Pedro the Ringmaster at the FEI World Equestrian Games 2018 in Tryon, N.C. Photo by Christophe Taniere/Courtesy FEI
It sounded like he was being dive-bombed by sea-planes when I spoke with Pedro Cebulka last week.
“That’s another one coming over now,” he’d say with a laugh as our conversation about his life and times had to be put on hold again and again.
He and his wife, Janet, were staying at a cabin belonging to some friends on a camper-van trip around Vancouver Island in British Columbia just a few days before heading back to their Canadian home on the lake at Invermere. The man known in the equestrian world as “Pedro the Ringmaster” has an insatiable lust for travel, and simply loves being on the road.
To those who watch him turning chaos into order at so many of the major events on the international equestrian circuit it seems near-impossible that he has time to do anything else. But this multi-faceted character has significant business interests, a second home in Mexico where he and Janet live a different lifestyle, a great passion for music and for animal welfare, and a powerful sense of social responsibility. It’s quite difficult to keep up with him to be honest, but I give it my best shot.
“I have a Spanish first name, Polish last name, German and Canadian passports, a Dutch wife who is now also Canadian, and two Canadian kids who also have German passports, so I’m really mixed up!” he begins.
However Pedro Cebulka isn’t his birth name. He was born Peter Cebulka, but changed it to the Spanish version after falling in love with the Latin outlook on life on his first visit to Brazil in 1976 at the age of 24.
By then he had already been very successful in the world of banking and was on course for a university degree in Economics. But as he said when we spoke, “It wasn’t what I was meant for.”
He was only 15 years old when he took up a three-year apprenticeship at Deutsche Bank before moving to Hamburg, where his career really took off over the next five years.
“I was good at stocks and bonds, and I worked my way up to the Stock Exchange,” he says.
But, in his own inimitable way, Pedro also had a side-line.
“A friend of mine had a lovely pub in Lueneburg, so I worked in the bank five days a week, and on Saturday morning, I was a bartender in the pub, and on Sunday morning I was a waiter,” he says. “I had Sunday afternoon off and then on Sunday evening I was a bartender again, and I learned a lot from those days—how to communicate with all kinds of people from all walks of life, how to make them happy and comfortable and how to deal with them if there was a problem.”
A trip to Brazil dramatically changed the course of his career in 1976.
“After three weeks there I decided to hell with Economics, the world is too beautiful, so I stayed in South America for five months, and I never looked back!” he says. “I saw Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands, Machu Picchu, I learned Spanish, and I met many wonderful people”.
With his new-found taste for freedom, he set off the following year on a world tour with a group of friends, and on his way through Banff in Canada, a chance meeting would turn his life in another new direction.
“It was August 1977, and I met a Swiss guy who said he was working at a new equestrian centre called Spruce Meadows, and that if I wanted a job, I could work there as a carpenter/helper for a few days, so I did that,” explains Cebulka. “And when we were laid off, the riding master Albert Kley, who came from the same area as me in Germany, said I could help out at the show coming up in September, so I stayed and worked on maintenance and other things around the showgrounds.”
By then, Ron Southern, founder of Spruce Meadows and Chairman of the Calgary-based ATCO Group, had encountered the enthusiastic young German, and they formed a strong bond.
“He treated me like a stepson,” Cebulka says.
It was only the second year of the now world-renowned Masters Tournament, and Cebulka’s multiple skills were called into play as an interpreter for visiting teams and their crews, as an announcer in German and Spanish, and as a course-builder. Over the next five years, he would divide his time between helping out at Spruce Meadows and working as a tour guide.
“I was a guide for several years in South America, Central America, South East Asia and in many exotic countries where I could help German tourists feel at home. It was a wonderful time,” he recalls.
During this period, he also expanded his course-building expertise under the guiding hand of the legendary British course-designer Pam Carruthers, who was responsible for the development of Spruce Meadows in the early years. Both Curruthers and Ron Southern encouraged Cebulka to go to Europe for experience, and in 1979 he assisted at the FEI European Championships in Rotterdam (NED) before being invited to help at Hickstead (GBR). He remembers one particularly frenetic afternoon at the big British event.
“The course crew always took a break around 2:30 p.m., and one afternoon myself and a lady called Penny, who was about 85 years old, were the only ones in the arena when a rider came in,” he says. “He had a refusal and destroyed an early fence, so I had to run over and put it together again, and then he had another refusal on the other side of the arena, and I was running around like crazy to find poles and trying to keep things going. And then he came down to the last fence and ploughed through that, and it was a huge job to get it back in place before the next horse came in—all while the rest of the crew were having their afternoon tea!”
Curruthers told him there was no point in going on to Dublin Horse Show looking for work.
“But after three days of pestering, Steve Hickey [Irish course designer] took me under his wing, and I had the best of times working with him!” says Cebulka. “It was all part of Ron Southern’s advice to stay open to new ideas. At many of the old shows they would say, ‘It’s tradition, we do it this way and we can’t change,’ but in Spruce Meadows, we borrowed the good ideas and always kept an open mind.”
From 1983 to 1985 Cebulka enjoyed some special years working full-time at Spruce Meadows and managing the Equitana (now Equi-Fair) trade show. He and his wife, Janet, were married in Hawaii in 1984, and their daughters, Stephanie and Jessica, arrived over the next two years. But in 1986 Pedro decided to leave Spruce Meadows for health reasons. He was burned out.
“I loved what I was doing, but physically it was too much,” he explains. “I’d start at 7 a.m. and work until midnight, and I had high blood pressure.”
He took up a job as a salesman with Fairmont Hot Springs Resort in the Rocky Mountains.
