Thursday, October 29, 2009
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Monday, October 19, 2009
Monday, October 12, 2009
This past saturday was Radnor, Freddy's first recognized event. I had so much fun and I am super pleased with how he did.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
On Sunday I went with Jac to audit a dressage clinic that her trainer was organizing up in Coopersburg. The clinician was Ulf Wadeborn, a Swedish Grand Prix rider who operates out in California. It was definitely interesting to watch and a lot of what he said confirmed what I have been working on with Fred. I didn’t get to see that many riders but what I really liked was that he emphasized the training scale. He focused a lot on getting the horse ‘aligned’, meaning even on both reins. I find that when I get Fred truly aligned that everything gets really easy. I have an easier time maintaining my position and am able to ride smoother more efficient transitions.
I was feeling inspired so I decided to give Freddy a good flat school on Monday. It went really really well! I ran through pretty much all of the training level movements and he was great. I think that I sometimes cheat a little bit and use too much hand and sort of curl him up at the beginning of my ride, and then later have to really kick him up to get him to take a real contact. This time I started out trotting on a long rein and focused on keeping my hand absolutely stock still and just riding forward and rebalancing with my seat and leg when necessary. Well wouldn’t ya know he stretched right down and started looking for my hand almost right away. I trotted him around long and low for a few minutes then did a quick canter in both directions before really putting him to work. Once I shortened up my reins and got him to where I felt like he was aligned and taking an even contact on both reins I did some transitions just to work on getting him to really push from behind. He’s getting to the point where he really jumps into the trot (or canter) when I ask, which is great. Because he was being so good with the transitions, I decided to work a little bit on getting his poll up and getting him into a bit more of an uphill balance. It’s going to be a long process before he’s strong enough to really maintain that sort of carriage but he tried for me and was able to hold it for a couple strides at a time. He feels the most uphill right after we do a transition up to the canter so I try to memorize that feeling and duplicate it elsewhere in my ride. Really the hardest thing for me is to not allow him to pull on me. When he gets tired or lazy he will try and just lay on the bit and have me carry him. Sometimes he will even dive down and really grab onto the bit and yank, which is really quite naughty. Every time he does it I know I need to boot him forward with my leg but I also have to remember to soften my hand and not give him anything to grab onto. This is especially hard when he gets crooked and starts to fall in on a circle and hang on my inside hand. I want to give with my inside rein, but if I do he just swings his head to the outside and falls in more. He does this to the left a lot which is weird because he was always weaker to the right so I focused a lot on working him in that direction and now he is being more difficult to the left.
I also practiced the stretchy circle with him in both directions and that was excellent. As long as he’s relaxed he stretches really well, but it’s when he gets distracted or tense that we can’t get it done. The other thing that I worked on a little bit was the trot lengthening. I haven’t really worked much on that with him but I think it was pretty good. I have to be careful not to let him just get quick but as long as I really pay attention to my rhythm he’s fine. He doesn’t have a very big trot so there’s only so much we can lengthen but I think it’s good enough for training level.
Yesterday when I rode I jumped him a little bit finally. I really haven’t been jumping him because his canter needed so much work, but now that the canter is better I figured his jumping would be better as well. Show jumping is really our weakest phase. Partly because the turning was difficult for him sometimes and partly because I tend to anticipate the fences a little bit and cause him to rush the last few strides and take off long. Because he’s so good, I sometimes forget that he’s only 5 and he’s green and needs me to help him sometimes. I just set up 3 fences in the ring, but I did it in such a way that I had a lot of options. I set 2 fences 3 strides apart on the far long side and then I set another fence on the diagonal on the opposite side of the ring coming off of a somewhat short turn. I started out just trotting back and forth over a little vertical just trying to do it quietly and land trotting and halt on a straight line. He was a little excited at first and didn’t want to wait. I eventually put the fence up a little bit to about 2’9” and did the same thing and he actually crashed through it one time because he tried to take off long and I wouldn’t let him. He paid much better attention after that and decided maybe I knew what I was talking about. I made up a couple of little courses and cantered him around and he was pretty good, but still wanting to rush the last 2 or 3 strides. I started counting out loud to remember my rhythm and that made all the difference. We’re only jumping novice height so really all I have to do is get a good canter and keep the rhythm the same and even if we don’t get the exact distance we want it’ll be OK because the fences are low.
