2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair Archives - Horse Illustrated Magazine https://www.horseillustrated.com/tag/2024-royal-agricultural-winter-fair/ Thu, 14 Nov 2024 16:04:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 A Royal Wrap: 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair Synopsis https://www.horseillustrated.com/2024-royal-agricultural-winter-fair-synopsis/ https://www.horseillustrated.com/2024-royal-agricultural-winter-fair-synopsis/#respond Wed, 13 Nov 2024 21:10:33 +0000 https://www.horseillustrated.com/?p=936560 Things have gone quiet now in Toronto at the Canadian National Exhibition grounds on the waterfront of Lake Ontario after the previous bustling, festive 10 days of the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. The horses, alpacas, cows, goats, guinea pigs, hogs, rabbits, sheep and poultry have all gone back to their own cozy barns and […]

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Things have gone quiet now in Toronto at the Canadian National Exhibition grounds on the waterfront of Lake Ontario after the previous bustling, festive 10 days of the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. The horses, alpacas, cows, goats, guinea pigs, hogs, rabbits, sheep and poultry have all gone back to their own cozy barns and coops. Hockey ice for the Toronto Maple Leafs has replaced the fluffy horse show footing in the Royal Coliseum.

The Stonecreek Friesians driven by Jordan Steenbeek compete in the Green Meadows coaching division at the 2024 Royal Fair.
The Stonecreek Friesians driven by Jordan Steenbeek compete in the Green Meadows coaching division at the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. Photo by Kim MacMillan/MacMillan Photography

Looking back, what an exciting and action-packed event it was! The 102nd year of “The Royal” offered loyal and new visitors both expected and unexpected happenings over the ten-day run from Friday, November 1-Sunday, November 10. International and Canadian champions were named in the horse and agriculture shows. In addition to the those exhibitions, audiences were entertained with live music, cooking classes, high-flying aerial performances, Canadian Cowgirls mounted drill team appearances, a play and education area and petting zoo for the little ones, and a full agenda in the Animal Theatre. One-stop holiday gift shopping was easy-peasy and dining and beverage options were vast.

2024 Royal Horse Show Summary

For Horse Illustrated readers, the Royal Horse Show is undoubtedly the main point of interest. The Horse Show opened with the two-day Mad Barn Indoor Eventing Showcase, followed by Canadian Championship hunter and jumper classes, and a Royal Grand Prix Dressage CDI-3* Division (Grand Prix and Grand Prix Freestyle classes) over the first five days. Then, four days of international jumper classes filled the coliseum with the Royal Rodeo capping things on the final Sunday.

On the last Saturday morning, the prestigious Governor General and Lieutenant Governor General Cup classes for 3-year-old Canadian-bred sport horses were contested with matching Royal Pony Cup classes for sport ponies. The “cup classes” are in-hand and under-saddle classes which are judged on conformation, movement and general impression for suitability to become a sport horse.

Throughout the Royal, breeding and performance classes were interspersed into the horse show schedule for draft horse breeds (Belgian, Clydesdale and Percheron), Hackney Horses and Ponies, Welsh Ponies and Cobs, Canadian Sport Horses, Standardbreds, and Thoroughbreds. It was gratifying to see many ex-racehorses in the Standardbred road horse and roadster performance classes. And, the Green Meadows antique coaches pulled by matching four-in-hand horses harkened to an earlier time when genuine horsepower was the method of public transportation.

First place in the Canadian Road Horse to Cart class for Standardbreds, Robin U Blind driven by Dale Salisbury.
First place in the Canadian Road Horse to Cart class for Standardbreds was Robin U Blind driven by Dale Salisbury. Many of the entries in the road horse and roadster classes were retired racehorses. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

Canadian Kendal Lehari topped the Indoor Eventing Showcase with the 11-year-old Canadian Sport Horse gelding Audacious, who she owns with her mother Gwen. American Boyd Martin riding Catarina for owner Nancy Hathaway took second in indoor eventing, and Canadian Olympic rider Jessica Phoenix guided Charlotte Schickedanz’s Trakehner Watson GS to third.

“It’s such a rush having that many people in there cheering you on, as well as my family and supporters,” said Lehari, 37, from Uxbridge, Ontario, Canada. “Everyone’s got your back and wants to see you do well. I think this is a really good showcase for our sport. Not a lot of people know much about eventing, so to be able to do it inside [in this environment] is so much fun.”

