The road to an athletic scholarship differs for each high school athlete. For Minnetonka’s Taylor Landstrom, it’s a journey unlike any other.
Most Minnesotans who travel south in the winter do so for a round of golf or a nap on a poolside lounger — not for weeks of national-level equestrian competition.
Landstrom’s annual escape to Florida has a special purpose. She spends nearly a quarter of each year living near Palm Beach and riding horses. She’s a rare Minnesotan on the national equestrian show circuit and the only reported Minnesota senior to sign with a Division I equestrian program this year.
It’s not just any equestrian program, either. In November, Landstrom officially accepted her scholarship to compete for the 2022 national champion Oklahoma State Cowgirls.
“To anyone, this sport is a novel concept, unless you’re truly riding,” Landstrom said. “Even my parents don’t understand it, to a full extent.“
Instant connection
No one in her family knew much about horses — her dad is even allergic to them — but Landstrom had her first horse riding lesson at age 4, and it stuck.
“It’s just incredible to create a bond with a horse,” Landstrom said. “To be able to go into the ring and have this animal with its own mind ... and be able to compete.”
As she progressed, however, Landstrom required a more competitive barn than those that existed in wintery Minnesota. In middle school, her family contemplated using Three Ships, a barn nine hours away in Indianapolis but known for producing national champions.