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COMINGS AND GOINGS A fond farewell to…


…Chet Anderson, who has retired from Peachtree Veterinary Clinic in Beallsville; …T oroughbred racehorse owner, trainer and former jockey Eddie Gaudet, retiring after over 50 years in the business. His daughter Lacey and wife Linda will be running his training stables.


Welcome to…


…Dutch Chapman Reining Horses at Rising Star Farm in Woodbine; …Mark Zeigler, who was recently hired as marketing director for T e Great Frederick Fair and the E-ventplex at the fairgrounds;


…Ray Ediger, who is the new president of the Frederick County Farm Bureau. Maryland Will Miss


William P. Gilbert, husband of Fair Hill International’s co-president and Maryland Horse Industry Board member Trish Gilbert and father of Sandy Spring event rider/trainer Rumsey Keefe, died on December 22 at his home in Churchville. A memorial service will be scheduled for the spring at which time his ashes will be spread on the waters that he en-


joyed so much. Patricia Bond Loane of Ashton, died on


January 9 at the age of 72. She was the mother of dressage trainer/rider Cheryl Ann Loane of T urmont and rarely missed watching Cheryl compete. Loane graduated from Cornell Uni- versity and married Edward Loane in 1961. Elizabeth Phillips, 93, of West Baltimore died on December 28. Phillips was a funeral home owner and director by trade and was also an avid horseback rider, though at the time,


ON THE MEND A speedy recovery to…


…Yvonne Mulgrew, owner of TLC Blanket Repair (Dickerson), who had to undergo two major back surgeries within days of each other this past December;


…apprentice jockey Sarah Rook, who broke her collarbone after falling from Nucky T ompson at Laurel Park.


riding stables in Baltimore were segregated so Phillips traveled to a barn in Pennsylvania to enjoy her passion. Dr Louis Allen Liljedahl died January 4 at the age of 82. He was a retired engineer with the USDA Agricultural Research Service at Beltsville. Dr. Liljedahl joined USDA in 1953 after receiving his PhD in Agricultural Engi- neering from Iowa State University. He also taught several courses in agricultural engineer- ing at the University of Maryland.


Please send your wedding, birth and death announcements, and any photos, to editor@equiery.com. Photos accompanying submissions must be sized at 3” x 5” and 300 dpi, and must include the names of all individuals in the photos, along with the photographer’s name.


martingales, bigger bits, teeth grinding, pinned ears, knocking jumps, bad dressage scores & retiring at age 12 are THINGS OF THE PAST!


Structure dictates function - Function dictates structure Learn how the horse's body parts (structure) are supposed to function


(range of motion) & you will experience the health/soundness, performance & relationship you always wanted from your horse


When function misfi res, patterns of tension/holding emerge & the structure


breaks down & ages prematurely. Restoring correct function to the structure puts everything back in balance & seems to "take years off!"


Schedule a lesson to understand what all of this really means! Your horse or mine!


PotomacGlenRidingSchool.com 98 | THE EQUIERY | FEBRUARY 2012 64 Gambrills Rd, Severn MD 21144


www.effectiveriding.com Sarah 410-977-7835 800-244-9580 | www.equiery.com


Joint injections at age 8, side reins, weak stifl es,


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