Palmer Equestrian, LLC

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10/01/2025

The hallways of the hunter/jumper sport are lined with champions, and one of the greatest on the wall is the Thoroughbred mare, Touch of Class.

Touch of Class (1973-2001) was everything she wasn’t supposed to be in order to make it in the sport of show jumping. She’d had a brief career at the track (under her Jockey Club name Stillaspill) that fizzled out after six unsuccessful starts. For an elite show jumper, she was tiny at only 16 hands. She was hot. She seemed to cross-canter more often than not. A lot of professionals passed on her. Until Joe Fargis.

Fargis understood the mare and could see past her height. He’s a very sensitive rider and could give her exactly the quiet, composed ride she needed to do her job well. And for that, he was rewarded with individual and team gold in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, beating his long-time friend Conrad Homfeld on Abdullah in the individual competition. You can watch Homfeld and Fargis’s rounds here. Their team also included Melanie Smith with Calypso and Leslie Burr with Albany.

Touch of Class made history by being the first horse to post double-clear rounds at the Olympics and secured the first ever gold medals for the US show jumping team. Of the 91 jumps she faced at the Olympics, she cleared 90 of them without a rail. After her extraordinary performance, she was named the first non-human US Olympic Committee Female Equestrian Athlete of the Year. The legendary Bill Steinkraus commentated the Olympics, and said her name was apt: “She has class all the way down to her hoofprints.”

Fargis, who stands 6’2”, made the fine-boned mare look even smaller, especially set against the enormous jumps. The two appeared severely over-matched by the five foot high, seven foot wide oxers, but they were nothing compared to the mare’s eagerness to go.

Fargis and Touch of Class captivated their audience at the Olympics. “She has a lot of heart and a lot of talent,” Fargis told The New York Times just after the team competition wrapped up. Most of his horses at the time were Thoroughbreds off the track. “They may have been too slow for there,” he said, “but they’re still good movers, light on their feet and intelligent.”

Kitty, as she was known around the barn, was definitely a hothead who gave her riders a run for their money, but Fargis knew quality when he saw it. Before he got her, she had been passed from owner to owner, never selling for more than $15,000. Early in her career, Fargis and Homfeld recommended Kitty to a client, Debi Connor. Connor competed the mare successfully through the intermediate jumpers until Connor was injured in a fall that put her out of commission in 1981.

A junior rider who trained with Fargis and was looking for an upper level mount tried her next, but Kitty didn’t pass a pre-purchase exam. By then, Fargis knew Kitty was special and convened a syndicate to buy her, pre-purchase failure and all. If ever there was an incredible instinct for a horse, Fargis had it for Kitty.

In 1982, he moved her up to the Grand Prix level. Fargis was injured coming off a different horse, but Homfeld successfully took the ride until Fargis was back in action. Homfeld and Kitty qualified for the 1983 World Cup Finals in Vienna. Even though Fargis was back to riding by the time the Finals rolled around, he let Homfeld have the ride, because it was he who qualified her–a classy move, if you will. Homfeld and Kitty finished fourth, and Fargis went on to have a tremendous international year with her, culminating in their Olympic golds in 1984.

After the Olympics, she competed successfully but sparingly until 1988, when she pulled a check ligament. In addition to her Olympic victory, she won six major grand prixes (a nice triumph over her six losses at the race track); placed second or third in another 14; and was on six medal winning national teams. After her retirement, she went on to have a successful breeding career. In 2000, she was inducted into the Show Jumping Hall of Fame. She passed away in 2001.

📎 Continue reading the article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2019/03/13/touch-of-class-show-jumpings-great-thoroughbred-mare/
📸 © Alice Conroy Donovan

09/09/2025
06/16/2025

You don’t HAVE it, you LEARN it.

So many riders, so many horses, if something isn’t there sort of soon, right away, it is assumed that it never will be all that much more than what they see in front of them right now.

People, mainly, don’t think anywhere close to long term enough, either about rider progression or horse development. Think, maybe, 5 years at least for a horse and at the very least a full ten years for a rider, and that’s just to BEGIN to reach full competence.

