Horse People Podcast

Gideon Kotkowski

A podcast diving into the stories behind some of the world's everyday equestrians. Horse People weaves a narrative journey about entrepreneurs, professionals, and riders alike, and the stories about the lives they’ve built. 

  1. 3D AGO

    #68 - Orchid Bertelsen: Horses, Business, and Building an Audience

    Orchid Bertelsen spent the last 20 years building a career that took her from a law firm in DC to the Gucci sales floor, through digital marketing at Nestle, and eventually into private equity, where she now helps beauty brands grow profitably. A first-generation Taiwanese American who grew up without a safety net, Orchid learned early that the path forward meant working harder than everyone else and getting close to the money. After 30 years away from horses, she recently returned to the saddle at a historic equestrian club 10 minutes from her home in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, and what started as a Christmas gift of six lessons has since taken over her entire personality. FIVE KEY INSIGHTS: Finding your way back: Orchid rode from 10 to 14, competed on the B circuit in Illinois and Wisconsin, then stepped away for nearly 30 years. Her return started with a walk past the Grosse Pointe Equestrian Center with her kid in a stroller and one question: "what if?"Horses as a forcing function for presence: Managing an oversensitive 17.3-hand horse named Bo has a way of demanding you show up fully. For someone always attached to her phone, barn time is the one place she's not.Building content with a system: Through Orchid in the Saddle, she applies her marketing background to create content for returning riders. Batch film on barn days, script with ChatGPT, edit ruthlessly in CapCut to 30 seconds or less, and let the data tell you what to make next.The gap the equestrian industry is missing: There's a disconnect between who brands design for and who's actually buying. From boot calf widths to men's sizing to grooming bags, the middle market for quality products made for real people at real price points is wide open.Immigrant grit and the cost of an obsession: All three voices in this conversation are first-generation Americans, and the thread connecting growing up without a safety net, building careers close to revenue, and developing a full-blown horse obsession is very real and very relatable. Orchid Bertelsen is proof that the horse world can pull you back in no matter how long you've been gone, and that returning to the barn at 43 with a half-lease, a TikTok account, and a marketing brain is its own kind of superpower. This conversation covers everything from building a content strategy on a barn budget to the very real gap in equestrian products for adult amateurs, and why the brands that figure that out first are going to win big. If you've ever thought about coming back to horses, or wondered whether your outside career could actually make you better in the saddle, this episode is for you. Follow Orchid: @orchidinthesaddle on TikTok and Instagram Subscribe and follow Horse People for more cross-discipline content and stories.

    1h 6m
  2. FEB 27

    #67 - Susan Friedland: Misty, Marguerite, and the Magic of a Great Horse Story

    Susan Friedland is a former middle school English teacher turned equestrian author based outside Chicago, Illinois. She traded the classroom for the page and has since written four books, including her latest, Marguerite, Misty, and Me, a deep dive into the life of beloved children's author Marguerite Henry. A lifelong horse-obsessed kid who grew up borrowing horses in Wayne, Illinois, Susan eventually found her way to fox hunting, polo lessons, and the wild pony swim at Chincoteague Island, all while building a writing career that blends her love of horses, history, and storytelling. What we talked about: The real story behind Misty of Chincoteague: wild pony swims, saltwater cowboys, and the tiny Virginia island that inspired one of the most beloved horse books of all timeHow Marguerite Henry went from a city woman with no horse experience to the author of millions of copies across multiple languages, including a Newbery Medal winnerWhat it actually takes to write a book about a beloved figure and why Susan says it's "not for the faint of heart"The hero's journey hiding inside every great horse story, and why that's probably why these books still hit the way they doWhy traditional publishers keep passing on horse books, and why Susan (and the numbers) think they're wrongSusan's story is proof that the path to your dream career doesn't have to be a straight line. It can look like a fox hunting trail through the California hills, a trip to a Virginia island, and an attic full of letters written to a pony. If you've ever felt the pull of a horse book as a kid, this one will take you right back. Follow Susan on Instagram: @saddleseekshorses Subscribe and follow @horsepeoplepodcast for more cross-discipline content and stories.

    1h 8m
  3. JAN 6

    #64 - Horse Racing: Pierce Dargan, Building and Selling Software for the Horse Industry

    Gideon sits down with Pierce Dargan, CEO of Equine MediRecord, local Irish councillor, and deputy mayor, to talk about what it takes to digitize equine welfare compliance in a pen and paper world, how COVID flipped adoption overnight, and where AI can actually make horses safer. Key topics discussed: Why Pierce ran for local politics, and what it means to shape real decisions like roads, schools, and community life. The early grind of building Equine MediRecord, including two years of approvals and stakeholder buy in before anyone could ditch the paper book. The unsexy truth of software: bugs, doubt, product fit anxiety, and the first moment someone actually paid. How COVID forced even the biggest holdouts online, and why that timing helped push equine compliance tech into new countries fast. Where AI can help next, from early lameness detection to colic alerts, plus why better data helps racing earn trust. Bonus: Pierce’s first syndicate horse, Arthurian Fame, won the Microsoft Cup, then went on to run at Royal Ascot, which is the kind of sentence that only a few get to say aloud. Social media links for the guest:LinkedIn: Pierce DarganInstagram: @equine.medirecord Subscribe to Horse People Podcast on Spotify or Apple Podcasts so you do not miss the next conversation. If you work anywhere near a barn office or a racing office, send this episode to the person still guarding the paper binder like it is a family heirloom.

    58 min
  4. 12/16/2025

    #63 - Horse Racing: The (Improbable) story of Michael Iavarone's Rise to a Horse Racing Legend.

    Michael Iavarone’s done what most horse people only dream about, he’s won the Kentucky Derby. He’s been in this game at the highest level, from Big Brown taking him to the presipice of racing to many G1 wins, but he didn’t grow up in it. He came from a working-class family, started out getting crushed at the betting windows, and somehow figured out how to buy the right horses at the right time. This one’s full of wild stories, buying million-dollar horses days before a race, flying around the world to race in Hong Kong and Dubai, and the highs and heartbreaks that come with it. But what stuck with me most is how much Michael still loves the game. Even after all the pressure, all the wins, all the money spent, he’s still out there watching morning works like it’s the best part of his day. Key Topics we discussed: Why Michael only buys horses that have already raced, and how that’s helped him win big The story behind Big Brown and how it felt to win two legs of the Triple Crown What it’s like to wire a million dollars for a horse just days before the Breeders’ Cup Why elite horses have to be mentally tough, not just talented How horse racing pulled him back in after he stepped away Follow Michael on Instagram: @michael.iavarone Subscribe and follow Horse People Podcast for more cross discipline content and stories from equestrians all around the world. @horsepeoplepodcast

    1h 4m
5
out of 5
28 Ratings

About

A podcast diving into the stories behind some of the world's everyday equestrians. Horse People weaves a narrative journey about entrepreneurs, professionals, and riders alike, and the stories about the lives they’ve built. 

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