Lexington & KHP


There are now fewer than six months on the “countdown to WEG” clocks around town.

We here in Lexington and at the KY Horse Park expect to be welcoming many thousands of visitors from around the world this fall. We have 200 people signed up on our CAA trip alone!

So for anyone reading this blog who’s coming to WEG (or is just curious about Lexington) and who’s never been to Lex. or not spent much time here, except perhaps at the Horse Park … we’re getting ready to start two new features here on the CAA blog.

At least every two weeks (starting in May), we’ll feature a new installment in what will become our CAA restaurant guide. My husband and I will introduce you to a wide variety of local restaurants … some are favorites of ours, some we’ve been meaning to try but haven’t yet.

Then, on alternating weeks, we’ll feature a story and/or photos about something to see or do here in Lexington and the surrounding area. On this list so far: historic houses, the brewery tour at Alltech (title sponsor of the WEG), Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill, bourbon distilleries, Keeneland, and more. Let us know if there’s something/somewhere else you’d like to know about.

We love our city, and we hope that you will too!

Here in Lexington, we are fortunate to have (in my and others’ opinions) one of the most beautiful Thoroughbred tracks in the world: Keeneland.

Over the past several years, many people inside and outside the horse industry have been debating the pros and cons of whether to allow “expanded gambling” at Kentucky’s racetracks. To be honest, I’m not completely sure whether this means a couple of slot machines at the tracks, additional forms of betting on horse races, or full-blown casinos (which we don’t at the moment have in Kentucky).

Everyone, of course, has a different opinion on the matter.

In yesterday’s Lexington Herlad-Leader (www.kentucky.com) was this article, in which I think Mr. Nicholson makes a number of very good points.

Nicholson offers long view of horse industry; Keeneland president looks beyond gaming

by Tom Eblen (Herald-Leader columnist)

As the spring racing meet was about to begin, Keeneland President Nick Nicholson briskly walked the grounds to make sure everything was ready.

At the track’s last turn, he inspected the yellow forsythia hedge and tall magnolia trees. (He knows there are exactly 73 of them.) He pointed out new bushes in the infield that look as if they have always been there, and a maple tree in the paddock that won’t thrive no matter what the groundskeepers do.

Nicholson drove a visitor to the back of the racecourse’s 1,200 acres, to a nursery where trimmed shrubs stand ready should any part of the green hedges that spell “Keeneland” in the infield suddenly turn brown.

“You’re looking at the next generation of the parking lot there,” he said, pointing to a row of tall trees in the nursery. They are gradually being moved out to the parking lot to replace the giant pin oaks as they succumb to age and insects.

What does this obsession with landscaping have to do with horse racing and Kentucky’s Thoroughbred industry? Everything, Nicholson believes.

That’s because the future of the horse industry that is so vital to Kentucky’s image and economy depends on developing a larger, younger and more loyal fan base. Nicholson thinks the years-long battle over expanded gambling has distracted the industry from that fundamental issue.

“Expanded gaming has taken on more of a role than I think it should have; I would love to think of a way to get it behind us,” he said. “It will never be a long-term fix or a total solution. It would just provide some capital at a time when the industry needs capital. It’s a means to an end. It’s not the end.”

Horse racing once flourished, in part, because it was the only way many people could gamble legally. Now there are plenty of quicker and cheaper ways, including lotteries, slot machines, Internet betting and casinos. Everyone wants in on the action, including politicians eager to avoid raising taxes.

“I often feel like a ping-pong ball in other people’s ping-pong games,” Nicholson said.

Unlike corporate racetracks, whose ultimate goal is to provide shareholders with a maximum return on investment, Keeneland is a non-profit association. Since its founding in 1936, the mission has been to support Kentucky’s Thoroughbred breeding industry through racing and sales to an increasingly international market.

“It’s the marketplace where the farmers bring their crop to market,” he said. “The reason we race is to determine which horses to breed to which horses.”

The income and jobs the horse industry provides Kentucky — from breeders and blacksmiths to restaurant waiters and equine artists — ultimately depend on the popularity of horses and racing, Nicholson said. That’s why he spends much of his time on efforts to improve racing’s credibility, from the integrity of the betting system to improved safety for horses and riders.

“For the new fan base we’ll build the sport on, safety is a threshold issue,” he said. “You can’t say (frequent death and injury) is part of the sport anymore. You’ve got to be doing everything you can do to prevent it.”

That means cracking down on horse doping and investing in such things as artificial track surfaces that are easier on horses’ legs and high-tech padding in the starting gate.