Canadian rider Kendal Lehari and Audacious topped the Mad Barn Indoor Eventing Showcase at the 2024 Royal Horse Show at the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair.
Canadian rider Kendal Lehari and Audacious topped the Mad Barn Indoor Eventing Showcase at the 2024 Royal Horse Show. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

Martin, who last competed at The Royal in 2017, commented on course designer Captain Mark Phillips’ track, his experience at the Royal, and his fellow eventers after the competition, “I love this show. What a huge honor and privilege it is to ride here. It’s high-energy, nerve-wracking, and it happens fast. At a normal horse trial, we have a couple days to process how things are going to ride. I think Mark built a course that was horse-friendly, but still challenging enough. These Canadian girls sure are quick!”

Boyd Martin from the USA finished second in the 2024 Royal Mad Barn Indoor Eventing Showcase with Catarin at the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair.
Boyd Martin from the USA finished second in the 2024 Royal Mad Barn Indoor Eventing Showcase with Catarina. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

The Royal Horse Show offered two hunter derby classes, as well as many divisions of hunter classes for adult and junior riders. Winner of the $15,000 Braeburn Farms Canadian Hunter Derby on Sunday, November 3, was Kelly Soleau-Millar (Wellington, Fla.) and Nitecap, owned by Jeff Brandmaier and Margaret Guthrie’s Knightwood Stables, who topped a field of 21 entries. Ashley Arnoldt (Langley, British Columbia, Canada) rode Light My Fire, a 12-year-old Hanoverian stallion owned by Jennifer Arnoldt, to win the $25,000 Knightwood Hunter Derby on Tuesday, November 5.

In addition to the Canadian Open Jumper Championship and international jumper classes, there were a number of amateur adult/junior jumper classes too. The $125,000 Henry Equestrian Canadian Show Jumping Championship was contested over the first two days with Olympian Amy Millar (daughter of famous rider and Olympian Ian “Captain Canada” Millar) taking top honors with Jelvinia MB, a 10-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare owned by J Team. Mario Deslauriers (New York, NY), an FEI World Cup Champion and Olympian, was Reserve Canadian Champion riding Costa Quick PS, owned by Aram Ampagoumian, LLC. Three-time Olympian Tiffany Foster (Langley, British Columbia, Canada) finished third in the Canadian Championship riding Electrique, a horse she owns together with 5 Roosters.

Millar, 47, (Perth, Ontario, Canada) enthusiastically described her mount Jelvinia B after taking the Canadian Championship, “She is one of the nicest horses I’ve had the privilege of riding. I had been looking for [a horse like] her for a long time. When I tried her, I just knew. She is super careful and scopey, and has great technique. She has all of it.”

In the Royal Dressage CDI-3* Division Naima Moreira Laliberte (Outremont, Quebec, Canada) and her long-time partner Statesman won both the $15,000 Grand Prix Qualifier class on Monday, November 4, and then the $20,000 Grand Prix Freestyle class (75.745%) on Tuesday evening, November 5. Statesman is a 17-year-old Hanoverian gelding (Sandro Hit x Brentano II) owned by KML, Inc. and Guy Laliberte.

“We’ve been all over the world together,” said Laliberte of Statesman who carried her to two Pan American Games medals and two Olympic Games. “We were traveling reserves in Tokyo and competed in Paris, we did two Pan American Games, as well as [FEI competition in] Herning [Denmark], Doha [Qatar], Aachen [Germany], and a couple of Nations Cups in Florida. He’s always been a reliable partner and such a fun horse to travel with.”

Royal Dressage CDI-3* Division winners Naima Moreira Laliberte and Statesman.
2024 Royal Dressage CDI-3* Division winners Naima Moreira Laliberte and Statesman. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

Turning to the international jumper classes, the USA’s Aaron Vale and I.Adermie R4 captured the first major class of the Royal, the $43,860 McKee Family International Challenge on Wednesday, November 6. His countryman McLain Ward riding First Lady was runner-up and Ireland’s Daniel Coyle was third on Farrel.

Thursday afternoon, November 7, British rider Jessica Mendoza won the $43,860 Brickenden Trophy International Jumper class with I-Car CL Z. That evening, it was Richard Vogel’s (Germany) turn to top the $170,000 Mad Barn/Big Ben International Challenge with Levi Noesar (the class was named in honor of Ian Millar’s legendary jumper Big Ben). Vogel is now based in the USA part-time and trains with McLain Ward.

Vogel, 27, talked about his horse and the Royal after his win in the Big Ben. “Levi is an amazing horse, but he’s only eight which is why I had to compromise and not risk everything. He’s green, but with the way he performed in the jump-off tonight, you can see his abilities and his will to give everything in the ring. A lot of people told me that I was going to like this show, and it has exceeded all those expectations. It’s a unique show and you can feel the history.”

