The high-flying dentist making his first visit to Badminton 18 years after his debut
Harald Ambros has returned to the Mars Badminton Horse Trials for the first time since making his debut 18 years ago. He rides Vitorio Du Montet, a 16-year-old gelding with whom he finished 33rd at the Paris Olympics.
Harald, 45, has had “a lot of championship horses” in the interim, but none he thought were suited to the Badminton challenge.
“My other horses have done Europeans and World Championships, but they haven’t had the gallop to come here,” he says. “Badminton is much stronger, and you have to be lucky to have the right horse.”
The Austrian rider works full-time as a dentist alongside competing four eventers, and explained how he juggles his dual life while prepping Vitorio for their first five-star together.
“For the past six weeks it’s been really hard because I’ve started training at 5.30 in the morning, then cleared everything up and started work at 7.30,” he says. “I work til five o’clock and then back to training again.
“My plan is to go to Blenheim [Europeans] this year, which is hilly and tough,” says Harald, who competed at the last Blenheim Europeans in 2005 on his previous Badminton contender Miss Ferrari.
“I know that Vitorio is a good horse who can do a five-star. I decided he should also do Badminton if he is to do Blenheim.”
How Harald Ambros settles his horse’s nerves
Harald is Vitorio’s fifth rider in the past three years, but the pair have established a great bond.
“This horse can do everything, but his nerves are tricky,” he says. “The first event I went to, the cross-country started next to the dressage and he turned round and wouldn’t go anywhere near the arena. But that was my only negative experience and it was useful to know it can happen because I can prepare.
“If he gets nervous he cannot do anything, like he is blocked. When you ask for power, he goes into a spin like a propeller. So you have to give him his head and prepare him well.”
Harald recalls Paris, where the tannoy made much of the fact he was riding a French-bred horse, with a French name, previously ridden by French rider Maxime Livio, and explains how he prepares him for such atmospheres.
“I rode him three times yesterday, and twice today before my dressage,” he says. “It’s nice at Badminton because you can canter around outside, to see everything and go up into the woodland.”
The pair posted a decent score of 34.9 to lie mid-division of the 81-strong field, which delighted Harald. But he played down his chances of bettering his 18th place with Miss Ferrari in 2007.
“It feels the same as the last time I came – the course is again clockwise and the weather is really nice – but I will not be chasing the time,” he says. “When you’re young, you try this, but when you’re older like me, you’re happy just to be here and have the possibility.”
How to watch Badminton Horse Trials
If you want to watch the live action from Badminton Horse Trials from the comfort of your home, wherever you are in the world, you will need to subscribe to Badminton TV. This year, Badminton TV has teamed up with ClipMyHorse.TV, but you do not need a full ClipMyHorse.TV subscription to watch Badminton – you can just subscribe to Badminton TV for £21.99. Go to clipmyhorse.tv/en_GB/badminton to subscribe or to activate your account as an existing Badminton TV subscriber. If you are already a ClipMyHorse.TV premium member, Badminton TV is included in your subscription. As part of Badminton TV, you can enjoy the documentary programme Legends and Legacy, a fly-on-the-wall insight into the 2024 event and preview of 2025.
Enjoy the best of Badminton with Horse & Hound
To ensure you keep up to date with all the breaking news, behind the scenes insight, and the best of the action throughout Badminton Horse Trials with no limits on how much you can read, subscribe to the Horse & Hound website from as little as £1 a week. Sign up now. And don’t miss our bumper 22-page magazine report on Badminton, including in-depth analysis and exclusive comments from top names, in the issue of Horse & Hound dated 15 May.
You may also be interested in:
How to watch Badminton Horse Trials 2025 live from anywhere in the world
‘I wouldn’t train a horse like I trained myself!’ Ros Canter looks back on running London marathon 12 days before Badminton
‘I’ll watch videos before I go to sleep tonight’: how time-short amateur rider is prepping to be fast at Badminton
‘She chose me’: meet the Badminton first-timer splitting her time between Britain and Australia – and her talented mare
A runaway leader, a stunning debut and riders’ course reactions: all you need to know from day one at Badminton Horse Trials