“I loved it because we were selling dreams to customers,” he says.
In 1988, he also got involved in a time-share business in Mexico, and then Don and Carol Seable invited Cebulka to become a partner in the Fairmont business. A whole new chapter of his life was opening up, and he would go on to become a land developer in his own right and would establish his own condominium management company. But he didn’t sever his connections with Spruce Meadows.
Asked to help at the in-gate as a starter for the horse shows, he jumped at the chance.
“They wanted someone who knew the riders, who was strong enough so they would be listened to, but not a little general yelling, because now he thinks he’s a policeman!” describes Cebulka.
Cebulka learned a lot from these early days in command of the arena gateway.
“It taught me to be kind but firm,” says the man who continues to show those two important qualities to this day.
I ask him if being so tall—at least 6-foot 3-inches—helps when he is trying to instil discipline into proceedings, and he laughs.
“Yes, size matters, but what I find now after 43 years doing this job is that 43 years matter! Someone once said anyone can be a superstar for one year, but the best athletes are on top over a long period of time. Like the Whitakers, like Nick (Skelton), like David Broome, like Ludger (Beerbaum). I’ve been doing this job a long time.”
He says he never found the job of getting riders into the ring promptly, or making sense out of chaotic prize-giving ceremonies or ceremonial occasions, a problem because his mantra to the riders is, “I’m here to help you.”
He had the ultimate pressure from the outset at Spruce Meadows with live TV demanding spot-on timing.
“That’s where my German background kicks in—I give the riders the countdown and it has to be done. If someone is late going in, I don’t say anything, but when they come out.”
He says that Mexican businessman and political advisor Alfonso Romo from the world-famous La Silla Stud in Monterrey tells a story about his first encounter with Pedro the Ringmaster.
“I was competing at Spruce Meadows, and I was a sponsor of a new building, so I was a VIP guest of honor, and this guy (Pedro) calls me in Spanish,” he says. “I’m a little bit late, just a minute or so, and when I come out he says to me very nicely, ‘Poncho, when you have the horse put away, can you come and see me? He says I’ve 50 riders here with 50 different systems of working their horses, and we have live TV. When you have your system, you do what you want, but when you are in my ring you do my system or you’re going home!”
Apparently Senor Romo didn’t do it again.
“If everyone is late, then the warm-up of 50 riders doesn’t work,” says Cebulka. “I don’t have time to say please. I learned from Pamela Carruthers to do it in military style, we are here to work and that’s it. I may come across as a bit harsh, but in essence the word is ‘now!'”
Cebulka says he’s doesn’t take it personally on the rare occasions that his instructions are ignored.
“And I’ve learned over the last six Olympics that they are like nothing else,” he says. “I’d rather have a rule broken then get a rider upset before they go in —the pressure they are under is incredible. But of course I have the TV director shouting at me, so it’s a very fine line.”
I ask about moments that stand out for him down the years.
“There are so many I get goosebumps just thinking about them!” he shares. “There was Ian Millar (CAN) at the Pan-American Games in 1999 when he came to the gate—with a broken foot—and I’m telling him there are four more to go and you are in fifth, then three to go and now you’re in third, the next rider had eight faults, and he was in silver, and then the last rider went and he had the gold. It felt so good; he’s been a friend to me from the beginning.”
“And the high five I got from Eric Lamaze (CAN)—I’ve been with him through good and bad—when he won the gold in Hong Kong (Beijing 2008 Olympic Games)! That evening I carried him to the media party on my shoulders and we were dancing and celebrating until four in the morning!
“Everyone is your friend when you win but for me a real friend is the one who is there when you are down, so Marcus Ehning (GER) at the European Championships in Mannheim (GER) in 2007 where Kuchengirl stopped again and again. He goes on the podium to get the team gold medal without jumping a single round and he’s crying with the medal around his neck. I’ll never forget that. But I’ll never forget him winning the Global Final with her in Rio (Brazil) a few years later either. It was a huge win, and I was there for that too—it was a great moment!”
I ask him about the extraordinary costumes he wears in his ringmaster role—what inspires them?
“It all started when I bought a pink hat in Hawaii, and people liked it. I went on to a military hat, a Mountie uniform, I put crazy things together wherever I went. In 2010, Animo sponsored my tails, and now I have a few of them designed by Franco Dragone. I rent some of them too—they make people smile!”
Pedro Cebulka is a man with a hugely positive outlook on life, and who lives it to the fullest. He tells me he’s keeping fit, eating healthily, and he cycles and he walks the family’s two rescue dogs every day. They were both strays. Santo attaching himself to Janet on Santa Barbara Beach in California in 2011 and Mexi latching on to them when they overnighted in a parking lot at the Mexican border 18 months ago.
“We are very much involved with dog rescue down in the Baja (California peninsula), and I do Master of Ceremonies at fundraisers to help out,” he shares.
I finally ask him about his thoughts on coping with the current situation created by the pandemic that continues to restrict, and affect, life and sport. He says he’s inspired by para-athletes because they have so much to put up with, but never complain.
“I can’t speak for people who have lost their jobs and everything.” he says. “It’s too hard. But there are also people who could do better but let themselves get dragged down—you have to try to be positive and make the best out of it. We send money down to friends in Mexico on the beach to help because it’s really tough for them. JustWorld (Cebulka is an Ambassador) is an official FEI partner and works with thousands of kids who need food, so if you can help with this or any other charities then do. The world needs everyone to do their best right now”.
Horse Illustrated is the magazine for people who are passionate about horses. Each issue offers advice on horse health and care, plus user-friendly training tips for both English and western riders and engaging lifestyle features for horse lovers.
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