Colleen Hoekstra Dressage
From Training to Grand Prix,
and Beyond...
Colleen began her riding career at the age of eight,
when she
started taking dressage lessons in Michigan. Although she
competed
mostly in 4-H shows until then, she began her dressage career with a
bang. At her first All Dressage Association show in 1988, at
the age
of 9, she was High Percent Champion for Training
Level
Jr./Young Rider. From that point on, she fell in love with
the sport
of dressage. She spent hours riding after school, practicing
for her
shows and spending time with the horses. That same year, her
parents,
Tim and Carolyn, made their first trip to the Netherlands to import
Dutch breeding stock. They also purchased the approved Dutch
stallion
Patrick, and a breeding and training legacy began.
After
showing for a few years at schooling shows around Michigan, Colleen
decided she wanted to try her hand at the breeding business her parents
started. Using one of the 4-H horses her family owned, she
saved her
allowance for a year to afford a breeding fee to an Arabian
stallion.
A year later, in 1990, Alborak ("Bennie") was born, meant to be her
next competition mount. She did all his training, from halter
breaking, to showing in-hand as a young horse, to starting him under
saddle in 1993 when he was three and she was fourteen. They
went on
the next year to be the Year-End Champion at
Training Level
Jr. Novice for the All Dressage Association, as well as winning all the
English pleasure and dressage classes at the county fair that
year. In
1994, Colleen was also introduced to riding stallions when she rode
Patrick, who was then retired from competition.
This
education with Bennie laid the groundwork for her life in the show
ring, and demonstrated her talent early on for starting young horses
through understanding their behavior and responding
accordingly. From
then on, with her newfound fondness of training horses, Colleen went on
to break out all the young horses her parents' now-five-year-old
breeding program produced. She also did this relying on a few
clinics
and her own sense, because most of her early riding had been on her own
with very little instruction.
Living on a breeding farm
from a young age was great instruction in itself. Colleen has
been
able to learn about breeding and raising young horses, and in the
process has learned to play a part in every facet of the horse
world:
She has ridden dressage for more than 15 years, jumped for 4 years,
collected the stallions, bred the mares, attended countless foalings
and vet exams, evaluated semen, imprinted foals, and has trained and
shown young horses in-hand and at breed inspections. She also
has been
over to Europe several times to purchase horses, and has gone all over
the country from Orlando to San Antonio to San Diego to attend the
NA/WPN annual meetings. From the seminars at these meetings,
Colleen
has learned about biomechanics, nutrition, lameness, X-ray
evaluation,
horse psychology, semen handling, communicable diseases, in-hand
showmanship and the judging of horses' conformation, movement and
free-jumping talent. Adding those to extensive research on
horse
behavior, evolution and psychology, Colleen has pulled together a
knowledge base that allows her to train, teach and communicate with the
horses and their owners successfully.
Training several
different young horses, introducing them to work and their first
competitions provided Colleen with invaluable lessons on the
individuality of horses and their particular training needs.
She had
numerous young horses win their classes at their first shows, including
Ilanka, Knollwood Farm's premier broodmare, whom she also rode in her
mare performance test to earn a "Keur" status from the NA/WPN; Hodea,
dam of Knollwood's stallion Noteworthy, and many offspring of Patrick
over the years. Colleen has started over 50 young horses i
n her
career, all with excellent results, and each adding another essential
component to her education.
At sixteen years old, Colleen
started Knollwood Farm's approved Dutch stallion Kevekko under
saddle. Tim and
Carolyn imported Kevekko in 1992 at 8 months of age with the help of
the late head inspector of the NA/WPN, Gert van der Veen. By
1995,
Colleen had finished Kevekko's groundwork and began his under
saddle
training. After riding Patrick, and now Kevekko, her work
secured her
affection and proficiency for riding stallions. As
Kevekko and Colleen
progressed, they won several awards from Training Level (they
were the
1997 Reserve Champions for Training Level Jr/Young Rider at the
ABIC/USDF Regional Finals) all the way through FEI (they competed in
the 2003 Pan-Am Games Selection Trials, placing in the top 50
in the
country). The opportunity not only to compete at every level,
but to
bring Kevekko along every step of the way has allowed Colleen to
understand the entire training system from the beginning, and makes
clear the priorities of the training scale. Everyone should
have the
chance at such a partnership.
