Amanda Walker wasn’t sure what she’d gotten herself into when she went to try Runaway Romeo as a potential sales project in 2018.
The gelding was a bit bigger than Walker was looking for and was quite pushy coming out of the stall. When she got on, it didn’t get much better.
“He was immediately spinning and trying to get me off or into a wall again,” said Walker, who was 13 at the time. “The whole ride, we couldn’t even canter. He was just going sideways the whole time.”
"Roman" had been found at an auction a month earlier by Julie Copper of Copper Horse Crusade, an Ohio-based organization that saves slaughter-bound horses. Roman and a mare named Velvet were a bonded pair, and Copper hoped they would be adopted together.
Despite their first ride, Walker fell in love with Roman and believed he could be turned around with time and trust. Velvet came home with her too, despite being unsound to ride at the time.
“We got him a month after the auction as soon as he was cleared to be out of quarantine,” she said. “He was skin and bones. You could see every rib, his hip divots; his withers were really profound at the time. When you looked into his eyes, there was nothing there. It looked like he’d already given up on life.”
Roman wasn’t tattooed or microchipped, but Walker and her vet believe he’s a Thoroughbred who was about 5- or 6-years-old when she adopted him. She’s hoping to get him DNA-tested in the future.
A week after he got to his new barn, Roman contracted pneumonia, and Walker used the downtime to start bonding with him from the ground.
“He didn’t have any self-preservation,” she said. “He would run himself into the wall. He didn’t trust anybody enough to be like, ‘Hey, we just want to help you.’ For a while he didn’t want to leave his stall with us. I would sit in his stall with him a lot and bribe him with treats to see if he’d let me pet his head, just hanging out with him and trying to get him to trust me. I just wanted to be his friend. It took awhile. He was finally like, ‘Hey, this isn’t so bad.’”
Walker had competed to unrecognized Beginner Novice with her previous off-the-track Thoroughbred. With help from trainer Kristi Woods-Foltz, they taught Roman the basics of dressage and jumping, and he took to it well.
They started competing in unrecognized events in 2019. At their first event, Roman stopped twice in show jumping because he was scared of the flower boxes, but “then on cross-country I didn’t have to put my leg on or anything. He was just going. He loved every bit of it,” Walker recalled.
Walker remembers their second event as pretty dramatic, which led to Roman's registered name.
“He got it because at [the] show we tied him to a trailer, and it was a very foggy day, and he ended up breaking the trailer tie and getting loose,” she said. “He ran five miles from the show grounds across a highway. He wasn’t smart enough to run back to the other horses and ran down a path. We found him 2 ½ hours later in a field of alfalfa hay.”
Although Roman had a dressage saddle on, both he and his tack were unscathed, and he and Walker went on to score a 27 in dressage.
After she graduated high school in 2022, Walker decided to take a working student position with Megan Moore at her Verona Equestrian in Verona, Kentucky.
She did her and Roman’s first USEA-recognized event at Bucks County Horse Park Horse Trials (Revere, Pennsylvania) in September where they finished second in a Novice division, and most recently they won the Novice Rider division at Grand Oaks Horse Trials (Weirsdale, Florida).
While Roman’s friend Velvet was affectionate from the start, it took him awhile to come out of his shell. Now, he’s in everyone’s pocket according to Walker.
“He loves attention now,” she said. “He’ll stick his head out of the gate and turn his head to side or make faces at you as you walk by. Sometimes he’ll try to grab my belt loop to get me to pet him. He loves people now.”
Walker, 18, is spending the winter in Ocala, Florida, and hopes to do a Modified event by the end of the year.
“It felt amazing to be able to win with something you wouldn’t see at this level and have the chance to keep going,” she said.
Eventers who are new to the sport may feel a little overwhelmed by the often-misunderstood world of saddle fitting. Riders are often bombarded with information from peers online or self-described experts, putting them at risk of following bad advice related to equipment that impacts horse welfare perhaps more than any other piece of tack. Finding a qualified expert to answer these questions is crucial. Who better to turn to than both a qualified Master Saddle Fitter and a fourth-generation saddle designer to answer some of these questions?
Did you know that the USEA Foundation awards over 150 grants each year to deserving individuals who are involved in the sport of eventing? With grants that assist riders with accomplishing their competition goals, grants geared toward licensed officials, grants that are specific to continuing education for coaches, grants that assist competitions with obtaining frangible technology, and so much more, there really is a grant opportunity available to almost anyone!
With the start of the New Year just days away, now is the time to consider how your actions can have a positive impact on the sport of eventing in 2025. Each and every member of the eventing community has an important role to play in ensuring the sport continues to grow and thrive. From fostering educational opportunities to supporting grassroots initiatives and participating at all levels of the sport, there are so many ways to get involved.
Ride iQ’s popular “Ask An Expert” series features professional advice and tips from all areas of the horse industry. One of the most-downloaded episodes is an expert session with Peter Gray, an accomplished dressage judge and Olympic eventer. He has recently judged at events like the five-star at the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event, and he served on the ground jury at the 2022 FEI World Eventing Championships in Pratoni, Italy. His background as a competitor in the Olympic Games riding for Bermuda and as a coach and selector for the Canadian eventing team adds depth to his understanding of the sport.