Making horse racing’s fan base grow means providing a total entertainment experience — everything from exciting sport to good food, comfortable seats, beautiful landscaping, easy parking and friendly customer service.

During an orientation last Wednesday for some of the hundreds of green-jacketed retirees who work customer-service jobs at each racing meet, Nicholson told them: “You’re the secret ingredient in the recipe for what makes Keeneland special.”

To appeal to potential young fans, horse racing must market itself more creatively and embrace technology. Keeneland now has new season and annual passes, live online race video, race replays for cell phones and updates for both experienced and novice fans via SMS text, Twitter and Facebook.

Discreet remote-control television cameras have been installed in the paddock, and there’s a new TV camera platform behind the winner’s circle. “We want to create more of a Game Day atmosphere,” Nicholson said. “We’d like each meet to be like an international festival.”

The TVG network will have daily coverage from Keeneland this month. Churchill Downs in Louisville has partnered with NBC Sports for Road to the Kentucky Derby, telecasts that will include Keeneland’s Blue Grass Stakes on April 10.

The future of the Thoroughbred industry, Nicholson says, depends on attracting more fans who become passionate about horses, not just about gambling. It’s about the pageantry and excitement of the sport, the intellectual challenge of handicapping, the thrill of betting on a winner and the pleasure of an afternoon with friends in a beautiful place that looks as if it has always been there.

“More days of cheap racing won’t do it,” he said. “We must work with like-minded tracks to create an appealing product. We can’t compete with a casino, nor should we want to.”

We’re nearing the tail-end of March Madness, for those of you who follow college basketball, or who have read previous posts here about the Univ. of Kentucky’s basketball team.

Sadly, our UK Wildcats lost in the Elite 8 round and didn’t make it to the Final Four this year. So there won’t be any partying in the streets of Lexington. Of course, making it to the Elite 8 is better than they’ve done in many years, so it’s not all bad. On Tuesday night, the UK women’s team lost (in the Elite 8 round as well) their bid for a first-ever spot in the Final Four. Perhaps next year …

Now that the basketball season is officially finished here in the Bluegrass, everyone’s attention can turn to horses. Keeneland’s spring meet starts tomorrow and runs through most of April. And the ever-popular Rolex KY Three-Day Event (here at the KY Horse Park, along with the WEG test events for dressage and jumping) is in just a few short weeks. The many tents are already going up.

And those WEG marathon obstacles that we’ve been trying to keep secret? The many thousands of people who will be in the park to watch the Rolex cross country will have their first full look at them, so I may be able to post some photos here as well that day. The Rolex KY Three-Day Event is April 22 through 25, so stay tuned!

About two weeks ago, the KHP’s first foal of the season was born here at the park.

In years past, the KHP’s small annual foal crop could be found in the Big Barn or in one or more of the neighboring paddocks. Last Friday, I walked over to the Big Barn, camera in hand, only to find a single horse in the barn and a sign out front declaring that renovations were on the way.  Apparently, the KHP’s Education Department (which handles the foaling and runs the “mare and foal” show for park visitors later in the spring) had moved.

This week, I found out where they’ve moved and headed to that barn yesterday afternoon. The barn was quiet when I got there in the late afternoon — the only sounds: the rustling of straw, the munching of hay, and the friendly greeting of a calico barn cat. I peered into a few of the stalls and, in one of the large ones, saw the new filly taking a nap in the straw.

I tried taking a few sleeping-foal photos, but they aren’t the best, what with the soothing (dark) barn interior and the odd camera angle from having to aim the camera between the stall railings. Here’s the best of the lot:

this sleeping Thoroughbred filly is the first of the foals born at the KHP this year

I wandered down the stall aisle, visited with the barn cat, and watched her investigate a few stalls.

the barn cat, making her rounds

Then, on my way out, I looked in on the filly one more time. And she started to stir from her nap, then got up for a snack. The big black blur at the end of the video is the mare’s dark bay nose investigating the camera.

On Friday, 5,000 Kentucky schoolchildren came to the KY Horse Park’s new indoor arena to see demonstrations of the sports being featured in this year’s World Equestrian Games. Coming in to work in the morning, I drove past long rows of yellow school buses, each sporting the name of a different KY county.

The driving demonstration was provided by the folks at the Gayla Driving Center in Georgetown, KY, with Sterling Graburn driving a four-in-hand team of Hackney Ponies. Debbie Banfield narrated the demo and explained that a team of ponies should be considered “WEG light” — that it would be teams of horses in the actual competition this fall. Regardless, the crowd seemed to really enjoy the demo, judging from their applause and cheers …

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urvbZsHnhHs&feature=player_embedded

and

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riBORwMx4zM&feature=related

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