This idea of Partnership is
the core of Colleen's training program. With the horse's
confidence
and well-being always at heart, she has successfully brought several
other horses along over the years, such as Noteworthy, Knollwood Farm's
other approved stallion. He is now competing at Prix St. Georges,
after earning scores over 70% at every level through Fourth. This
training perspective has
also allowed
her to help problem horses, nervous horses, or previously "unrideable"
horses, as well as helping their riders understand them and gain their
confidence and trust.
In 1996 at seventeen years old,
Colleen spent a summer in Gurnee, IL to train at Tempel Farms with
Curtis Sage.
Kevekko was in the Chicago
area during that time to
prepare for the jumping portion of his
approvals. Over
that summer,
Colleen began her FEI education with Tarzan, a schoolmaster by
Patrick. During that time, she also participated in the
Lipizzan
stallion shows held at Tempel, and had the opportunity to work with the
great Carl Mikolka. The following year, in 1997, she and
Tarzan placed
at the ABIC/USDF Regional Finals at Fourth Level.
Working
through college (she majored in Graphic Design at the University of
Michigan), Colleen traveled over 800 miles a week for five years, driving the
hour-and-a-half commute four times a week so she could ride and go to
school at the same time. Although grueling, it was
worth all the extra
hours to not only earn a college degree, but to complete her sense of
resolve and commitment to her horses and the sport of Dressage.
In
2000, Colleen won her first Regional Final, earning the title of
Regional Champion at Second Level with Kevekko. From
there the two
progressed through the levels, and in 2001, placed 3rd in the AHSA's
National Silver Stirrup Awards at Fourth Level. In 2002 they
made
their FEI debut, earning a 65% at Prix St. Georges their first time
out, and ending up USA Equestrian's National Upper Level Dressage
Champions. They were also the FEI High % Champion at Dressage
at
Lamplight and CDI*** with a 70.5% at Prix St. Georges. In
2003 they
were the Intermediare I National Champions for the U.S. Equestrian
Federation's Silver Stirrup Awards, and competed together for the first
time at Dressage at Devon. Kevekko is now competing
successfully at
Grand Prix, helping Colleen complete this training.
After
earning her USDF Bronze and Silver Medals with Kevekko, Colleen made
her Grand Prix debut on Knollwood's gelding "Bill de Grand
Champ". At
Detroit Dressage at Will
ow Ridge and Dressage at
Waterloo in 2003, she
and Bill won every class. She went on to earn her USDF Gold
Medal with
Bill in 2003. This was made possible partly by the three
months of
intensive training Colleen received over the Winter of 2003 when she
traveled to California to train with USET Champion rider Jan
Ebeling.
While out west, she also had the opportunity to train with the
legendary Harry Boldt, as well as meet and compete against some of the
top riders in the country. Over the last three years, she has
primarily trained via clinics with Christine Traurig, George Williams,
Jan Ebeling and Canadian Olympian Tom Dvorak. Most recently,
she has
trained with Dr. Cesar Parra, and Olympic medalist Michelle Gibson in
Florida, who have been
invaluable to her success.
Other trainers and judges Colleen has worked with over
the years and recently:
| Harry Boldt |
Hilda Gurney |
Elizabeth Searle |
| Patrick Burssens |
Sue Madden-Mandas |
Betsy Steiner |
| Tom Dvorak |
Elizabeth McMullen |
Nancy Smith |
| Jan Ebeling |
Carl Mikolka |
Christine Traurig |
| Max Gahwyler |
J. Ashton Moore |
Nicole Uphoff |
| Michelle Gibson |
Dr. Cesar Parra |
George Williams |
| Lendon Gray |
|
Lois Yukins |
Colleen was also thrilled in July 2005 to be able to
show her lifelong partner, Kevekko, at the Grand Prix Level at Dressage
at Lamplight, where he earned a 62%. Being able to complete
the training scale with her greatest equine friend has been her
greatest accomplishment to date, and one of her proudest moments.
She is looking forward to continuing her Dressage education
in the UK with her filly, Arcadia, a 2005 Oldenburg filly by Noteworthy out of a Kevekko mare.