TOKYO OLYMPICS

Meet Barb Roux, Owner of Newly Decorated Olympic Horse

Meet Barb Roux, Owner of Newly Decorated Olympic Horse

REFLECTING ON THE TOKYO OLYMPICS, HOW SHE GOT THERE, AND LIFE IN VIRGINIA

Written by Kaitlin Hill
Photos by Jennifer Gray and Austin Kaseman

For Barb Roux of St. Bride’s Farm in Upperville, Va., success is a team effort. In July, two of her horses, Baloutinue and Confu, were shortlisted to represent Team USA at the Tokyo Olympics with rider Laura Kraut.


“It was a community and a village effort that made this a success story,” Roux says.

In addition to the support of the St. Bride’s crew, Roux’s passion for the sport, her horses, and the athletes she works with are key ingredients in the farm’s track record of triumphs.

“It’s a funny story,” Roux says of her late-in-life introduction to the equestrian world. “I bought a horse for my then 10-year-old daughter … It had always been on my bucket list to learn how to ride. I thought, ‘I’m 50. If I don’t learn to ride now, I’ll never learn.’ So we took lessons, and [my daughter] lost interest, and I gained enormous interest.”
Roux started lessons 16 years ago while living in California.

Barb and “Mariposas” sculpture. Photo by Jennifer Gray

As her skills expanded, so did her respect for the sport, the athletes, and the horses.

“When I started taking lessons, I wanted to learn how to jump and compete,” she says. “And I just had enormous respect for people who could … I learned to have an extreme and genuine appreciation for the athletes that compete at the highest level in our sport.”

That respect resulted in a desire to support the sport and the decision to relocate to Virginia. “My goal was always to support an American rider,” she says. “[In California], we were really unable to find enough land to develop the program. But when we came to visit [Upperville], we saw the farm and bought it the same day.”

Roux and her husband, David, spent three years renovating existing structures and adding new ones. “We spent three years restoring the original barn, which was built in the 20s,” she says. “And then we added the paddocks, the upper barn, the auxiliary buildings like the hay barn and the utility barns. It was a huge learning experience, and I never regretted it, and I never looked back.”

Connecting with local equestrians proved to be an important part of that learning experience and crucial to developing St. Bride’s. Roux credits Olympic gold medalist Joe Fargis for many of the meaningful and lasting relationships she made.

“Joe was extremely kind in connecting me with different people who showed me their barns and let me ask a lot of questions,” she says. Fargis-forged friendships included the Firestone family, Sheila Johnson, and Tracey Weinberg of Weinberg Harris & Associates Equestrian Marketing firm. “The universe put us together,” Weinberg says. “It was literally a casual introduction.”

With a new set of similarly minded friends, Roux finished her barn and set her sights on an ambitious list of goals. “I had several goals,” she says. “One was to be in a Nation’s Cup. The second was to go to the Pan-Am Games. And the third was to go to the Olympics. I met all of those goals.”

“Chance” is being ridden by Justin Haesner. Photo by Austin Kaseman

In 2017, Roux was introduced to Laura Kraut, who would not only help train St. Bride’s horses but take two to the Tokyo Olympics. “She is extraordinary,” Roux says of Kraut. “It was a stroke of luck we met, a personal introduction. We just hit it off, and it has been a partnership that has been so fulfilling.”

The journey shared by Roux and Kraut is a perfect example of the St. Bride’s lifecycle from breeding to competing at the highest levels. “I breed only with performance mares, mares that have been successful in meter 45 or above level,” Roux says. “And I breed them only to successful stallions. We start with good genetics.”

After breeding, comes training. “We have a program at the farm that trains the horses from birth until [age] 4 or 5,” Roux says. “After giving them the basics they start their formal training with a person who specializes in 4-, 5- and 6-year-olds and introduces the young horses to competition. If they prove themselves successful, they go into Laura Kraut’s program where her trainer, Julie Welles, introduces them to more complex courses and progressively higher jumps. If they are willing and able to do this work, Laura will take them from there and ride them herself.”

