to read the 2015 article about Hap Hansen, featuring Sir Caletto.
Transcription
to read the 2015 article about Hap Hansen, featuring Sir Caletto.
FEATURE RIDER SPOTLIGHT Artist Sharon Lynn Campbell painted an oil portrait of Hap and Sir Caletto, a Hanoverian stallion owned by California breeder Barb Gualco of Silverhorne Sporthorse, LLC. Photo courtesy of Barb Gualco Sometimes Nice Guys Do Finish First Times And Counting T By Kim F. Miller 99 hings have changed since Hap Hansen entered the professional equestrian ranks in the 1970s. What was a sparsely populated West Coast show circuit now has evolved into supporting Grand Prix show jumping and big-money hunter derbies almost every weekend of the year, often several on the same weekend. At 61, Hap has kept up with the times. He’s ridden jumpers to $2 million-plus in prize money, including over $1 million against the world’s very best at Spruce Meadows. He’s a threat in the Grand Prix ring, where his next win will be his 100th. In the hunter rings, he’s developing and campaigning horses to success at every level and his students are winning in every division. He even has a website, a Facebook page and a Twitter account. Not Done Yet Hap seemed a little taken aback when awarded the California Professional Horsemen’s Association Lifetime Achievement award in 2006. “I’m not done!” he said with a smile and a twinkle in his bright blue eyes. Sure enough, he won his 99th Grand Prix title in 2012 and came close in early 2014 with a clean round at Thermal aboard Archie Bunker, with whom he finished fifth after the jump-off. But in the ways that really matter — the ways that make him a touchstone for all that’s right and good in equestrian sports — Hap hasn’t changed one bit and he doesn’t plan to. “I love horses and I love competition and that’s always been the case,” he said. “What makes the competing special is that you’re working with another living being. It’s not a baseball bat or a piece of equipment. It’s an animal that you’re trying to understand and communicate with the best you can. They’re always trying to tell us something and we’re always trying to learn what that is. It’s a shared responsibility between living beings.” Programs like the United States Hunter Jumper Association’s Trainer Certification Program exist to preserve and promote the horsemanship lessons of the masters. Hap has always been a voluntary conduit, sometimes on purpose and sometimes by virtue of what and how he does what he does with horses. His years with “the grandmaster” Jimmy Williams at the Flintridge Riding Club provided an enduring foundation over these last 40-plus years. “Whether you’re 20 years old or 60, you learn from every horse you get on that they’re all individuals with something to teach you,” he said. “Every horse gives you a new experience and something to learn from.” He hasn’t limited those learning opportunities to the hunter and jumper rings. Saddlebred successes dominated Hap’s first professional foray as a trainer. Later, he owned and enjoyed watching the top reining stallion, Shine On. Lessons from the cowboy-hatted, cowboy-hearted Jimmy Williams were rarely easy to ride out. “My first open jumper class was at Santa Barbara on Hale’s Pride,” Hap recounted. “The horse had become so hot that Jimmy made me get on the horse in the barn aisle. Back in those days, you used to warm up in the barn aisle, but Jimmy wouldn’t even let me warm up. I rode right to the ring; no trotting, no cantering, just right into the ring. I was scared to death. But, it worked out fine and it was on from there.” One of the Greats To this day, it’s pretty much universal thinking that Hap is remarkable for being equally successful with hunters and jumpers at the highest levels. “There aren’t many professionals that can say that over the decades,” observed Bernie Traurig. “He rides both equally well, and at the World Cup level for jumpers or the highest level for hunters, and with thousands of horses.” A versatile and veteran competitor himself, Bernie attributes Hap’s gift to his softness with horses. “Owners love having Hap ride their horses because he interacts with them so well. He has a great empathy for every horse and a really soft way with them, too.” Hap led Silverhorne’s Sophia Loren to IHF Champion 2 year old Hunter Breeding in Del Mar with Barb Gualco and friends. Photo by Silverhorne George Morris is one of Hap’s biggest fans. “Hap Hansen rides simply beautifully,” the longtime USET show jumping chef d’equipe wrote in his 1993 manifesto, The American Jumping Style. “He also rides very simply and naturally; nothing is made complicated. Horses jump particularly well for him, even on short acquaintance. He combines strength and power with softness and finesse.” As his coach for a nail-biter of a Nations Cup in 1986 at Spruce Meadows, George told Hap, the team’s anchor rider, that the only way to win “was to do the impossible.” And that’s what Hap and Juniperus did, George recounted in a tribute for Hap’s 2012 induction into the U.S. Show Jumping Hall of Fame. Along with many Nations Cup outings, Hap earned Rider of the Year honors from the American Horse Shows Association and the American Grand Prix Association. Among many World Cup Finals appearances, he was the highest placed American, at sixth, at the World Cup Finals in Sweden in 1988, with Juniperus. He owned the Los Angeles World Cup qualifier every year from 1992 to 1995, each time on different horses. Sail Away, Zulu, Juniperus, Amerika 