The Beginning: The Canadian Equestrian Team, circa 1950s

I started on the show jumping team in 1950 when I was 16. Before 1950 you had to be in the military to be on the team, so I didn’t have to do that, but I did have to lie about my age, because you were supposed to be 17, and I’d just turned 16.

I jumped with the team through the 50s, but then we moved to the three-day event because we never had the jumpers with the scope that could jump the big outdoor stadium fences. Where the Europeans had big strong jumpers, ours were a different kind of horse. They were good jumpers and we always jumped high, because back then in the classes you kept jumping until a winner was declared. If you went clean, you came back and they put the jumps higher, and so on. So we got a lot of jumping in, but we didn’t jump the combinations here that you need a big, galloping horse for. So with the team they said, ‘If you boys want to go to the Olympics, you’ve got to find a way to do it.’

In the three-day event, all you needed then was a good all-round horse. You only had to jump four feet. And you needed a fit horse, because you had to go 21 miles. And you had to do the dressage; well, my first dressage competition that I’d ever been to was the Olympics – 1956 Olympics, Stockholm, Sweden. I remember when we walked the cross-country course the first time. We were staying all together in the former palace of the Swedish king, and all the other teams were there, and we had fun. We went to supper after we’d walked the cross-country course; it was so quiet you could hear a pin drop. Everybody was heads down, thinking, ‘Oh geez, how are we going to get around it?’

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