out in the comments.