Call in the Cavalry!

By Zack Bennett

夜色小视频 Cadets discovering the history and experience of military equine partnerships and excellence

summer record cover

夜色小视频 is renowned for creating leaders. The university provides a multitude of paths towards student leadership, but a specialty unit like the Cavalry Troop offers a truly unique opportunity for Cadets. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e gaining leadership experience you won鈥檛 get anywhere else,鈥 said Samantha McCullough 鈥24, reflecting upon her years spent in the troop. McCullough is a first sergeant of the troop who has spent years of her personal life riding horses before becoming a Cadet. She saw this specialty unit as a chance to foster her love of horses while in school and prepare her for life in the military after graduation. Cadets learn leadership from the first day they set foot on campus as a Rook, but leadership looks different in a specialty unit like the Cavalry Troop. 鈥淲ithin the Cavalry Unit, you have to become a leader, but you also have to do that with an animal,鈥 said McCullough. 鈥淭he animal comes before anything else. If you ride the horse and something happens, your first duty is caring for the animal.鈥 Although horses are not used in the military in the way they once were, the Cadets learn invaluable leadership lessons. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a different way of approaching leadership because instead of being worried about the well-being of people, you鈥檙e in charge of the well-being of animals who don鈥檛 speak our language,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t translates to putting people鈥檚 and the company鈥檚 needs before your own. At the end of the day, you鈥檙e there to get a mission done in accordance with your people.鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檙e gaining leadership experience you won鈥檛 get anywhere else.鈥

McCullough said the skills she gains through these experiences are versatile, and she can use them wherever she goes. 鈥淔or me personally, I鈥檓 going to commission into the Army,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 could bring this kind of leadership experience to my first duty station.鈥

The Cadets head off campus to Vermont Firefly Farm in Roxbury to hone their skills. Laura Hamilton and her husband own the farm and Figure 8 Riding, a full-service lesson and training program. She has been working with the students for nine years and has seen the program grow and improve.

鈥淲hen we first started working together, there were about six students in the program,鈥 said Hamilton. 鈥淢ost of them had never ridden before.鈥 She brought them through the riding basics and said, 鈥淭hey got quite good.鈥 Hamilton has enjoyed her time with the troopers and is honored to work with them. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e very teachable. They listen, they鈥檙e respectful, and they鈥檙e committed. They give me their full attention when they鈥檙e here,鈥 she said. Thanks to their life as a Cadet, they鈥檙e ahead of most beginners physically. 鈥淭hey can use their bodies in ways that most beginners can鈥檛.鈥

Once troops are up to speed on horseback, she can advance their education and career prospects at the same time. Hamilton has the group complete mounted police clinics where the Cadets gain certifications for mounted police work.

Hamilton鈥檚 confidence in the troop鈥檚 skills has grown so much that now she invites them to show off their skills to the public. 鈥淚 brought them to Equine Affaire, where they did mounted drill demonstrations,鈥 said Hamilton. 鈥淲e took them out there and they did a lot of public relations activities, like manning a booth in the breed barn to promote the Cavalry Troop.鈥

McCullough has also had the opportunity to show Hamilton鈥檚 horses individually when Hamilton sponsored her at a show at the Champlain Valley Fairgrounds. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really large horse show,鈥 said Hamilton. 鈥淪he competed in several classes, both riding and in-hand on the ground and did very well.鈥

McCullough sees these experiences as fun and a way to promote the Cavalry Troop鈥檚 skills to the world. 鈥淚f we have troopers who can show, it gives more opportunity to show both the Cavalry鈥檚 and our skills,鈥 she said.

鈥淭hey decided they鈥檇 provide funding for the unit because they believe in the work that horsemanship does for a person.鈥

While the troops were constantly conquering new challenges and showing the world what they could do, there was a time when the institution of the Cavalry Troop faced adversity.

鈥淒uring my sophomore year, there was very, very few of us in the troop,鈥 said Francis Smith 鈥17, a former Cavalry Trooper. With such low participation, there were questions about whether the program could continue receiving funding.

Smith and Alyssa Pinard 鈥16, a fellow trooper, couldn鈥檛 bear the thought of the troop dissolving. The pair of troopers began working to keep it alive and put together a business proposal with the hopes of finding a source of funding for the troop, and Pinard scouted the local area for potential barn owners and trainers before eventually finding Hamilton.

鈥淢y parents are businesspeople,鈥 said Smith. 鈥淲e pitched them the business proposal about funding the troop, and they graciously said yes, they want to be in as the donors. They decided they鈥檇 provide funding for the unit because they believe in the work that horsemanship does for a person.鈥

It has been nearly 10 years since his parents, Jerry Smith and Terry Romero, said yes to funding the troop, and the family is still providing their support. 鈥溡股∈悠 produces successful people. You don鈥檛 go to this kind of school if you鈥檙e not motivated,鈥 said Romero. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a highly driven, high-impact kind of place. A lot is demanded, and the Cadets give a lot,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e happy to do it.鈥

Smith echoed his mother and said the family is 鈥渧ery, very pleased鈥 to foster new generations of riders at 夜色小视频. 鈥淲e hope to see that horsemanship is kept alive at 夜色小视频,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e unequivocally believe in this program with our entire beings.鈥

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