The equine industry in Ontario is a multi-billion-dollar sector and finding one’s way to the top may seem beyond reach, especially for the uninitiated. Interviews with top competitors and industry professionals at the 2024 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto revealed key ingredients to their success stories. Spoiler alert: common threads included passion and a lot of hard work.

You may be surprised to learn how far these consummate pros have journeyed in their career paths and many worked their way up from humble beginnings. Read to the end to learn about a free program that has been helping Ontarians enter the horse industry since November 2021.

Christine Reupke, the director of equestrian and breed sport at the Royal Winter Fair, began her career as a groom and then a rider and is now involved in planning one of the largest horse shows in the country!

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Pro rider and popular clinician Hyde Moffat echoed hard work and building up experience right off the top, but merrily added, “It doesn’t ever really feel like work if you are enjoying what you do.” He, too, started out working in horse barns as a little kid, mucking stalls and feeding horses. At 14 he jumped at the opportunity to back some racehorses, “It provided me a lot of time in the saddle; a lot of knowledge I use every day came from the experiences that I was able to have with the racehorses.” That led to starting horses for professional barns in the show industry, which led to different rides and more horses. Moffatt now specializes in the development, training, showing and sales of showjumping horses.

Seventeen-year-old Kyleigh Whitwell of Oshawa, ON, claimed the Jump Canada Medal Final aboard Miss Montreal. A real go-getter and up-and-comer, Whitwell has already figured out the formula of working hard, meeting the right people in the industry and going after every good opportunity.