St. Bride’s Stables. Photo by Austin Kaseman

She concludes, “It’s a constant evaluation, and you have to be flexible to try new things. And then, you just have to watch how the horse develops.”

Trust and chemistry are essential too. “When they are little, you give them a foundation of trust and honesty,” Roux says. “And during their training, you give them an enormous amount of patience, to allow them to develop at their own pace.”

“And you just know when the horse is right for the rider,” she says. “Every horse doesn’t work for every accomplished rider; it has to be a real chemistry.”

Roux explains that Baloutinue, who earned a silver medal with Kraut in Tokyo this summer, is a “hometown story,” coming from Plain Bay Farm in Middleburg, where he was developed by the Prudent family. “Also, Laura grew up competing in Upperville, where her parents were involved with the show,” Roux says. “So, the whole Tokyo experience really began here.”

She adds, “And the process takes a village.” In the case of Baloutinue, Roux recognizes Margo Thomas, Mary Elizabeth Kent, Nick Skelton, Ian Allison, Arnie Gervasio, Paul Bocken, Christiana Ober, Julie Welles, and Melissa Welker as indispensable members of the team that helped get Baloutinue to the Olympics and succeed while there.

Barb and her dog playing around with “Just Ask Daddy” in front of the Mariposas sculpture. Photo by Austin Kaseman

Of Kraut and Baloutinue’s Olympic achievement, Roux says, “The atmosphere was electric and was a moment that will be etched in our memories forever. Witnessing our team win the silver medal, stand on the podium to accept their medals, and celebrating this achievement with them was something I really can’t find words to describe.”

The success of the St. Bride’s program is certainly something to be proud of. But Roux finds as much joy in retiring horses as she does in raising them. “The thing I enjoy most is retiring these horses that have done a good job for me,” she says. “They’re just my rock stars. And I want them to live a life of total happiness. It is so gratifying to be able to do that.”

In addition to giving back to the horses that work so hard for her, Roux contributes to a range of charitable endeavors to support the community at large. “We support charities that work to help alleviate food and housing inequities, protect animals, and also support community events like the Upperville Colt and Horse Show, where I was on the board for many years and served as president in 2019,” she says. “Additionally, this year we are hosting The Piedmont Environmental Council Gala on Saturday, October 2 at St. Bride’s.”

“More generally, we focus on giving back in ways that impact the most people,” she says. “We focus on conservation, education access, and global health issues. We also support a variety of biomedical research efforts, including new cancer therapies. Finally, we are enthusiastic sponsors of various initiatives to support the men and women in our military, in particular the members of our Special Forces Community.”

As Roux looks to the future, she plans to continue building on St. Bride’s reputation for excellence and further establish her sport horse-breeding program in America. “Our goal is to develop a line of St. Bride’s horses that can successfully compete at the Grand Prix internationally,” Roux explains.

With her undeniable drive, passionate team, and deep understanding of what makes a successful steed, it’s a safe bet that Roux will achieve her goals. ML

This article first appeared in the September 2021 Issue.

Middleburg Life September 2021 Cover. Photo by Jennifer Gray for ML.

To see more of St. Bride’s Farm check out our Beautiful Barns article here.

Virginians Head To The Olympics With A Village of Support

GOING FOR GOLD:

Virginians Head To The Olympics

With A Village of Support

Written by Kaitlin Hill

“To see your flag and hear your national anthem, there is nothing else like that,” Bonnie Jenkins, Executive Director of the United States Equestrian Teams Foundation (USET), says. “And I think any athlete would agree. To bring medals home for your country, it’s pretty special.”

Jenkins and the USET Foundation’s Chairman, President, and CEO, Jim McNerney, believe reaching that golden opportunity of success in elite equestrian competition requires early development, complete dedication, effective financial support, and a heavy dose of patriotism. With all eyes on the Tokyo Olympics, Jenkins, McNerney, and familiar equestrian figures Laura Kraut, Robert Ridland, and Joe Fargis, share how the USET Foundation plays a fundamental role in Team USA’s perpetual preparation for this year’s summer games and beyond.

