Problems at XC today - now what?

sonjafoers

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Today I went xc schooling with one of my horses. She has been difficult in the past but we have come on slowly with the help of a great instructor & are at the point where we are jumping roughly 3 ft during xc schooling & I am feeling really confident jumping her.

She has been bought on gradually & has weekly lessons, with probably one of these a month being at a xc course, and I have never cross country schooled her without my instructor being there.

Today I very stupidly went schooling on my own. A local course was open for the day so I thought I would take her along & just let her see the water & some of the smaller jumps. It is not a course I normally use so I thought it would be a good experience for her to go somewhere different & jump some small jumps without feeling overfaced in a strange place.

When I got there I was very disappointed, the jumps were in poor condition and the whole site was on a hill, I don't think there was one jump on flat ground at all. The jumps were either about a foot high (literally) or 3 foot & the water complex had no water in it, it was just boggy ground.

We didn't get off to a good start when she slipped on the steep ground & completely lost her back end before we had even jumped anything, & although I kept things very calm & tried to do everything right she would hardly jump a thing. I fell off at one point when she did a late refusal, and she refused most of the jumps I tried, jumping them at 2nd or 3rd attempt.

I am not sure if she was unhappy because the ground was slippery & on a camber, or if it was because the jumps were so small she didn't really understand they were jumps. I only presented her to the small ones & didn't attempt any of the larger ones at all.

I am now worried I have undone all the work that's been put in & whether this has now put her back in terms of her training. I am booked onto a xc clinic on 17th July with Andrew Lovell & I felt she was ready to go & do this but now I am very worried about taking her as I won't be able to do any xc with my normal instructor beforehand, although she will be having her usual lessons in the school.

What do you think I should do? Should I cancel the clinic & have a few quiet xc lessons with my instructor to get our confidence back, or do you think it would be ok to go to the clinic after today's performance?

I don't want to lose my nerve with her as she really has been difficult in the past & it is so great to now feel we trust each other. I just wish I hadn't gone but now I need to do the right thing to get us back on track.

Sorry it's long but all advice appreciated.
 
Right, so the basic mistake was not finding out beforehand whether the course was suitable, compounded by carrying on when you got there and found it wasn't, made worse by your trying to get her jumping when she wasn't happy on the ground and then keeping on jumping when she was refusing and clearly telling you she was WAY out of her comfort zone.

So, easily solved for the future:)

Personally I'd have a lesson or a couple of lessons with your regular instructor to get your confidence back in the school before the clinic and just get on as though it hadn't happened.
 
Oh no, how terrible do I feel now?! When I see it all written down like that jemima_too I realise I need shooting.

I will be having lessons in the school before the clinic but no xc lessons, I'm hoping she will just go & be her usual confident self but I am quite worried I have ruined things today & she won't be happy.
 
Oh dear, that sounds awful but seriously, don't beat yourself up over it. It wasn't a terrible thing to do, you had got yourself there I wouldn't have expected you to just go straight home when you saw it wasn't suitable. I would have another lesson with an instructor you know at a course you know to get both of you back on board and move on swiftly from today's debacle! Good luck.
 
Thank you Farrierlover, I have left a message for my instructor to see if he can fit me in for a xc lesson next week instead of our usual lesson in the school. I think I need to or I will start feeling nervous about her refusing & that won't help either of us. You are right in that we need to put this behind us asap.

If we get on ok there I will go to the clinic but if there;s any doubt at all I will leave it & just concentrate on getting things back together at our usual course.
 
As above book a lesson with your instructor. I doubt one bad day would have ruined the bad work - after all horses have the odd bad day now and again just like us!
 
Is it possible that your horse could have picked up a slight injury when she slipped, this could have put her off of jumping on the day. Also if you were not confident in the ground/jumps she would have picked up on your issues too.

I'd say give her a rest or light work for a day or two to gather her thoughts and then have a lesson over jumps that you are both very confident with.
 
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