CONTINUED from page 22 "I grew up in Florida and went to medical school in Miami," says the radiologist and director of PuddingStone Manor, an equine boarding and train- ing facility. "And I've had a lifelong love of horses." When she met her husband, neurosurgeon Lawrence Rapp, he was a little baffled by her fasci- nation with the four-legged creatures. "He liked the sexy riding boots, though," says Rapp, who strikes quite a pedigreed, Ralph Lauren-esque pose in her equestrian gear and casual barn jacket. The couple bought a house in Wabeek in Bloomfield Hills, close to the rest of the Rapp fami- ly; had - two- children, Forrest and Rachel, then ven- tured out to Clarkston, at Beverly's behest, where they now reside on 30 bucolic acres. "I was determined to breed Dutch Warmbloods, a line of Olympic-quality horses," says Rapp. So about 3 1/2 years ago, she built her farm in Davisburg — a large, modern barn, an indoor arena, a viewing gallery and lots of pasture surround- ing a 19th-century farmhouse, where her manager resides. She named it PuddingStone Manor, after dis- covering a pudding stone (a conglomer- ate of small stones that forms a larger boulder) in the farmhouse garden. "The training center is for serious competitors," says Rapp. "We fly in Olympic trainers and judges for clinics." Peggy Nagler, a dressage trainer and former consultant for EDS, spends time every day at PuddingStone. She boards her horses, Polo and Wettino, there. Polo works at an interna- tional level, and Wettino, a younger horse, is a Hanoverian, from Hanover, Germany. "In dressage (a French word for training), we work in complex movements and patterns," says Nagler. "There's an invisible communication between the rider and horse." "It's like dancing," adds Rapp. Typically, Rapp gets to the barn by 8 a.m. and works the six horses that are presently in training, including Uriah, a Dutch yearling she helped birth, and Lyric, her Grand Prix Dressage Schoolmaster from Europe. "I'm training Lyric for the Pan Am tri- als," she says. "I'll probably take him to Florida for the winter." In the afternoon, Rapp goes to the office to read X-rays. "It's important to me to fit everything in. And so Beverly Rapp manages to meld all of her passions into one very full life. The wife and moth- er, horsewoman and radiologist, nurtures and trains, grooms and diagnoses all in the course of a day. In dressage, there's an invisible communication between the rider and horse. Its like dancing. 24 • JULY 2002 • STYLE Al' THE JN