7 and Pikadero are just a few of the jumpers Hap campaigned to fame over the years. Winning a 100th Grand Prix title is on his agenda. “That would be a really nice milestone,” he said. “If people would stop bugging me about it, I’d really like that part of it!” Of course, he’ll only go for the century mark if a Grand Prix go fits into his horse’s best interest. Hap’s had a good season so far with Geraldine Bidwell’s Acer, and his veteran Grand Prix mount, Linda Smith’s Archie Bunker, will hopefully rejoin the string next year. Fans in Every Arena California breeder Barb Gualco from Silverhorne Sporthorse, LLC, is among the legion of owners very happy to have had Hap show her horse. In her case, it was the Hanoverian stallion Sir Caletto, imported from German Olympian Paul Shockemohle in 2002. Caletto’s bloodlines — Sandro and Caletto I — spoke for themselves and Barb sought a rider who could bring out Caletto’s best at the Indio HITS series. Hap did that and went on to be an influential spokesman for the horse. “Hap’s place in the industry played a significant role in Caletto’s acceptance in the States,” Barb said, reflecting on the lasting impression created by the gray sire’s success with Hap in the Regular Working Hunter ring in 2004. Hap describes Sir Caletto as “one of the nicest horses I’ve ever ridden.” But his jump was so big it popped the buttons off the coat worn by his first rider and it needed some toning down for the American hunter ring. “The rhythm and the step were so consistently there, but Caletto was a jumper and he’d go right to the base,” Barb explained. “Hap smoothed out his jump a little bit and got him to stand off from the fence.” The pair definitely made an impression. While out to dinner one night during that Indio circuit, Hap ran into two judges. One had pinned Hap and Sir Caletto in the hunter ring that day and the other had been officiating in the adjacent arena from the berm where both rings’ judges sat. “They told me that the judge watching Sir Caletto told the other judge to turn around and watch this horse,” Hap said. “That judge said, ‘I can’t, I’m watching this horse.’ Forget about that horse,’ the Caletto judge insisted. ‘You have to watch this horse.’” And it wasn’t just judges. The end result was a horse “that people were lining up to see in the hunter ring,” Barb remembers. “And who rushes to see horses in the hunter ring?” Now nearing 20, Sir Caletto stands at Silverhorne and Hap is still his owner’s go-to guy if anybody wants to know what his disposition is like. “Unabashedly I just give them Hap’s number!” Barb’s ongoing appreciation of Hap and Sir Caletto’s memorable show run prompted the recent commission of an original oil portrait of the pair by accomplished artist Sharon Lynn Campbell. A year in the making, the painting is large scale and detailed, capturing the intensity of concentration on Hap’s face. The Madison, Virginia-based artist was well aware of Hap’s ongoing legacy and her thrill in the assignment was enhanced by her own experience with him. It happened in the mid-80s when Hap was racking up Grand Prix wins with Juniperus and Maybe. Sharon was heading to a horse show in Tampa with her family when they came across Hap walking along the side of the road because his truck had broken down. “He was very well known already as a Grand Prix rider and we really felt like we had a celebrity in our car when we offered him a ride,” Sharon said. “But he was so nice and normal. You wouldn’t have known he was a big deal and he must have thanked us a thousand times. To have a chance to paint his portrait all these years later is really quite something.” “He’s one of the most genuinely kind, caring and giving individuals and always willing to give back to the sport,” added top trainer and longtime friend Karen Healey. “Caring about people and animals is just part of his character.” Asked to describe Hap’s best qualities in the 2012 tribute, Hap’s contemporaries echoed Karen’s words. 2008 Olympian Will Simpson said, “Consistency: Hap is always the same as a rider and as your friend.” 2012 Olympian Rich Fellers said, “Kindness — extreme kindness toward his horses.” Fellow Grand Prix rider Joie Gatlin said, “Calm, cool, collected.” And owner Linda Smith replied, “honesty and integrity.” That list just scratches the surface of how colleagues feel about Hap. Few if anybody know Hap better than his friend and barn manager of 26 years, Lisa Baldassari. The Hap the world sees and admires is the Hap she sees day in and day out. “He’s a really good guy and a nice boss,” she said. Simple, old-fashioned horsemanship keeps horses sound and successful and a dramafree barn environment makes for long-tenured staff members and remarkably loyal clients. They say nice guys finish last. Not so for Hap, as he’s been quietly proving in the professional horse show world for 40-plus years and counting. About the writer: Kim F. Miller has been editor of California Riding Magazine for 16 years and freelances regularly for national and international equestrian publications. She lives in Newport Beach with her husband and two teenage boys, but unfortunately, no horses at the moment. Kim hopes to return to the hunter/jumper ring as a competitor at some point! Top: Hap on Silverhorne’s Puccini S in the 1.30 class at Spruce Meadows, claiming first place out of 60 entries. Photo by Jumpshot Bottom: Hap on Sir Caletto— Indio Regular Working Hunter Champion, Week IV. Photo by Todd Sutherland