After World War II, he rode the horse Senta at the international show jumping competition CHIO Aachen in 1952.
Schulten-Baumer worked as a manager in the steel and cement industry,[5] and was a member of the board of the "Roheisen-Verband" (Pig iron association).
[6] Beginning in 1986, he began to work with Nicole Uphoff, and a year later she first won a Grand Prix Spécial in Lausanne, with Rembrandt.
He also helped develop and train a number of promising young dressage horses, including Gigolo FRH whom he purchased in 1989 and was successfully shown by Werth to four gold and two silver Olympic medals.
[5] At the 2005 CHIO Aachen he was awarded the "Silbernes Pferd" (Silver Horse) for his lifetime achievement[16] and the German Rider's Cross in Gold.
Award in recognition of his work selecting and training talented young horses for dressage and show jumping.
[5] Twice, in 1999 and 2002, he won the Otto-Lörke-Preis of the Deutsches Olympiade-Komitee für Reiterei for the most successful rising young Grand Prix horse of the year.