Huge thanks to Cabin Branch Tack Shop for sponsoring! |
Oh yeah, & I moved Encore up to Training level there.
*insert pause for giddiness*
But let's not get ahead of ourselves.
I did have the same problem I had at FenRidge in October: our jumping time was 40 minutes after our dressage time. Sigh. Serious pitfall of one-day event. But I resolved to just be as efficient as I could & this time, I was not going to short-change my horse's warmup no matter what. I certainly couldn't have pulled it all off without the help of once-again awesome crew!
Thank cod I was able drive down the afternoon before to walk the XC course, since I was riding my dressage test at 8:30 in the morning. I walked it twice before it got dark, decided it looked fun, with great questions, & just right for Encore. Thank you, Andrea!!!
After a night with good friends & as much sleep time as could be managed, we made our way back to the Park & got ready for dressage. Warmup was uneventful but not spectacular. I'd use the same words to describe our test. Encore got tense at entry & I tried to ride it out but he never let the tension go; his trot work was choppy & tight, but he did give me some canter that I quite liked! Baby steps. So our 39 was very fair.
From there it was pretty much a mad dash to change outfits & get back to SJ warmup ASAP. I was extremely glad I decided to put his studs in before dressage. It was a bit nervewracking hoping Encore wouldn't step on himself, even though they were only my small road studs, but he was nice enough to keep his feet away from each other & it was a lifesaver.
I kept it short & sweet in the jumping warmup as fitness was my main concern. He really hadn't been back in work after his feet healed for much more than a month, so I was on high alert for signs of muscle fatigue. Not that you could tell when he turned into a jump-seeking missile after entering the ring. His own feet couldn't even keep up.
We did make that crazy time though & only demolished the first one...because I stared at the stupid jump. Will I never learn? It was a tight, extremely roll-back-y course that caught us both a bit off guard & Encore has not mastered that technique yet.
That day I learned I have the most honest, try-ing-est, generous horse ever. Even though we lost most of our impulsion in the turns & approached some jumps with me squeezing like mad & Encore at nearly a jog, he never ONCE tried to runout, refuse, & he tucked his hoofies up over each one with intense care. By the second half of the course, he had it figured out!
I was very proud & let him take a long, slow walk to catch his breath before XC. You can see the pro photos here, thanks to High Time Photography.
After jumping a single wide bench in warmup there, we headed out to the start box in the middle of the steeplechase track. Encore already had his game face on & practically dragged me to the starter. The course had a bit of everything & a LOT of terrain, so I was very interested to see what kind of ride I would get. At the same time, I was prepared to walk off if anything felt off.
I'm very sad the photographers did not capture any of the first four jumps. They were all single fly jumps, including a table whose width the horse did not see until they were very close & a tall bench, which I personally hate. Aside from a very small dip, they were all on a pretty level stretch.
I can jump whatevs, mom, no worries |
Then we went downhill to approach the little coffin at 5, which you can see in the photos. From the elephant at the end of my reins, I gathered that his butt muscles were beginning to tire. I did an interesting tree-maze-dance to bring him back to a trot & rebalance before turning to the first coffin element.
He peeked, but with encouragement, he jumped through & then we picked our way down the steep hill to the GINORMOUSLY MASSIVE trakehener at 6. I don't generally have a problem riding them & have never had an issue in competition. At a schooling, sometimes I forget I'm supposed to use my legs, but on course, I'm generally good. This thing was big, though. BIG.
I kept my eye up, applied all my aids, but Encore skidded to stop. It didn't feel like a scared stop though, & he's jumped large ones before, it felt like an "wow, that is a really big effort & I'm not sure I've got that much in the tank" stop. My red flag waved, but I decided to let him have one more try. We gave it a big, positive ride, but he stopped exactly the same way.
I raised The Hand & walked off. I was 100% certain he could do the rest of the jumps on the course without a problem; he had already shown me he had the heart & scope & we had previously practiced all the questions & then some.
But it was long & it was hilly & my game, VERY professional worker-bee of a horse told me loud & clear that his muscles were not up to it. I may have been able to stuff him over the trakehener & continue, but to what end? I really did not want to meet the EMT's that day, nor did I want to scare or possibly injure my horse. They don't call me Safety Nazi for nothing.
Big picture: I thought it was a great place to end his year. We weren't able to meet the conditioning demands in the time we had, but that is easy to fix & a good winter project. The skills are there, now we just finesse. If I ever have any money to compete again!
So we'll spend our cold months in the woods, trotting up & down hills & enjoying the trails, after both our bodies & brains get a good break. I don't know if we'll get to run any horse trials next year or not, but I still get to spend the winter with my TRAINING horse & that is, as longtime readers know, a pretty big damn deal.
Congrats on your training horse! You guys are very inspiring.
ReplyDeleteSafety first is no joke. ;D
ReplyDeleteWell done - great way to move up and end on a good note!
Thanks -- we certainly still have lots of hiccups, but I felt overall it was a good schooling experience at the level (which totally counts for me!!!!).
ReplyDeleteYou guys did great. That SJ course was apparently the same as one of the recognized courses used earlier this year, and had some serious rollbacks in it, and their trakehners are super intimidating if you ask me! So that you made it that far is great, and shows great horsemanship for pulling up when you needed to.
ReplyDeleteWe will also be training this winter and prepare to come out guns blazing and debut at Novice next spring! Woowhee!
Britt, I saw your packet and was going to try and come say hi, but dang, I never had 4 seconds!
ReplyDeleteI have ridden that N trakehener many times and it is good sized but it rides well if you keep your eye up the hill. That T beast was just a massive increase in width + huge log, wow!!!!
I never did get a chance to walk the SJ course completely, it wasn't set up all the way the day before, so I only got to walk the first 5 jumps. I appreciate Marc using big numbers!
Can't wait to see y'all get out and roll at N!!
I tried to catch your rides too, but I think I just missed your SJ round. And I didn't get to talk the SJ course either, just watched people ride it and hoped for the best!
ReplyDeleteThe timing does seem pretty tricky at these 1 day shows, and I have NEVER seen a bigger schooling show at CHP- I counted and in BN alone there were over 50 entries! That's a busy busy day at the Horse Park.
We will definitely see you next year!
I was happy to see people turnout, but I think overall entries were down a bit that late in the year. Hardly any stabling was used according to friend who kept horse there.
ReplyDeleteMaybe just us morning people thought it was scarce, I'm super glad to hear that BN had such a good turnout!!!
Congrats on the upgrade! Too bad about the Trakehner...you will be more than ready in the spring.
ReplyDeleteThanks, T -- we WILL be ready. Probably still broke, but ready!!! HA!
ReplyDelete