Langmeier and Rafferty Farm LLC’s 2010 Oldenburg mare by Balou Du Rouet, formerly owned and ridden by Samuel Parot, have been paired together since the beginning of the summer, but have already built a strong partnership. “I really trust my horse, and she trusts me,” she shared about her jump-off strategy. “is already really fast, and when I walked the course with Henri and Katie [Prudent] we saw that there was an inside turn to the second-to-last jump, and nobody had really done it yet. I figured I’d give it a try!”
The result was a comfortable lead for the win, but Langmeier is taking things day by day with her new mount and her new phase in life as an emerging professional at the age of 21, she explained. For the moment, she’d like to repeat more positive experiences in FEI competition while building a string of horses:
“It’s been really awesome [becoming a professional]. I work with Katie and Henri, and my parents are professionals, so they help me as well. It’s been really exciting to be a professional and get my career started.
“I want to be moving up in the FEI classes, and starting to get a group of horses that can help me out with that. I haven’t been doing a ton of FEI classes – mostly just this summer,” Langmeier acknowledged. “I had a little break there because I was at college, so I did FEI when I was a junior rider, but now I’m really starting to focus on some of those bigger classes again.”
As part of that educational experience, Langmeier noted that it was a “no-brainer” to choose to compete in the Tryon Fall Series at TIEC. “It’s such a great venue. They do an amazing job with the facility, and it’s so nice to show here,” she concluded. “It was a no-brainer to show here!”
Langmeier and Rafferty Farm LLC’s 2010 Oldenburg mare by Balou Du Rouet, formerly owned and ridden by Samuel Parot, have been paired together since the beginning of the summer, but have already built a strong partnership. “I really trust my horse, and she trusts me,” she shared about her jump-off strategy. “is already really fast, and when I walked the course with Henri and Katie [Prudent] we saw that there was an inside turn to the second-to-last jump, and nobody had really done it yet. I figured I’d give it a try!”
The result was a comfortable lead for the win, but Langmeier is taking things day by day with her new mount and her new phase in life as an emerging professional at the age of 21, she explained. For the moment, she’d like to repeat more positive experiences in FEI competition while building a string of horses:
“It’s been really awesome [becoming a professional]. I work with Katie and Henri, and my parents are professionals, so they help me as well. It’s been really exciting to be a professional and get my career started.
“I want to be moving up in the FEI classes, and starting to get a group of horses that can help me out with that. I haven’t been doing a ton of FEI classes – mostly just this summer,” Langmeier acknowledged. “I had a little break there because I was at college, so I did FEI when I was a junior rider, but now I’m really starting to focus on some of those bigger classes again.”
As part of that educational experience, Langmeier noted that it was a “no-brainer” to choose to compete in the Tryon Fall Series at TIEC. “It’s such a great venue. They do an amazing job with the facility, and it’s so nice to show here,” she concluded. “It was a no-brainer to show here!”