
We are the United States Pony Club's team representing the U.S. in the Inter-Pacific exchange this summer in New Zealand. The team is as follows: Alexa Wolf, Mid California Region; Kelsey Hamilton, Delmarva Region; Kaleigh Quinn, New Jersey Region; Susan Thomas, Old Dominion Region; Kiersti Wylie, Southern California Region; Coach: Janna Bankston Ritacco; Chaperone: Robyn Whitten. Thank you for your support!

Monday, March 28, 2011
T Minus One Month and Counting!

Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Crunch Time
After hearing that I had made the IPE New Zealand Team for 2011, I knew that I would have a lot on my plate this semester between class, taking finals early, work, competing, and foxhunting. The past 3 months have flown by and its getting close to crunch time with less that 7 weeks until we depart for New Zealand. Although completing my finals close to two weeks early may prove to be stressful and challenging, I am so excited to be a part of this team. I have been in Pony Club since I was 9 years old and I feel that it is responsible for my horsemanship skills, as I come from a family of non-horse people. I feel forever indebted to Pony Club for all of the opportunities that it has provided!
My name is Susan Thomas and I am a junior at the University of Georgia. After a freshman year full of the common mixed emotions that go along with choosing a major, I decided to study Equine Science Management and minor in Agricultural Business with an emphasis on Marketing. I couldn’t be more pleased with my decision, especially after taking my Advanced Equine Reproduction class through the UGA Vet school this semester. We have been busy palpating, ultrasounding, and will soon AI the mares at the UGA undergraduate research barn and then recheck throughout the first month of their gestation. Equine Reproduction is not my central interest; however, I have really enjoyed the chance to get some hands on experience with such a fascinating process!
Aside from school, I have a part time job at Inyazura Farms, a boarding facility outside of Athens that specializes in foxhunting and eventing. Through Inyazura, I have become active with the Shakerag Hounds Hunt Club and try to hunt as much as possible between October and March. I also plan to spend quite a bit of time at the kennels this Spring and Summer getting to know the hounds through unmounted hound exercises.
When I’m not in class, working, or foxhunting, I try my best to make it out to a few events each season. Currently, my horse(pictured top) is being leased to a young girl in Cleremont, Georgia while I finish school, but I am lucky enough to get the chance to compete two of the horses from Inyazura: Crimson and CC. While my beloved horse, Camel, is teaching his “new girl” the ropes of eventing, I have been exploring the perks and challenges of balancing two very different horses at a horse trials. Crimson (pictured below) is a 15.3h crossbred mare who has been very successful at Training level the past two seasons. We hope to move up this fall if everything goes as planned over the Summer. CC (pictured right) is a more hot and sprightly mare who has gone back and fourth between foxhunting and low level eventing. This is my first season with CC and we still need to work out a few small kinks in our dressage and showjumping at Novice before we make the move up to Training, which I also hope to accomplish this fall.
As the Exchange approaches, I will be busy with finals and preparing to move to a new place to finish out my last year of school- one of my roommates is graduating and will be missed greatly! My Spring event season is coming to a close so hopefully I’ll be able to have a little bit of down time before flying out to California at the end of April. Until then, I’d like to wish my teammates good luck with all of their endeavors and I can’t wait to meet you all in about a month’s time!
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Less Than 50 Days!
Less than 50 days until I leave New York for California to meet up with my team! When I heard I made the IPE Team to go to New Zealand I though May would never come....well I was wrong. Time is flying, and May is right around the corner and there is so much to do between catching up on school work and keeping my own horse in condition for this competition season.
I am 18 and a senior at the Port Jervis High School in New York. I'm taking all AP and colleges classes and I get to miss my AP Chemistry exam while I'm in New Zealand (oh darn), but I'm sure anyone would rather be riding in New Zealand than taking a four hour exam! I plan on going to Quinnipiac University this fall and majoring in Athletic Training/ Sports Medicine. I am so excited!
Friday, March 4, 2011
A Chaperone's View

Janna asked me to post on the blog and since this is my first "blog" experience, bear with me. I am so excited to have the privilege to participate in the IPE exchange to New Zealand!
Friday, February 25, 2011
Dreaming of New Zealand