2017 Winning Team USA Laura Kraut, Lillie Keenan, Chef d’Equipe Robert Ridland, Lauren Hough, and Elizabeth Madden Photo Tony Parkes

Best described as the philanthropic partner of US Equestrian Teams, the USET Foundation was established in 2003 with a fixed focus on fundraising. “At the time USET, which had always done the fundraising, transitioned into a formal foundation to continue the fundraising work for high performance,” Jenkins says.

“The first reason to split the two, the management of the teams, athletes, and the horses from the fundraising, is you get a more professional job from each,” McNerney says. “You get two boards and more people involved. The second reason for the split … is it became a better governance standard.”

The repositioning of US Equestrian and USET Foundation created clear objectives for each side while retaining a close working relationship with positive results. “The proof is in the pudding,” McNerney says. “The fundraising has more than doubled on a yearly grant basis and is continuing to grow. It has the virtue of being both good governance and more effective.”

“It’s a great relationship and it serves the sport very well,” Jenkins says.

USET Foundation is the largest financial backer for US Equestrian, helping underwrite the long journey from youth development to elite status in the eight international disciplines: dressage, eventing, jumping, driving, endurance, reining, para-equestrian, and vaulting.

That road begins with providing the financial support to develop young riders, a part of the Foundation’s work that McNerney describes as “critical. Maybe the most important thing we do.”

As an athlete in the 1976 Olympic Games and current US Show Jumping Chef d’Equi- pe, Robert Ridland has seen his share of rider development and explains how the USET Foundation-funded Pathway Program, for example, is an essential element.

“These riders and these horses are part of a long process,” Ridland says. “The major function of the program is the pathway to get there for younger riders of various levels … We aren’t only supporting top riders, we are preparing the riders for the next championship and the next competition. If we are not invigorating that pathway of athletes that are going to be competing in the Olympics seven years from now, we aren’t doing our job.”

“The USET Foundation’s support of the Pathway Program develops the athletes and develops the sport to make us more competitive,” McNerney says. Becoming more competitive is “all-consuming,” Joe Fargis explains, a 1984 Olympic Show Jumping Gold Medalist and Middle- burg resident. “It’s constant and as repetitive as practice can be,” he says. “You have to immerse yourself in it if you want to get better. It takes all day long, seven days a week, 365 days a year.”

With nearly four decades in equestrian competition under her belt, a recent second place in the Rome Grand Prix, with Tokyo on her horizon, Laura Kraut has certainly put in the time and experienced firsthand the support provided by USET Foundation funding over a long career.

“When you’re at the level of competing internationally and jumping for the United States, [the Foundation] is there in every way,” she shares. “Support staff with logistics, veterinarians, team physios, they are there from start to finish making it as pain-free as possible so the athlete can concentrate on what they need to do.”

A major part of the Olympics or any competition is taking care of horses in transit, a task that requires a huge logistical effort and serious funding. “A lot of our funding is to make sure those horses fly comfortably and safely with their veterinarians,” Jenkins says. “These horses are top athletes too. And then with eight disciplines, it’s not just a show jumping team. You could have eight teams going abroad to represent us.”

Kraut shares that USET Foundation’s financial aid sets the US apart in a big way. “I think we are the envy of the international jumping world … We are very fortunate that the people helping us are fantastic, and in the end, it really makes a difference.”

“It takes an awful lot of preparation in your life and in your team’s life,” Ridland says. “And of course, it is a parallel path for the horse as well. That is where the USET Foundation comes in … Many countries have their Olympics subsidized by government subsidies and we don’t. We couldn’t exist without the USET Foundation.”

Much more than dollars and cents, the fundraising efforts of the USET Foundation speak to a uniquely American patriotism and a camaraderie in the equestrian community.

“Our support is sort of grassroots by its virtue, and by the efforts of Bonnie and the board, it engenders a team effort,” McNerney says. This fashion of fundraising not only builds a team dynamic, it also creates a unique life cycle for the athletes and highlights a personal bond shared by many of the donors.