Daryl Kinney here with Beaulieu’s Simply Cool are good examples of that time line. Too many try, and actually try quite hard, but give up too soon. If they’d stuck with it another few years, which might seem like a long time AT the time, they might well have found those skills they’d been seeking.

It is HARD to get good. And especially so for those who won’t or can’t think in terms of decades of practice. Decades, not years.

06/07/2025

Good Morning! ⏰

06/01/2025

YOU GOTTA SUCK TO BE GREAT

Thinking you are going to be great at something without being terrible at it at first is one of the most arrogant thoughts you could ever have.

Every single person you see who has become great at what they do has put in thousands if not tens of thousands of hours into building that skill.

What makes you think this will be any different for you?

IT WON'T BE!

You have to humble yourself.

Losing is where the learning is...

Failing is where the learning is...

Using these lessons moving forward through consistent and countless repetitions is where the growth comes from.

You cannot expect to be great at anything without sucking at it at first and going through the years of failures, mistakes, and losing ALOT!

Believing you can skip all the hard, the f**k-ups, and all the challenges along the way is believing a lie.

You gotta be relentless...

You gotta be patient...

You gotta be resilient...

You gotta be committed!

You can't quit everytime it gets hard.

You gotta being willing to suck for years.

To be extremely great at something you gotta put in the time it takes.

YOU GOTTA BE WILLING TO NEVER QUIT!

Page 149 of 365

📸: Jared H Searcy

01/14/2025

Grand prix track? Too easy! ‘Horse of a lifetime’, who is blind in one eye, proves an out-and-out winner

Read more via link below

Horrible stuff 🤣
01/08/2025

Horrible stuff 🤣

11/25/2024

🍂 A Good Mare 🍂

“There’s something different about the way a good mare connects with her rider. It’s special. Like an unspoken agreement. Once a mare chooses you as her person, it’s like she has an instinct to protect you, to fight for you. It’s almost as if she takes ownership of you.

I believe the good mares have a deep sense of intuition. They can read your mind. They know what you’re thinking even before you do. The good mares I know breathe fire in the face of challenge and then somehow, miraculously, know to quiet themselves when a timid child is plopped on their back for a pony ride.

They are clever, cunning and calculated, which can be your greatest enemy or your saving grace. The good mares I know do not tolerate egotistical riding. They do not tolerate force. They demand tact, finesse and emotional control. But once you have won a mare’s heart, you have won all of her. In exchange for your best—and nothing less—she will give you everything.”

Written by: Lindsay Paulsen

🙏🏽💚
11/23/2024

🙏🏽💚

Fun little day trip up to Golden Gate Equestrian Center to play in the sandbox. Annie was on her best behavior for her g...
06/18/2024

Fun little day trip up to Golden Gate Equestrian Center to play in the sandbox. Annie was on her best behavior for her grandparents and Nick to take pictures and give her all the cookies 🍪 thank you for all the pictures, Jamie 😊

Passengers, please fasten your seatbelts and thank you for riding Air Annie ✈️ ⛅️
06/18/2024

Passengers, please fasten your seatbelts and thank you for riding Air Annie ✈️ ⛅️

05/14/2024

Unlike humans, horses are designed to run on a full stomach. Feeding your horse 2-3L of chaff or a biscuit of hay prior to exercise has two benefits :
1️⃣ The chaff will form a ball of feed in the stomach, which will help prevent acid from splashing up from the lower part of the stomach to cause gastric ulcers.
2️⃣ Blood is normally diverted away from the stomach during exercise, which reduces some of its normal protective mechanisms. Research has shown that feeding your horse before exercise actually reduces the amount of blood that is shunted away from the stomach and also increases the amount of blood delivered to the skeletal muscles and muscles of the chest. So not only are you helping to protect the stomach, you also might be improving your horse’s performance.
For more information : http://ow.ly/CfYy50Dmwnh

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Rochester, MN
55904

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