Now, a dream has become reality...or almost. I can't wait to be on a plane to the IPE exchange (and then another 3 weeks in NZ before I have to be back in California to teach at Woodside Junior Riders summer camp), but there is a lot to do between then and now for me (as well as the rest of the team, I'm sure!). I am a Sophomore at Bard College, 2 hours north of NYC, on the beautiful Hudson River. I am studying Film Production with a minor in Middle Eastern Studies, or at least planning on it. The way Bard works, as a sophomore everyone goes through "Moderation", which involves (for film at least), three papers and 20 minutes of finished quality film work in digital and 16mm formats. These are presented in front of a 3-person board from the department, and if all goes well, you are accepted into the major. Unfortunately, film is one of the hardest, so fingers crossed for my board in April!
Other than worrying about Moderation (and getting those papers written in the next two weeks), my days consist of studying Arabic, a genetics biology class (my first science in years!), a film history class about films as propaganda, and my film production class: Script to Screen. For Script to Screen we are each shooting a 10 min section of the 1931 Frankenstein! It's tons of fun, but eats up time...principal photography begins next week! I'm also co-writing and directing a film to be shot in NJ over spring break.
On top of all of that, I'm trying to keep my riding up. I ride twice a week at a great barn called Cedar Crest where Bard's IHSA team just moved, and twice a week I am a working student for Cari Swanson and Rex Peterson, two great trainers (and the one's responsible for all of the amazing horse tricks and training behind films like Hidalgo and Secretariat!). Unfortunately, I had to sell my one (and only) horse, Kalypso's Page, over x-mas break, but I guess all these borrowed horses are the best practice for NZ!
Well I guess that's more than long enough. I can't wait to meet everyone in person, and I can't wait to miss finals to be riding horses in NZ instead!
Alexa
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Ten Weeks Until Departure!

Personally, I have ten weeks to finish my semester, take an LSAT class, take the LSAT, fundraise for the trip, and tune up on my show jumping skills (good thing Pony Club taught me how to manage my time!). I am currently a junior at Georgetown College, in Georgetown KY, studying Environmental Policy. I am originally from Lewes, DE, the Delmarva region. I came out here for Georgetown’s Equine Scholars program (you should check it out, http://equinescholars.georgetowncollege.edu/ ), and I was lucky enough to bring my horse, Dylan out to school with me. We were avid Eventers but it’s time for Dylan to take a step back from the rigors of upper level competition and remember that he is not as young as he once was. That made this spring a perfect time to travel! After being named first alternate for the IPE, I decided that no one in their right mind would drop from the team, and to look for other options. LUCKILY!!!!! USPC decided to send a 5 man (or woman haha) team, (thank you to whom ever made that call, by the way) so I’m in! I can’t wait to meet the other girls, they are as busy as I am, but I’m sure they’ll be chiming into the blog as well! Naturally, all I can think about these days is being in New Zealand. In reality that’s almost the last thing I need to be thinking about. So before I can write my “please send me money” fundraising letters, I need to study for my Sociology test, write my Communication speech, and finish that English paper. I guess I should stop procrastinating and get back to my school work.
Kelsey Hamilton
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Introduction
USPC's 2011 Inter Pacific Exchange team:
Alexa Wolf, H-A from Middle California region
Kaleigh Quinn, B from New Jersey region
Kelsey Hamilton, H-A from Delmarva region
Susan Thomas, B from Old Dominion region
Kiersti Wylie, H-A from Southern California region
Coach: Janna Bankston Ritacco, Carolina region
Team manager: Robyn Whitten, Carolina region
Trip Itinerary:
May 1- May 15, 2011.
We will have a training and team building session for a few days in late April at the Wylie family's USPC Riding Center in San Diego before departing for New Zealand.
We will meet up with the other teams from New Zealand, Australia, Canada, and Hong Kong on New Zealand's South Island in Christchurch on May 1st and the Canterbury Area PC will host the teams for the first week of the exchange. Events the first week include a scramble team event in the form of a One Day Event at McLean's Island, Christchurch. Waikato Area PC located on the North Island of New Zealand will host the teams for the second week and will host the Nation's Cup Show Jumping Competition at the Kihikihi Domain. The teams will be accomodated at the Lake Karapiro rowing facility which is being used for this year's Rowing World Cup. We will depart from the Auckland airport on May 15th.
History of the IPE: The Inter Pacific Exchange first began in Australia in 1964. Great Britain, the United States, Canada, and New Zealand were originally part of the exchange, followed by Hong Kong and Japan. The exchange was conceived for the older members of Pony Club to have an educational, cultural, bilingual, and competitive experience. Each team consists of four members, a coach and a team manager/chaperone. Team selection criteria:- Be a B level rating or higher
- Older than 17 years of age
- Riders are expected to have had experience riding and competing borrowed horses
- Have competed at least at the training level in eventing
- Jumped 3'6" in Show Jumping
- Have top horse management skills
- Have extraordinary recommendations