“When you have to go out and find the money, you not only appreciate it, like in the case of Laura, [you take] advantage of it,” McNerney says. “And there’s this life cycle that when she gets to the top, she wants to reach back because she knows there are others embarking on the same journey she was on, and that it wasn’t easy. I don’t want to say that team dynamic doesn’t exist in other countries, but it exists for sure in Americans, both horizontally at any event and vertically [between] generations.”

Passion for the sport combined with patriotism breeds a special connection for the donors as well. “Most of our major donors have either participated themselves in the sport at some stage in their lives, have family involvement, or own the horses themselves. There is almost always a connection,” McNerney says.

“I would put patriotism near the top of the list for donor motivation,” Jenkins says.“Not just in the major gifts program, but also our annual support program. They are truly part of the team too.”

Patriotism is perhaps most apparent during an Olympic year, but Ridland, Kraut, Jenkins, and McNerney agree focusing on the future is equally important for a sport that never stops moving. “It’s a never-ending cycle in a very exciting way … It is fascinating to see where the sport was, where it is and where it will go,” Ridland says. “And we take our roles seriously as stewards of the sport, to put it in a better place 20 or 30 years from now.”

As the sport progresses, so too must the financial support, never losing sight of that patriotism. “Because the future is constant, the requirement is constant,” McNerney says. “There’s an arms race on all those things that add up to competitiveness.”

To cushion that constant change, the USET Foundation is building up its endowment in addition to the cyclical nature of giving that supports annual competitions and training. “Bonnie is really focused on creating and strengthening our endowment, which is stretched out over multiple years,” McNerney says. “That enables us to get through rough spots.”

According to Jenkins, McNerney’s role is key as well. “As our leader, Jim has been on the frontlines of building that endowment, which has made a huge difference to the organization. It’s now at 20 million. When Jim started, it was closer to six million. That was a huge achievement.”

Wherever the contribution is directed, whether it be annual giving for a particular discipline or toward the endowment benefiting the whole team for years to come, every penny counts. “I don’t think Bonnie or I want to create the impression that the smaller or medium-sized gifts aren’t critically important,” McNerney says. “They are. We equally celebrate and appreciate all levels of donors because they bring the same patriotism and love of the sport. It all adds up, making the country better in the sport.”

And many of those donations, big and small, come from the Middleburg area. A few loyal friends of note include Jacque- line B. Mars of The Plains, and Honorary Life Trustee of USET, Sheila Johnson, whose daughter, Paige, won USET’s Maxine Beard Award. Finally, Barbara and David Roux of St. Bride’s Farm who are not only supporters of the Foundation but also own Laura Kraut’s horses, Baloutine and Confu. Laura Kraut will be riding Baloutine at the Tokyo Olympic Games.

Laura Kraut /Image, Stefano Secchi, 88° CSIO Roma Piazza di Siena 2021

“The Middleburg connection to our sport is a big deal,” McNerney says. “There’s a deep cultural connection to the sport, and a number of wonderful supporters live in Middleburg.”

For Tokyo and beyond, it is obvious that the support of the USET Foundation is the secret of the team’s success. From creating opportunities for youth riders, funding domestic and international competition preparation, and building an endowment to secure the sport’s future, Kraut and Ridland describe the Foundation’s purpose best.

“USET Foundation helps us have that camaraderie, and they make us feel like we are doing something important,” Kraut says. “This is a very individual sport … but they make us realize that there is more to the sport than just being an individual. And there is a lot to be said for being part of a team and winning on the international stage.”

“I can’t emphasize enough how crucial the Foundation is to us being able to compete at the highest level of our sport,” Ridland says. “And we as Americans are privileged to have the Foundation leading the way.” ML

The USET Foundation was established in 2003 as a not-for-profit Section 501(c)(3). It is a separate organization from US Equestrian, the National Governing Body, and serves as its philanthropic partner. The Foundation’s mission is to raise tax-deductible contributions to support the nation’s High-Performance athletes and horses through grants made to US Equestrians. Donations may be made through uset.org.

US Equestrian develops, selects, equips, promotes, and manages US equestrian teams, as well as provides funding through corporate sponsorship, membership dues and fees, and USOPC support.