I feel good about this weekend at Radnor. I was going to go to the barn early today before work and jump him around again but it was cold and rainy and windy when I woke up so I decided against it. I’ll see if I can make it out tomorrow before it gets dark and then I will flat him again on Friday and run through my test a couple of times. I am actually a little bit nervous about this weekend because I haven’t done a recognized event in so many years. I’ve already started packing my stuff because I don’t want to forget anything. Mainly I just want it to be a good confidence building experience for him so that is my only goal for the weekend. A nice quiet dressage test and clean jumping, and if we place that’s just icing on the cake.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Monday, September 21, 2009
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
When I went to try the trot poles he seemed like he didn't understand the exercise. He kept jumping over them every time no matter how nice of a trot I had coming in. Then he'd get all upset when I'd try to correct him so I decided it wasn't worth it and just put the rails on the ground. He still wanted to get quick the first couple of times through but then he finally got better and it actually improved his trot some. I would trot him over the poles then do a 10m half circle and come back down over them the other way. The 10m circle forced me to sit up and ride my outside aids around the turn, then the poles forced him to be a little more active in his steps. Then when we went to the canter he started out much lighter in the bridle than normal. I also can tell that I am getting stronger because I can hold him on the circle with just my leg while keeping my hands an "even pair" as Jane says. I also felt like my body was stacked more correctly. I was reading the new ride with your mind clinic by Mary Wanless and there was a rider in there who had a position really similar to my default. She was round in her back with her leg out in front and leaning back somewhat braced against the horse. During my ride today I tried to focus really hard on keeping my body stacked upright. One thing that really helped was dropping my knee down and closing my thigh against the saddle a little bit. I wasn't gripping with my thigh but keeping a little pressure there helped me keep my leg in the correct position. With my leg in the right spot it was a lot easier to control my upper body. Rather than think about sitting up at leaning back I just thought about opening my chest and keeping my shoulders over my hips and my eyes up. I think in the process of opening my chest my ribcage also lifted slightly but not to the point that I was sitting back behind the motion. I could really feel the difference at the canter because it didn't feel like I was pumping with my seat the way it often does, it just felt like I was right with the motion and balanced. I am very excited to continue to improve on this because I think it is going to make a hugeee difference.
I called Boyd today and left him a message. Hopefully we will be scheduling a lessons for next week on tuesday or wednesday since I am off from work those days. Tomorrow I am heading over to the bucks county horse park to meet Rachel and go for a hack/maybe school some XC fences.
Monday, July 13, 2009
on Friday I started out just riding forward, abandoning everything else, to generate some energy. Then I took a little bit of a feel. He started out sort of sitting just behind the bit and every time I put my leg on he would quicken his tempo rather than take a contact. The first thing I did was think about my position. My leg always wants to creep forward so I made sure my leg was underneath me, my hands were low and out in front of me and my chest was lifted. Then I did a little bit of counter bend to get him straighter and to remind myself to ride the OUTSIDE of the horse and not just the inside. That helped a little bit and he started to stretch down a little bit more. Then I started to do some transitions. I tried my best to push him forward to a walk, walk a few steps, then go right back to trot. This helped A LOT. What's weird is that he actually did this better to the right which is normally his weaker side. When I would sit up and close my thighs I could feel him bring his butt up underneath himself and push into a walk rather than falling into it. Then when I would ask him to trot again, his butt was already underneath him so I got some really nice trot work out of him. As long as I can hold my position he maintains a balanced trot but the second I tip forward or draw my hands back at all he loses his impulsion and dives down on his forehand.
At the canter I wanted to use the counter-canter to get him sitting a little more. This is something I've done with Jane before. I rode the way it goes in one of the prelim dressage tests sort of. I'd pick up the canter on my 20m circle then do a half circle and go down the long side then transition to a trot before the corner, pick up the other lead and do the same thing the other way. It definitely challenged me to hold my body straight and keep riding him forward. If I tried to steer him with my hands rather than my seat and leg he would break to trot. I thought it really improved his canter after doing that exercise a few times. I think I rode him about 5 minutes too long because towards the end he started to get a little fussy and inattentive. Still overall it was a productive ride.
Yesterday he came out ready to go to work right from the start. This time I started right away in walk trying to establish a connection the way I've worked on in the past with Jane. I bend him a little to the outside until he softened then kept a firm contact on my outside rein and pushed him out with my inside leg so that he was bent slightly to the inside. Then he was giving me a nice swinging forward walk and was stretching down so I decided we were ready to trot. Well the first time I asked for trot he tensed his back a little and raised his head and basically just fell apart a bit. Rather than bring him back and try again I just rode forward. I knew that transitions would just make him more tense so I just rode forward and tried to reestablish the connection the same way I had done it at the walk. To the left it was easier and fairly immediately he softened and stretched over his topline and started opening up his stride a little more. To the right it's much more difficult. He's a bit weaker on his right hind so he tends to hang on my right rein and fall to the inside. Every time I try to give with my inside hand he just swings his head to the outside and falls in no matter how much inside leg I have on. I've realized that he's just really not strong enough to carry himself so I can't just throw away the inside rein altogether. I'll soften for a few strides and push him into my outside rein and when we start to lose it I'll tale a little feel on the inside and reposition him so that he's bent slightly in again. It's just really really hard for me to let go of that right rein because I can't hold him straight without it. I need to get some help with that because Jane would always just yell at me to let go of my inside rein but that's really unhelpful because he can't hold himself up on his own yet.
