The O’Brien family of Grange near Athenry in East County
Galway have been well known as one of the outstanding and successful
families on the pony showjumping circuit in Ireland between 1990
and 2004. The husband and wife team of Thomas and Frances were both
born and reared in this rural area of undulating fertile farmland.
Starting with two stables in the mid 80’s.
Farming and Horses
Tomas has already been involved with horses. As a child he remembers
his father Joe jumping at shows throughout the West, specialising
in the champion stone wall. This was the highjump competition of
that era, and Joe O’Brien travelled on his bike with the horse
in tow as far afield as Elphin in Roscommon and Ballinasloe to jump
and often win with Mountain Dew. Both of Joe’s brothers, Tommy
and Jack also drove their horses and carts long distances to Oranmore
to deliver turf and collect seaweed for the land. The same farm
work-horses took the brothers hunting when the Blazers met locally.
Tommy, a successful showjumper, subsequently trained racehorses
from 1972 on. While some of his brothers went pony racing, ponies
did not feature in his boyhood years, for Tomas, even then, had
one main equestrian interest and that was in the sport of Show-jumping.
Throughout his life, this has been his sole equine passion, and
this same enthusiasm is now firmly ingrained in his own family today.
His own horse
When Tomas was fifteen in 1957, his father bought him his first
horse at Ballinasloe Fair. This was Temple Tynagh, a two year old
well bred animal which he trained and took showjumping making an
auspicious start by wining his first class at his first show. It
was a Bunratty, where he had to beat ninety other horses, but it
started him on a track from which he has never since deviated :
he was hooked on the sport, as he says himself ‘show-jumping
mad’ Tomas jumped in Junior Trials and attended trainings
in Charle Haughey’s Kinsealy estate with Paul Daragh, Trevor
Monson and Emer Haughey under Anthony Paalman and Iris Kellett,
although he did not make the team to go abroad.
Sadly, his father died at a very early age leaving Tomas, the eldest
of twelev, with the responsibility of looking after his younger
siblings. At only nineteen he had to grow up rather quickly and
for some years he was kept busy, in his spare time, training his
six younger brothers and training their horses and driving to Shows
throughout Connacht. He smiles as he remembers that in the early
days of lorries without ramps, the driver always had to locate a
suitable bank or loading ramp on the roadside, unload and walk the
horses to the showgrounds and repeat this procedure, walking the
horses back and forth and loading each horse after it had jumped
its round.
A New Family
Having inherited a family farm, he met and married Frances Uniacke
from nearby Dunsandle and they have four children, Joseph, Ruth,
Thomas and David. Frances, also raised on a farm, was no newcomer
to the world of horses as they always had working horses on the
farm. It was only as an adult that she discovered that both her
father and grandfather were steeped in the horse tradition, her
grandfather having broken and trained young racehorses for Lord
French, and her fathe, Thomsie Uniacke having showjumped as a young
man. Both men had been involved in the hurlong tradition and had
gained treasured Croke Cup medals so obviously hurling, rather than
horses was the main family tradition. Bringing Temple Tynagh up
the ranks to grade A in showjumping started a pattern which was
to be continued in the present generation of the O’Brien family.
The challenge as well as the fun, according to Tomas, lies in buying
a complete novice and by training, conditioning and working with
the ability of that animal, producing a performer that will continuously
improve and compete and top level, either with the O’Briens
or with a furture owner.
Outstanding among the novice ponies they brought on were Greenvill
Lad in the 128cms category and Ballindooley Queen and Rosie Duncan
in the 138cm section and Mid West Star in the 148cm. As well as
the brilliant six year old Bertas Clover these ponies were all bought
locally and brought up to Grade A by the family. Bertas Clover bought
as a three year old, is by a Clover Hill stallion, Moores Clover,
who never grew to horse size and she is out of a Connemara mare,
A striking dark bay mare with a strong sturdy frame, she jumped
incredibily well in her short life with David, especially during
his last year in ponies.
David and travel abroad
In 2004 alone, the family made four continental trips, competing
at six Shows, with the Irish pony Show-jumping Team. Youngest son
David acquitted himself admirably, coming 2nd in the individual
in Fontainbleu. 3rd in the Grand Prix in Holland and also jumped
to victory in Germany where he won an International Class. It was
also a year in which the O”Briens made the long sea and overland
road journey to compete in Poland at the European Pony Chamnpionships,
with five team ponies in their lorry. Another trip to Liege in Belgium
and Verona in Italy in November resulted in a Grand Prix win for
David and Bertgas Clover at Liege. This was an incredible win more
especially so because the Leige Grand Prix had never been taken
by an Irish rider. Furthermore, the breeding of Bertas Cloveris
as Irish as they come, being all Irish Draught and Connemara. Their
return to Grange at the end of the last overseas The Grand Prix
win at Liege was celebrated in style with a big house-party and
bonfires along the roadside, an unforgettable welcome home. Another
big dahy was when David aboard Star of Cashel broke the Irish pony
high jump record, by learing 1.85 metres at Portlaoise Pony Puissance
in 2004. Grandfather Joe O’Brien, a high jump; specialist
in his own day, would have been proud!
That was the first year that family commitments had enabled Frances
to travel to see the family compete abroad. She was chief navigator
in the lorry with Tomas driiving the ponies for the Irish pony team,
and she enjoyed it hugely, learning to take the twenty minutes of
sleep when the opportunity arises, and to live with the inevitable
tiredness like a seasoned campaigner. The trips abroad meant weeks
away from home driving five valuable ponies in all sorts of driving
conditions, from snow covered mountain roads to busy motorways all
over western Europe.\\David’s schooling was not overlooked
as he was flown home after each event to be minded by his grandmother,
and to put his head in the books again, preparing for the Junior
Cert. Exam. His last year in ponies was to end on a very high note
when he was presented with the Irish Field award ad Pony Showjumpr
of the year.
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A great sport, -Show-jumping
Frances and Thomas thrieve on the lifestyle that success in Show
jumping has brought to the family. According to them, their involvement
in the sport has meant their children have passed their teenage
years trouble free. Being totally committed to their sport, with
equestrian events every weekend, the schooling and preparation of
the ponies leaving little time for for other diversions, they have,
their parents hapily claim, been easily reared. They both stree
athat they and the entire family owe a lot to show jumping, a great
sport in their view and one of the few sporting activities where
both boys and girls can compete at the same level.
For them it is an enjoyable lifestyle whether winning or losing,
trying harder each time, taking on board the responsibilities, the
disapointments and the joys, an adrenilin fix each time they compete.
The three O’Brien boys have all represented Ireland on pony
teams some eight or nine times abroad, travelling to France, Italy,
England, Holland, Germany, Belgium and Polland. They and their sister
Ruth all started competitive Show jumping at age eight, and not
before, Tomas being of the belief that children can pick up bad
riding habits if they start at a younger age when they are not really
able to understand instruction.
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