Germany’s Richard Vogel and Levi Noesar jumping to victory.
Germany’s Richard Vogel and Levi Noesar jumped to victory in the 2024 Royal Big Ben International Challenge. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

On the final Saturday of the Royal Horse Show, winners of the two afternoon international jumper classes were two brothers from Ireland. Daniel Coyle and Farrel, paired with Super Dog (dog agility) Doberman Zeus and his human handler, were victors in the K9-Equine Challenge class. Then, Jordan Coyle and Keep Me With You N.C. won the $50,000 CSI2* Grand Prix.

Ireland’s Daniel Coyle and Farrel clear a fence to end their show jumping round as Doberman Zeus and his handler get ready to start their agility round in the K9-Equine Challenge class at the 2024 Royal Fair.
Ireland’s Daniel Coyle and Farrel clear a fence to end their show jumping round as Doberman Zeus and his handler get ready to start their agility round in the K9-Equine Challenge class at the 2024 Royal Fair. They won the class. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

But, the biggest Royal international jumper accolades were garnered by 28-year-old Alex Matz who won three classes during the week and was named the Leading International Rider at the Royal at the end of the show. He and Cashew W won both the $43,860 Strength & Speed International Challenge on Wednesday, November 6, and the $85,680 Canadian Open/Centennial Cup on Friday, November 8. He is the son of Michael Matz, U.S. Show Jumping Hall of Fame member and trainer of Grade I Thoroughbred race horses, who had won top honors at the Royal 47 years earlier (in 1977).

In the $200,000 FEI World Cup Toronto, the final international jumper class of the show on Saturday night, November 9, Matz and his other mount, Ikigai, sailed around the course to top four other competitors in a jump-off for the win. Runner-up in the World Cup class was Canada’s Tiffany Foster on Electrique (who also won Leading Canadian Rider honors) and third was the USA’s McLain Ward on Ilex, his Paris 2024 Olympic mount.

This was Alex Matz’s first five-star World Cup qualifier win. He has been riding Ikigai, an 11-year-old Dutch Warmblood (Elvis Ter Putte x Iroko) stallion owned by 5 Star Partners, for three years. He talked about their triumph in the World Cup in the press conference after, “I’m honored to be in this position with two incredible riders behind me and so many good riders in the field. It’s for sure the biggest win of my career. I probably told everybody I know how good a horse he was, but a lot of people didn’t believe me until recently.”

Alex Matz and Ikigai on their way to winning the FEI Toronto World Cup class at the 2024 Royal Fair. Matz won two other big classes and was named Leading International Rider.
Alex Matz and Ikigai on their way to winning the FEI Toronto World Cup class at the 2024 Royal. Matz won two other big classes and was named Leading International Rider. Photo by Kim MacMillan/MacMillan Photography

The Leading Lady Rider award from the international jumper classes went to the USA’s Lillie Keenan. Incredible, owned by Ariel Grange of Lothlorien Farm (Cheltenham, Ontario, Canada) and ridden by Daniel Coyle, won the Leading Canadian Horse Award.

Lillie Keenan (USA) riding Kick On in the Big Ben Challenge.
Lillie Keenan (USA) riding Kick On in the Big Ben Challenge. Keenan was named Leading Lady Rider for the 2024 Royal Winter Fair. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

Find all of the results from the 2024 Royal Horse Show here.

Royal Fair Rewind 2024

The 2024 and 2023 Royal Horse Show international jumper classes, including the FEI World Cup Toronto, were livestreamed on ClipMyHorseTV. On-demand replays of that action are available on ClipMyHorse (subscription required, although a free test period may be available). You can watch those international jumper classes in Toronto, including the K9-Equine Challenge class, here.

Fans of the Royal Winter Fair may also enjoy 2024 highlights by going to the Royal’s Facebook photo gallery here and their YouTube Channel here.

Looking Ahead to Next Year

The 2025 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair and Royal Horse Show runs November 7-16, 2025. For more information, visit the Royal Fair website.

This article about the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair is a web exclusive for Horse Illustrated magazine. Click here to subscribe!

