Community Corner
Love Of Horses Brings Howell Teen Top State Honor
Jacqueline Tanzi, 18, is a Howell High School senior who has been named New Jersey Youth Horseperson of the Year for 2022.

HOWELL, N.J.— Jacqueline Tanzi of Howell has been named the 2022 New Jersey Youth Horseperson of the Year by the New Jersey Equine Advisory Board at the 65th Annual New Jersey Breeders’ Luncheon.
Tanzi, 18, a Howell High School senior was representing the New Jersey Horse Council.
As Youth Horseperson of the Year, Tanzi will attend functions hosted by the New Jersey Equine Advisory Board and represent the Board at various events. according to a news release from the state Department of Agriculture.
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Tanzi started riding when she was about 4 years old on her mother Renee’s horse farm in Sussex County and has been a member of the Hearts and Horseshoes 4-H club for 11 years. She has participated in horse bowl, hippology (the study of horses) and horse judging 4-H competitions, including qualifying for the national roundup in Kentucky for the second straight year.
“I was over the moon about getting this award,” Tanzi said. “Seeing all the faces that are in the horse business in New Jersey and having my name said among these people was a huge thing.”
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She has won the Introduction to Western Dressage championship in the East Coast Regional Dressage Association and regularly participates in 4-H shows, having reached the state level several times.
This year she is also competing in the Autumn Riders Horse Shows in Freehold in Monmouth County.
Winning the Western Dressage competition was a significant moment for Tanzi and her horse: “It was a big thing,” she said. “It was my first big win with my horse.”
Tanzi's success didn’t come without some difficult moments this past year. Her horse Laci died on Tanzi's birthday, and after trying a couple of new horses, one of which sent her for a spill, she now has a 3-year-old paint named Trixie and they have hit it off.
“I went to go see her, and absolutely fell in love,” Tanzi said. “She is so calm and well-tempered. I had missed having a young horse. She is everything I could have asked for.”
Tanzi plans to continue her education in the Penn Foster Online Program to become a veterinarian technician for horses and other large animals.
“I’m currently a horse trainer and exercise horses,” she said. “It’s a steady job, but some years are good and some not so much. I would rather do something where I can work with a personal veterinarian or at an animal emergency hospital.”
No matter which specific career path she takes, Tanzi can’t envision her life without horses.
“I am definitely staying in horses no matter what,” she said. “My dream is to own a bigger piece of land with cattle and horses. I would like to have my clients on my own piece of land. If I become really successful, I would like to train horses full-time.”
She fully admits that being a horse person is something in her blood.
“I was born with it,” she said. “My mom used to take me to the Sussex County Fair and do the pony rides and she could not get me off them.”
Tanzi now feels she has a special connection to horses.
“It’s their ability to listen to you,” she said. “They are quiet creatures, but they say so much. They know when things are a little off. I have conversations with a horse that I couldn’t have with the world. When they trust you, their personalities come out and it’s the most amazing thing to see.”
“Jacqueline’s passion for horses and her participation in various equine competitions throughout her career is why she was chosen as New Jersey’s Horseperson of the Year,” said New Jersey Secretary of Agriculture Douglas H. Fisher. “She will be a wonderful role model for those who are interested in equine and a great ambassador for the Garden State.”
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