My Blog:

  

March 28, 2010

December 26, 2009

Happy Holidays!!!

Ballerina and I have been busy training, training, training. In November we got the opportunity to go to Oklahoma City to represent Para Equestrain in a USEF World Equestrian Games promotion. It was during the AQHA World Championships and representing the other disciplines were Pete Kyle (reining), Will Simpson (show jumping), Phillip Dutton (eventing), Valerie Kanavy (endurance), and Mike McLennan (driving). It was amazing to meet all these top riders and they were all friendly and encouraging. It was an awesome experience and you can see photos in my photo gallery. 

I can't beleive 2009 is almost over! This year has been full of change. I have had to let go of a lot but I have been blessed with many opportunities. Getting to ride Ballerina has been by far the most incredible blessing I have had this year and I know next year will be full of opportunities for us.

2010 is a hugely important year for me, and more importantly for the U.S. para-equestrian program. The World Equestrian games are including para for the FIRST TIME and, since it will be held in the United States, we have to show the world what U.S. riders can do! I hope Ballerina and I can make the team and make our country proud at the games. My goal is to help the para-equestrian program gain much needed and deserved recognition and support!

Anyone who has met my mom Mary, or the rest of my family, knows that they put as much time and energy into my dreams as I do. I appreciate my family's undying support, but I would also like to recognize that without the sponsors who have helped along the way I could not continue to do what I love. Please take a moment to check out my sponsors.

Have a happy New Year everyone!!!!

-HB

 July 28, 2009

A lot has changed recently! I have a new home in Colorado, a new trainer (Sarah Dodge), and a new horse!!!

As wonderful as Lilly is, I knew that I would need a younger and more talented horse to ride at the WEG. Mary Phelps came to my rescue again and posted an amazing article on dressagedaily.com about my need for a horse. Robin Garrett, a dressage trainer from southern California, read the article and thought of her horse. That was when I met Grand Ballerina, a beautiful and talented bay Oldenburg mare.

  

Robin has so selflessly offered Ballerina for me to compete with in the WEG. She has been my dream horse! I am so grateful that I get to ride such an awesome horse and have someone as kind and generous as Robin in my life.

  

I took Ballerina to Illinois for the Lamplight CPEDI after just five weeks of riding her. She was great! We placed second nationally! Lamplight was the first CPEDI ever held in the U.S. It was so inspiring to see the huge turn out of disabled riders from all over the country and the world! Hopefully the sport will continue to grow and more disabled and able bodied riders will get involved.

-HB

© 2007 Holly Bergay

 

 Hi!

If you have logged on to my site in the past few months you have probably seen that my auction keeps getting postponed. It WILL be starting soon, so if you would like to donate items or services I could really use the help!!!  

March has been exhausting. Ballerina, my dad, and I made the drive from Colorado to Thousand Oaks, California, to train with Debbie McDonald and then compete in the CPEDI at the Dressage Affaire in Del Mar. A CPEDI is an international qualifier for paraequestrian, for those of you who don't know. Training was going great, but at the show, Ballerina was not 100% sound. It worried me enough that I decided to start looking for a back up horse for the WEG in case I can't get (and keep) Ballerina sound. Debbie, Robert Dover, Shannon and Steffen Peters, Mary Phelps, and lots of others put the word out. Am I lucky or what??? All my HEROES wanting to help ME find a horse. 

Not being able to compete at the Dressage Affaire made me realize just how badly I want this. The paraequestrian program NEEDS support and the U.S. NEEDS medals! Please take a few moments to read this.

"Para-Equestrian"

"Para-Equestrian sport includes all equestrian disciplines practiced by people with physical disabilities. "Para" means parallel to able-bodied equestrian sports. Many disabled athletes are able to hold their ground in competitions designed for the able-bodied, but Para-Equestrian opens the world of competition to riders and drivers with severe disabilities as well, allowing them to compete in a serious, focused environment. Many athletes who participate in Para-Equestrian are quite talented, and some are considered to be among the elite equestrians of the world, regardless of their physical condition.

  

In Para-Equestrian, each rider or driver is classified according to his or her functional ability. Para-Equestrians are assessed by trained physiotherapists and doctors who evaluate either muscle strength, coordination, or a combination thereof throughout the athlete’s body. The athlete is then given a functional profile that indicates the grade in which they can compete.

The competition within each grade is judged on the functional skill of the rider or driver and not the level of disability.

  

The primary focus of the Para-Equestrian programs are to provide clinic and competition opportunities for athletes with physical disabilities. Many of our Para-Equestrian athletes were first introduced to horses through their therapeutic riding programs. The therapy program objectives are to introduce riding to improve balance, joint mobility, coordination, muscle tone and posture to ease symptoms of a wide variety of disabilities. It is a well know fact that horse’s gaits parallel that of the human.

  

What makes Para-Equestrian so special is that a person with a disability can compete in an exciting and well respected sport as an elite athlete and be judged on their abilities. Some of our best Para-Equestrians compete at the highest level, the Paralympics. The Paralympics, not to be confused with Special Olympics, is an elite sporting event for athletes with physical disabilities. Currently, the only Para-Equestrian sport recognized at the Paralympic level is Para-Dressage.

  

Para-Equestrian is the eigth discipline within the United States Equestrian Federation. Para-Dressage is considered a High Performance Sport, therefor subject to the USEF selection criteria standards. All Para-Dressage riders must meet the strict show standards prior to being considered eligible to compete at a selection trial. After applying the selection criteria, considering the horse and rider combinations, their rankings and scores at the trials, a team is selected.

  

What does Olympic gold mean to athletes who have more to prove than just sporting ability? For starters, it takes a lot of money to support this sport. The most successful countries fund athletes’ living expenses through lotteries, heavy endowment funds, and corporate sponsorships so that they can concentrate on their job: riding for medals. In turn, medals won bring more funding, credibility, and respect." -Hope Hand

The bottom line is that the U.S. needs medals, and I feel that I have the potential to get them at the 2010 World Equestrian Games. I can't do it without help!!! Please go to my donations page if you believe in what I am trying to accomplish and would like to be a part of it.  

  

On another note, in light of Courtney King's recent accident, I would like to encourage everyone to WEAR A HELMET. Seeing this happen to someone as young and talented as Courtney should wake everyone up! Life is short.  Pray for Courtney and her family http://courtneykingdressage.com/

  

Appreciate your health, appreciate your horse's health, and don't take a single day for granted.

-HB