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2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair Preview https://www.horseillustrated.com/2024-royal-agricultural-winter-fair-preview/ https://www.horseillustrated.com/2024-royal-agricultural-winter-fair-preview/#respond Thu, 31 Oct 2024 20:40:17 +0000 https://www.horseillustrated.com/?p=936122 There’s only one place in North America where you can experience top international horse show competition combined with all the best a great state agricultural fair has to offer: the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. It really is something that anyone who loves horse shows and/or state fairs should not miss. Read on to find out […]

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The Royal Canadian Mounties at the Royal Winter Fair
The Royal Canadian Mounties made an appearance at the 2022 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. Photo by Sarah E. Miller/MacMillan Photography

There’s only one place in North America where you can experience top international horse show competition combined with all the best a great state agricultural fair has to offer: the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. It really is something that anyone who loves horse shows and/or state fairs should not miss. Read on to find out what the 2024 Royal Winter Fair has in store.

The Uniqueness of the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair

Think back to a time when the pomp and circumstance of VIP box seats and glamorous evening wear were a part of the spectacle at almost all of the large fall indoor horse shows around North America. Such was the case with the old National Horse Show in Madison Square Garden in New York City, among others. While the National still exists and is a great show, the venue has changed to the Kentucky Horse Park, and gowns and tuxes in preferred seating at Madison Square have given way to blue jeans and riding attire parked in the stands of the Horse Park’s Alltech Arena.

One key indoor show stands alone now, combining this historic charm and ambience―the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair held every November in Toronto, Canada. There really is nothing like the “Royal.” It spans ten days and has been held at the same location for over 100 years. It still features a horse-show audience in formal wear watching a mixed program of various breeds and disciplines performing each evening (although tickets are available for those who wish not to dress in evening wear). The horse show, combined with daily livestock shows, entertainment, educational events and more, makes the Royal a unique and fun-filled event that all may enjoy.

A Royal Winter Fair Horse Show coaching class competition viewed from one of the skyboxes.
A Royal Horse Show coaching class competition viewed from one of the skyboxes. Photo by Sarah E. Miller/MacMillan Photography

This year’s Royal Winter Fair runs November 1-10, 2024, at the Canadian National Exhibition grounds situated along Lake Ontario in Toronto. It is the 102nd renewal of this iconic event.

More About the Royal Winter Fair

The Winter Fair, which began in 1922 and has run almost continuously since that time (with only brief pauses for World War II and COVID-19), is billed as the largest combined indoor agriculture fair and international equestrian competition in the world. Approximately 300,000 visitors from a number of countries go through the doors over the ten days. Fairgoers can see everything from the daily horse show to other livestock and agricultural product exhibitions to entertainment, shopping, dining, and educational displays.

The Royal’s shopping choices are extensive, with offerings from tack, riding apparel, horse care products and horse trailers to Canadian-produced food (yes, there is maple syrup!) and gifts, clothing, home décor, health and beauty products, to Royal Fair logo sportswear, and more. It’s a great place to do your holiday shopping.

Shopping at the event
Shop ‘til you drop at the Royal Winter Fair, a great place to make holiday gift purchases. Photo by Sarah E. Miller/MacMillan Photography

Dining options are varied, too. Attendees can indulge in the ever-popular homemade apple dumplings or variations of the Canadian dish poutine (cheese curds, gravy and fried potatoes with the option of topping it with bacon or pulled pork), plus a wide variety of Canadian and international foods. Samples of various Canadian-grown foods are often available in the shopping area, too.

On any given day, in addition to the horse show, attendees can watch dairy and beef cattle, sheep, goats, hogs, alpacas, rabbits, cavies (guinea pigs) or poultry being shown. They may also tour the displays of competition winners for garden and agricultural crops, wool fleeces, jams and jellies, pickles, honey, meats and cheeses, and other farm products. The butter sculpture competition is another thing not to be missed. Every year, artists carve amazing figures chosen to match a theme that are crafted from huge blocks of chilled butter. The results are truly amazing.

There is also daily live entertainment on the OLG Entertainment Stage which also features a square dancing competition on the final day. Visitors may sign up for only $20 to participate in cooking classes conducted by professional chefs or tour the University of Guelph’s “The Future of Food” walk-through exhibit. Children will enjoy activities designed just for them (Royal Petting Farm, Spirit of the Horse, Dairy Education Center, Farm & Play Zone and more).

Educational farming VR
Educational opportunities are part of the fun at the Royal Winter Fair. Kids loved the virtual combine driving display which gave them insight into driving one of the huge harvesting vehicles. Photo by Sarah E. Miller/MacMillan Photography

The Royal Animal Theatre combines education with entertainment to the delight of both adults and kids. Appearances by the Global Pet Foods SuperDogs and demonstrations by birds of prey and handlers, sheep herding dogs, Double Dan Horsemanship, and a number of equestrian groups fill the calendar for the Royal Animal Theatre. The Royal Canadian Horseshoeing Classic competition takes over the Theatre on November 5 when the audience will witness hot-forged blacksmithing.

