stilltrying
Well-Known Member
Instead I have a sore hand and a massive dent in my pride. : (
I decided to take the plunge and take the big ginger one to a hunter trial yesterday. Hes been feeling good, looks fantastic and weve done a little XC schooling and popped the odd fence at home.
Bit of background .several years ago, after enjoying a season of unaff eventing and then a season of BE intro we had problems. A collapse at an event followed by a veterinary workup, which showed nothing wrong. Saddle got changed, shoes came off, things went well for a bit but took a turn for the worse, which culminated in me face planting in spectacular style, after he committed to a fence and decided to stop too late, and subsequently hit the fence. I wrote an epic thread on here about what to do next, and the advice ranged from veterinary work up, retire or pts. I chose to retire him from jumping. Weve since dabbled a bit with BD, popped the odd fence at home, did the odd bit of XC schooling, and generally enjoyed life.
Anyway hes been feeling good, better than ever, and I do miss XC I have XC dreams! .and as our local BE venue was holding a hunter trial I thought we could enter the smallest class. After all 2ft6 isnt much of an effort for a 17h horse. We have been XC schooling a couple of times this summer and hes felt like his old self a bit too keen, but bold. After the rainfall weve had the ground conditions were perfect and the course was up to height but straight forward.
Into the warm up he was a little excitable but rideable and cantering around just felt fantastic, really balanced and strong. There were 3 x warm up fences, a small log, a slightly bigger roll top mobile fence, and a bigger log. Popped the little log 3 x times in a controlled fashion. He has a tendency to rush, and if he is going to have a wobble it will be at the start, so I turned in trot and just allowed canter. All fine. I decided to try the roll top fence. I turned in quietly, he saw it, set off in canter, and as he approached I felt him have a good look. I sat back, pushed on, gave him a little tap behind the saddle and at the point of take-off he bottled it, hitting the fence and almost going down. I bent my finger back on his neck but stayed on, and he limped away whinnying. I hopped off and trotted up and he was fine, just knocked himself I think. By this point he was just pouring with sweat, got himself in a state. I hopped back on, and popped the log a few times and withdrew.
Im just really sad that its got to this point. I dont think Im asking too much of him, he could jump that height from a standstill. Yes I was nervous / excited and I know they pick up on that, but I did ride him positively. My non horsey OH suggested I have some XC lessons, but its the fact he hits the fence that I cant get my head around. I could handle a run out, or napping, or just stopping! But to commit then stop if we were going quicker it could have been very nasty.
Not quite sure of the point of the post .maybe after some reassurance that at the age of 14 its time to call it a day. (hes 14 not me Im old!) : (
I decided to take the plunge and take the big ginger one to a hunter trial yesterday. Hes been feeling good, looks fantastic and weve done a little XC schooling and popped the odd fence at home.
Bit of background .several years ago, after enjoying a season of unaff eventing and then a season of BE intro we had problems. A collapse at an event followed by a veterinary workup, which showed nothing wrong. Saddle got changed, shoes came off, things went well for a bit but took a turn for the worse, which culminated in me face planting in spectacular style, after he committed to a fence and decided to stop too late, and subsequently hit the fence. I wrote an epic thread on here about what to do next, and the advice ranged from veterinary work up, retire or pts. I chose to retire him from jumping. Weve since dabbled a bit with BD, popped the odd fence at home, did the odd bit of XC schooling, and generally enjoyed life.
Anyway hes been feeling good, better than ever, and I do miss XC I have XC dreams! .and as our local BE venue was holding a hunter trial I thought we could enter the smallest class. After all 2ft6 isnt much of an effort for a 17h horse. We have been XC schooling a couple of times this summer and hes felt like his old self a bit too keen, but bold. After the rainfall weve had the ground conditions were perfect and the course was up to height but straight forward.
Into the warm up he was a little excitable but rideable and cantering around just felt fantastic, really balanced and strong. There were 3 x warm up fences, a small log, a slightly bigger roll top mobile fence, and a bigger log. Popped the little log 3 x times in a controlled fashion. He has a tendency to rush, and if he is going to have a wobble it will be at the start, so I turned in trot and just allowed canter. All fine. I decided to try the roll top fence. I turned in quietly, he saw it, set off in canter, and as he approached I felt him have a good look. I sat back, pushed on, gave him a little tap behind the saddle and at the point of take-off he bottled it, hitting the fence and almost going down. I bent my finger back on his neck but stayed on, and he limped away whinnying. I hopped off and trotted up and he was fine, just knocked himself I think. By this point he was just pouring with sweat, got himself in a state. I hopped back on, and popped the log a few times and withdrew.
Im just really sad that its got to this point. I dont think Im asking too much of him, he could jump that height from a standstill. Yes I was nervous / excited and I know they pick up on that, but I did ride him positively. My non horsey OH suggested I have some XC lessons, but its the fact he hits the fence that I cant get my head around. I could handle a run out, or napping, or just stopping! But to commit then stop if we were going quicker it could have been very nasty.
Not quite sure of the point of the post .maybe after some reassurance that at the age of 14 its time to call it a day. (hes 14 not me Im old!) : (