Broadway BE80 report.....

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I was in two minds whether to post this because - to put it mildly - things did not quite turn out as I had hoped. But there were some good points, and it was a very good learning experience for me (i.e. never trust Jensen over a fence!)

Dressage was OK-ish - Ruy Fonseca was trying his best to run everyone over in the warm up :D but we prevailed and Jensen was going quite nicely. Sadly when we went into the arena i found it was waterlogged and covered in mole hills - so we squelched down the centre line and tripped our way around :D left canter transition is still my bete noire and unfortunately the corner where the transition was required was the worst in the arena - cue no left canter. Sigh, thanks Jensen! 38.3 was more generous than I’d been expecting....

SJ was incredibly easy, as you’d expect at an 80. Jensen pinged over the fences like they weren’t there, including the more visually scary ones.....except for fence 2, an innocuous little fence that he decided to duck out at. I was so cross with him and me that we jumped the rest in double quick time.... 4 to add

And then the XC - oh dear. Again, as you’d expect at an 80, nothing bad on the course - there was a brush fence with one stride to a teeny B element which I thought he might not like, a hanging log which needed firm steering as it was relatively narrow, and a hay wagon of the type that Jensen hates.

Set off over the first and his eyes were out on stalks, I always seem to forget how green he is! I rode firmly at the first and that was fine, up the slope to the second which was a tiny log between two bushes - and he ducked out. It was entirely my fault, the fence was so easy I hadn’t given it a second thought and just pointed him at it assuming he would pop over it. Hmmm.

Over fence 3, then uphill again to a feeder box fence - he caught sight of the fence as we came over the ridge and shot off sideways, didn’t like the look of it at all. Another 20. Regained control, sat up, kicked and steered, over we went. Hay wagon, brush double fence, scary bright pallisade, ditch and rail - all fine. Galloped uphill to another easy bench fence - slid out sideways, no thank you very much.

At that point of course we should have been eliminated but XC control were very generous (or maybe couldn’t count!) and let me carry on - I was listening to the tannoy and watching out for red flags or anxious fence judges but nothing!

The wall and the hanging log were fine - and then he did it again at a ordinary half roll-top thing before the water. Through the water, two more fences and we had finished - it was great to finish, obviously we were eliminated at the end!

You will be asking yourself what on earth I was doing - once he had done it once I should have ridden EVERY fence as I did the ‘difficult’ ones and we would have been fine. Believe me, I am wondering the same thing in hindsight!!! I really thought that as he settled into the round he would become more relaxed and less slippery, clearly that wasn’t the case and I am a total idiot! An expensive learning experience.....

My aim for the day was a double clear and I suppose I can take a little consolation from the fact that if I hadn’t ridden like a wet lettuce that would have been very very easy for us to achieve - Jensen has loads of scope and loves his jumping, so now I know what a little **** he can be then we will try again with more purpose.

I have got a lovely pic of him going over an XC fence but I can’t add it on my phone, I’ll try later. Onwards and upwards..... and shoulders back, leg on and steer at EVERY SINGLE FENCE!
 
As you say, a learning experience..... but well done for being so honest with your write up, that alone takes some chutzpah after what clearly was a rather dismal xc.
Onwards, and take the lessons about concentration and focus with you :)
 
The thing about making mistakes is even though it sucks at the time, sometimes it's the strongest way to learn something :)

Well done on completing the course, you will both have learnt a lot from the whole day and it's always good to have a nice pic :D
 
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Perversely I actually enjoyed the day despite the failures - even the XC, when he did jump properly he was amazing :) now I know I cannot take my eye off him for a second (metaphorically) i sincerely hope things will improve very quickly....!!
 
Love Broadway, such a nice event. For what it’s worth I don’t think your horse is anything that needs an asterick. I had to ride every single fence there when I did the 80 on Basil, it was also his first one. We would have had multiple stops if it hadn’t been for lots of encouragement and forward riding at every fence. And he wasn’t an arse, he was as honest as they come.

It doesn’t sound like yours is either, just a typical green Horse who needs some hand holding at his first big event.
 
I wondered how Broadway was going today. Well done for getting round.

Just before Lucinda Prior-Palmer was starting her Olympic round, someone ran up to her and said "Remember, ride every fence as though he might stop." Good advice.
 
As others have said, a learning experience and you did get round

At the heights I’m jumping (60) I’ve realised that the jumping isn’t the thing that needs work, or that the horses find difficult, it’s the rest of it! Leaving the others, moving away from the start box, being out on course on their own. Those are the bits for me to work on now, although not as easy to emulate that outside of a comp.

I think just having gotten him round is a positive thing for you!
 
Bernster you have hit the nail on the head - ‘the rest of it’ can only be practised at a competition really, and that is what J needs to see more of? He was much better than I expected with the SJ yesterday - the arena was surrounded by trade stands - but the XC was off into the wild unknown by himself :D

It is flipping expensive even doing unaff, but I’m determined to plug away, keeping taking him out and prove to him that he can trust me :)
 
Well done!!

My girls had a XC clinic over a BE course. The trainer said that the horses often stop at the silly little logs/fences after jumping bigger efforts. No idea why but she said it happened all the time. Sure enough the ponies both ducked out at a nothing log after a big sharks-tooth thingy.

She said horses seem to get confused by little fences after jumping big ones!

Good luck for next time. x
 
Well done, the first one under your belt even if it did not go as well as you hoped it was successful in many ways, lots to work on before the next one and much more idea of what is required, remember the positive parts and don't look back at the rest.
 
Sounds like you had a great day. Inspiring for the rest of us to get out there and have a go.
 
Well done you! Sounds a lot like my first event last year (mine was unaff 70cm @ Borde Hill). We were also eliminated XC for cumulative refusals, also at silly fences!! Reading your report brought back a lot of memories - and lessons learned!

First one is always the hardest with so many unknown quantities, so you both did so well to complete!

My second event after our first disaster was so much better and we sailed around the XC with no issues, so go ahead and enter your next one! Looking forward to reading the report ;)
 
Well done on a respectable dressage score (considering the canter issues) and a good SJ (4 faults is good in my book!). It sounds like the xc was a great learning experience, I'm sure the next event will be another story :)
 
Thank you all very much, I made my post feeling pretty stupid and pathetic but you have made some lovely comments which are really appreciated :)

I have got 3 unaff ODEs in succession now, hopefully to fine-tune our XC steering before it goes on record forever again :D
 
Echo, what the others have all said, well done for such an honest report ! :-) and I totally feel for you, having had very similar issues with my horse, he has all the scope in the world, but eyes on stalks around the first ever ODE XC course , looking at everything going on around him but totally unfocused on the jumps and felt like I had to carry him round the whole way- we did also have two stops when i ran out of puff!)

he is improving, our key was to get him focussing on me and really in front of my leg all the time, but I also cannot yet take my eye off the ball, am hoping with more "match practice" it will suddenly become easy and it will just be point and shoot ..... LOL

good luck for the next one and enjoy the highlights of the fabulous feeling he gave you over the good jumps and having completed the day with both of you in one piece :-)
 
Well done on persevering, babies arent always the easiest!!!

Just a side note though for future reference, You shouldn't have been eliminated after your 3rd refusal so were well within your rights to carry on, the rules state 3 refusals at the same obstacle is elimination OR 4 refusals round the course is elimination.... So you still had one left! Its all in the BE rule book, 3 refusals on course only comes into play at Novice level and above at 105 and below its 4 :)

Best of luck for your next outing!
 
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