Royal organizers designate an animal ambassador each year and this year’s picks are two alpacas named Dawson and Pacey, from All In Alpacas, owned by Derek and Lindsay Stoltz and their teenage daughters in Rockwood, Ontario. Over the last several years, Heartland television show star Amber Marshall has made frequent appearances at the Royal, too; she’ll be there again this year appearing during the horse show and emceeing the Royal Rodeo on the final Sunday.

The Royal Horse Show

In today’s specialized horse-show world, it can be difficult to find an event where many breeds and disciplines are showcased at one venue, but the Royal offers that chance. There are two show arenas, one in the huge Royal Horse Show Coliseum and the other a smaller competition ring in the center of the two-story stabling barn called the “Horse Palace.” All competing are vying to win a red ribbon, which in Canada signifies first place. To get a glimpse of all of the action at the Royal Horse Show watch this preview of the 2023 Royal.

Canadian and international jumpers, hunters, fast-paced indoor eventing, and dressage musical freestyle share the same coliseum arena with massive draft horse hitches, zippy roadster ponies, high-stepping fine harness horses, Welsh Pony driving classes, and elegant antique coaching. While over in the Horse Palace, breed classes take place for Belgian Drafts, Canadian Sport Horses, Clydesdales, Hackneys, Percherons, Sport Ponies, Thoroughbreds and Welsh Ponies. Most of these classes are open to competitors from anywhere in the world, not just Canada. The Royal Rodeo on the last Sunday is the final equestrian event each year.

Indoor eventing at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair Horse Show
Indoor eventing is a crowd favorite at the Royal Winter Fair, attracting top international and Canadian riders. Here, Canadian Jamie Kellock and Don’t Blink jump through the maple leaf. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

The Royal also stages two classes for 3-year-old sport horses in the coliseum, the Governor General’s Cup (an in-hand conformation line class) and the Lieutenant Governor’s Cup (in-hand line and under-saddle classes combined to name one winner). These are important showcases for Canadian-bred sport horses and entries must have qualified earlier in the year to compete. Even though contested at 7:30 a.m. on the final Saturday of the Royal, they attract a large audience.

A fan-favorite event held during the international jumper competition is the K9 Equine International Challenge class which combines a horse and rider jumper duo with a human and canine dog agility pair. Held on the final Saturday afternoon, the fastest combined time from the horse/human and canine/human pairings wins. See the 2022 Royal K9 Equine International Challenge competition here.

In jumper competition, the first four days of the Royal involve Canadian jumper classes with a Canadian Championship capping the series. Then, four more days are devoted to international jumper classes including the McKee Family International Challenge, the Mad Barn Big Ben Challenge International Challenge (named for Canadian Olympic rider Ian Millar’s famous horse), the International Speed Challenge, and finally the $250,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Toronto, the next-to-last North American League leg of the season’s FEI World Cup qualifying series (for next spring’s World Cup Final in Basel, Switzerland).

Daniel Bluman and Gemma W show jumping
Winners of the $250,000 2023 Royal Winter Fair World Cup qualifier, Daniel Bluman and Gemma W. Photo by Shelley Higgins/MacMillan Photography

At the end of the Royal jumper classes, a Leading Rider, Leading Lady Rider, Leading Canadian Rider, and Leading Canadian Horse are crowned. Find a video spotlight of one of the Canadian jumper riders, Sean Jobin, talking about his road to the 2024 Royal Winter Fair here.

Track the results from the 2024 Royal Horse Show here.

How to Purchase Tickets or Watch Online

Tickets to the Royal Winter Fair may still be purchased online or at the door. Entrance to morning and afternoon matinee Royal Horse Show classes is included with Royal Winter Fair general admission tickets. Evening Royal Horse Show and Royal Rodeo tickets require a separate purchase. For more ticketing information, visit here.

If you can’t attend in person, you may watch the 2024 Royal Horse Show online (subscription required) via this livestream.

You may tune in on FEI TV via ClipMyHorseTV to watch the $250,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Toronto. A subscription to ClipMyHorseTV is required; go here for more information.

Regardless of whether you attend in person or watch online, don’t miss the action of the 2024 Royal Winter Fair, a one-of-a-kind horse show!

Helpful Links

◆ The Royal’s Website
◆ Ticketing Information
◆ Schedules for the 2024 Royal Horse and Agriculture Shows and the Royal Animal Theatre
◆ A map of the Royal Winter Fair venue
Where to track the results from the 2024 Royal Horse Show
The Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Toronto competition
Royal Winter Fair videos

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