At the canter I did some canter-walk-canter traisitions on the circle and WOW did that make a difference. After doing it a few times he was jumping into the canter, pushing off his hocks and he felt very very balanced and light in front. We had some lovely transitions to walk and as long as I didn't draw back with my hands he continued stepping under all the way through the transition. It seems that transitions are the thing that really works for him to get him pushing from behind more. I just need to keep working on my position so that I am not getting in his way. I am very excited about this progress.
Volunteering.
Amanda was also there volunteering so I talked to her for a bit. She said that she just finished up a week at Phillip Dutton Camp. Lucky girl! Sounds like she had a great time and is looking forward to moving up to training level in the not too distant future. She also filled me in on some of the goings on over in sleeper-land. Sounds like it's pretty busy over there but everyone's having a good time and having some success.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
schedule
I was also thinking about what events and whatnot I want to enter in the next couple of months. I am still unsure about what I am going to be doing as far as lessons (except that I will def get Kate to help with the dressage) but I'm still just going to make a tentative list of things I am thinking about entering
July
29- Cecil County Jumper Show (Hopeful jumper/level II jumper)
August
2- Ryan Wood Clinic
14-16- Waredaca (YEH and maybe also Novice or NT)
September
13- Bucks County HT (Novice)
or
18-19- Marlborough (Novice)
26-27- Serra Valley (YEH)
October
10- Radnor (Training?)
15-16- Fair Hill (YEH Champs...ya know cuz of course we're gonna qualify lol)
or
17- New Jersey HT (Training?)
I guess that's about it. Now I need to quit procrastinating and get back to the real reason I'm up at 3am...writing my paper for International Marketing...ughh.
gridwork
I decided last night that I wanted to do grids with Freddy today so I moved the jumps around and set up a simple grid, x-18 feet-vertical-18 feet-oxer, going across the diagonal. He warmed up pretty well except for spooking violently at ::gasp:: the gate laying on its side! I took down the gate jump but didn't feel like moving it to the side so I just left the gate laying on the ground. He had a fit over it so I made him trot back and forth over it until he got over himself.
He went through the grid a few times with it set at about 2'6-2'9 then I put the back rail of the oxer up and had it set at about 3'. He did that well so I put it up to 3'3. When he breezed right through that I decided to be ambitious and put it up another hole. Mind you I have not jumped this high since I had Cruz. He went right through like it was nothing. He didn't even feel like he was trying! I wish someone had been there to take pictures but I am sure this is the first of many times he will jump a 3'6" fence. Still, I am very excited that he is finally becoming a "real horse" lol. The pic up top is what it looked like the last time I went through.

And here is the man enjoying the hay buffet outside of his stall. It's good to be Fred lol.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
After I was done riding I made a quick trip to bit of britain to get some fly spray and I saw Syd. She congratulated me on our win this weekend :) Mary Schlachter was there working also and she asked me if I could volunteer this weekend at DVCTA. As long as I don't have to work I'm going to do it, I'll just have to give her a call and let her know tomorrow when I get my schedule.
I had e-mailed Doug Payne a few days ago about some lessons but unfortunately he is too busy to take any students right now. He referred me to Sinead Halpin so I might be schedueling a lesson with her sometime in the near future. I've never met her but I like what I've seen on her website so we shall see. I just want to really work on improving my riding so I can give Freddy the best shot possible at reaching his potential (and mine too of course!).
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Fair Hill July 5, 2009
I had about an hour between my dressage and SJ so I went ahead and got his bell boots and galloping boots on then let him stand on the trailer and eat hay until it was time to tack up. When I was hacking up the road to the SJ area I remembered why I love eventers so much. Every single rider I passed along the way smiled and wished me luck. We have such a great community in this sport and while time are changing a bit it is still about good horsemanship and sportsmanship over competition. Fred was very relaxed all the way up the road until we got out of the woods. I asked him to trot as soon as we hit the grass and his head shot up and I felt his whole body tense up. There was a little dip in the path and he slammed on the brakes and tried to whirl around, the little booger! I kicked him firmly forward, which he ignored, so he got a couple of taps behind my leg with my crop. That made him move forward and just as suddenly as it started his little tantrum was over. I know he wasn't afraid of anything, this is just what he does every now and then to test me. He thinks life's quite funny and wants to see if I'll allow him to misbehave. Once we got up to the SJ warmup area he trotted around on the buckle completely relaxed as if nothing had just happened. He warmed up well although I kept seeing long spots. I didn't worry too much about it though because he was forward and relaxed which were my main concerns. Syd was the ring steward and she called me over and said she was sending Sally in the ring and then me.
