Jimmy Elder and John Rumble, who were both part of the bronze medal Olympic Eventing Team at Stockholm in 1956, searched for two years for a horse they could develop into a competitive eventer. They had hoped he would be over 17 hands, which would suit John, as he is 6’2”; John would address the basic flatwork and Jimmy would see to the jumping.

Their friend Meg Harris was adamant they should go and see a barely-broken, 17.3-hand five-year-old (2003) named High Society 3E at Hugh Graham’s KingRidge Farms near King City, ON. High Society was a registered Canadian Sport Horse gelding, an embryo transplant out of a Thoroughbred mare and by Rio Bronco, who was by Hanoverian sire Rio Grande. The minute they saw him trot out, they both exclaimed, “That’s him!” John felt he needed a stronger name for eventing, so High Society became Foxwood High.

Jimmy’s grandson Chad took Woody up through the levels to Training before he had to leave to attend university. When John saw Selena and Colombo competing at Rolex Kentucky, he felt he might have found the perfect rider to develop “Woody” into a serious international contender. This was a hard call for John, who had a theory that Woody “needed a man” to ride him, but he decided to give a woman a test run for one winter to see how it went.

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