I've been praying for Darren, his family and his students since the accident but it's good to know he's showing signs of improvement. Thankfully, he was in outstanding physical condition before the fall so that always is a helpful factor.
Secondly, I'd like to comment on how incredibly supportive and helpful the ENTIRE horse industry has been since this happened. He and his farm are not just being supported by eventers -- many people have taken Independence Farm under their wing to keep his business going and support his students and their horses. Robert Dover, world renowned Dressage rider and trainer, taught some lessons the other day as well as the Madden's and Lauren Hough who are Hunter/Jumper people. I think it's an important lesson saying that no matter how many differences each of these disciplines have, no matter how many things we disagree on or how many times we look down on a different discipline, we are all united by a common passion -- and that's horses. I don't see that many problems here on the message boards, but the horse industry is FULL of bad mouthing and backstabbing not just against different disciplines but about their own. We all ride differently -- we all train differently -- our goals are different -- our shows clothes are different -- our tack is different -- our training beliefs are different -- our horsecare is even different ... but what's the same is the most important factor, and that's the love for the horses.
Another thing I wanted to bring up is about the fences that are currently on the cross-country courses. I rode and trained hunter/jumpers for years before I decided to focus strictly on dressage. I can tell you, that I would NEVER have the guts to do what Darren and his fellow horseman do at that level. However, as a horse lover, I find a problem with some of the jumps that are on these cross country courses. I know course designers are starting to use something along the lines of jump-cups so the fence falls if a horse where to hit it (helping reduce the chance of rotational falls, etc.) and I understand that some types of obstacles CANNOT physically be made with those special pins ... but I feel as though eventing is getting a little ridiculous and entirely unsafe for horse and rider alike. Our course designers are brilliant ... they created beautiful and challenging courses. With that being said, I feel like they need to start putting their heads together to create something that is aimed more at what the origional purpose of eventing used to be (logs, brush, etc.) and not huge solid combinations that are all beauty and creativeness and no safety. I'd like to hear what some of you eventers feel about that ...
All of that being said, I'm really not sure I will be attending Rolex until the industry figures out how to make this sport a bit safer so we're not losing horses AND riders left and right ...