When we entered the ring he definitely "woke up" a little bit. He got all wide-eyed and snorty as I trotted him in and picked up my left lead canter to approach the first jump. Once we got over the first fence I think he realized what we were doing and settled right down to business. I still need to work on not pulling him around the turns with my inside hand. To the left we're ok but since he's a bit weaker on his right hind we were sort of swinging around the right hand turns with his shounders drifting left. For the most part he clocked right around the course like it was nothing although he did have a peek at the third fence, a good sized oxer with arches underneath it. We jumped clean and other than sort of gunning him to the last oxer I think we had a pretty smooth round.
We headed over to XC next and I had 3 or 4 riders to wait for before it was my turn. At least 2 of the riders before me had refusals so I did start to get a little nervous as I stood there waiting. That quickly disappeared as soon as I got on course. Fred was on fire! I rode every fence like he was going to stop but there was no question. He clocked right around like a pro! I had several people comment to me afterwards about how smooth we looked going around. He'd never jumped a trakehner before and he didn't even hesitate one bit. He cantered right in the water too. I was very very proud, he made it so easy and fun. Fair Hill's course is pretty straightforward because the terrain is so flat so I think we'll enter a recognized event for his next outing and see how he does with that. I think that Training level by the end of the year is definitely doable. We're also going to enter the last 2 YEH in area II and see if we can qualify for the championship since it's right at fair hill this fall.
As if I wasn't already on cloud 9 after our 2 lovely clear rounds, when I got back to the trailer my mom and Jac informed me that I was in FIRST PLACE! Even though I only got a 37.5 on my dressage that was enough to win my division! Not only did my horse totally impress me but he brought home a blue ribbon, can't beat that!
The next few weeks should be interesting as I'll be trying lessons with some new trainers (my new BO and possibly Doug Payne and/or Boyd), XC schooling, going to a jumper show, and plugging away at our dressage work. Stay tuned!
Introduction
After I sold Cruz I decided to look for a young horse to bring along. This is when my parents cut me loose financially on the horse front. The deal was that if I sold Cruz, I could keep the money to put towards my riding expenses. My instuctor at the time told me about a friend of hers who was selling a nice 3yr old Hungarian WarmbloodX named Nick. I went to have a look and was very impressed with him. He'd only been under saddle for 6 weeks but he was W/T/C and trotting over poles and a small X. He was nicely put together, a super mover, and extremely quiet. Although he was a bit small for me (15.3hh and I am 5'10"), I decided to go for it and bought him. Once I started having lessons on him it became evident how little he really knew. He also had a somewhat stubborn attitude when asked to work harder than he really wanted to. I remember clearly one lessons where we were doing a gymnastic exercise and he bucked me off not once but TWICE because I was asking him to use his back end a bit more. I did 2 small events with him and it became evident to me that he did not what to be an event horse. He was such a nice mover that he'd win the dressage, but he just had no interest in the cross country. I could barely keep him cantering on course! After working with him for nearly a year I decided to sell him. A friend of mine who does the hunters suggested that I bring him to her trainer as they specialize in selling young hunters. They loved him so I sent him there and in 6 weeks he was sold. He is now successfully competing in the 'A' circuit hunters and his owners absolutely adore him.
After I sold Nick I decided that I would go back to thoroughbreds. I've always loved them and I just think they make the best event horses. My first stop when looking was at Phyllis Dawson's where I tried 7 horses. All of them were 'nice' but nothing really stood out to me. One day I was just scrolling through the ads on Equine.com and a picture of a big chestnut caught my attention. He was big, clean, in good flesh, and stood up nicely to show his conformation. Right away I was impressed with the owner's professionalism to have appropriate photos for her ads. Even though she didn't have any under saddle photos, something about this horse was calling to me so I made the 2 hour drive out to Harrisburg to see him. The first time I saw him go there were some things that I didn't like about him. He didn't have such an impressive trot and he sometimes kicked out when the trainer asked him to canter. For whatever reason I just saw something there. I came out and rode him a second time about a week later and decided that I wanted to have him vetted. The exam went great so I bought him a few days later. Freddy and I have had some ups and downs over the past year and a half including injuries, bad feet, and weight issues, but everything is coming together now. For a while I questioned if my gut feeling about this horse had been right but he is now proving to me that it was.