Retraining ex-racers thread

ycbm

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Putting this in here as we achieved another milestone today - the ex racehorse did his first intermediate (also my first intermediate). A few tappy poles in a technical course SJ, but he stayed positive and forwards. And then really awesome around the xc in pretty sticky, heavy going. Not bad for a horse that we originally thought wasn't brave enough to get round 80s/90s! Just a case of very slowly building up his confidence.



Congratulations Rachel, you make that look so easy. I think I'll probably be happy if I can pop 70cm on mine.
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stangs

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Putting this in here as we achieved another milestone today - the ex racehorse did his first intermediate (also my first intermediate). A few tappy poles in a technical course SJ, but he stayed positive and forwards. And then really awesome around the xc in pretty sticky, heavy going. Not bad for a horse that we originally thought wasn't brave enough to get round 80s/90s! Just a case of very slowly building up his confidence.
Love the way you ride, and love the way he goes for you. Very nice viewing.
 

McGrools

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Putting this in here as we achieved another milestone today - the ex racehorse did his first intermediate (also my first intermediate). A few tappy poles in a technical course SJ, but he stayed positive and forwards. And then really awesome around the xc in pretty sticky, heavy going. Not bad for a horse that we originally thought wasn't brave enough to get round 80s/90s! Just a case of very slowly building up his confidence.

Fabulous! 😍😍
 

Squeak

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Well done RF, a big achievement to make it to and complete an intermediate. Agree with the others that you both made that look easy. Out of interest how old is he now?
 

RachelFerd

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Well done RF, a big achievement to make it to and complete an intermediate. Agree with the others that you both made that look easy. Out of interest how old is he now?

He's 12 now, so i'm really hoping we've got a good few years of being able to enjoy him at some of the big fancy events at 2* and the odd intermediate. He's a real dude and a complete pleasure to take out and about.
 

Squeak

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He's 12 now, so i'm really hoping we've got a good few years of being able to enjoy him at some of the big fancy events at 2* and the odd intermediate. He's a real dude and a complete pleasure to take out and about.

Oh yes, that's a really good age to hopefully have a good few years to enjoy, for some reason I was thinking he was 16ish! It was encouraging at the RoR awards evening to hear the ages of the horses that were being awarded the prizes (I'm pretty sure the elite prizes too) as if I'm remembering correctly most of them were late teens +.
 

RachelFerd

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Oh yes, that's a really good age to hopefully have a good few years to enjoy, for some reason I was thinking he was 16ish! It was encouraging at the RoR awards evening to hear the ages of the horses that were being awarded the prizes (I'm pretty sure the elite prizes too) as if I'm remembering correctly most of them were late teens +.

I saw that Think Tank Think was back at Badminton Grassroots again this year aged 21 - 651 foundation points in total - this is a BE record to be very proud of for an ex racehorse - https://www.britisheventing.com/about/people-and-horses/horse-profiles/THINK-TANK-THINK-39964
 

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ycbm

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ycbm

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Hi! I'm so excited to join this thread. Here's Charlie, 17.1+hh staying flat racer, 7 years old. Won once with Frankie Dettori, stopped racing, sound, after his owner ran out of money.. Bought from the trainer after being let down for a few months.,

Arrived today, Starts his retraining process tomorrow.

IMG_20230516_123317_resized_20230516_125249278.jpgIMG_20230516_123258_resized_20230516_125515054.jpg
 

TheMule

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Hi! I'm so excited to join this thread. Here's Charlie, 17.1+hh staying flat racer, 7 years old. Won once with Frankie Dettori, stopped racing, sound, after his owner ran out of money.. Bought from the trainer after being let down for a few months.,

Arrived today, Starts his retraining process tomorrow.

View attachment 113707View attachment 113708

Congratulations, and good luck!
 

McGrools

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Hi! I'm so excited to join this thread. Here's Charlie, 17.1+hh staying flat racer, 7 years old. Won once with Frankie Dettori, stopped racing, sound, after his owner ran out of money.. Bought from the trainer after being let down for a few months.,

Arrived today, Starts his retraining process tomorrow.

View attachment 113707View attachment 113708
Beautiful! Congratulations! 😍
 

Hamlet

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Congrats ycbm! He’s got the sweetest face 🥰 looking forward to the updates.

Not much going on in the life of Brian, other than learning to be chilled. He was a superstar out hacking today though as a pheasant shot out behind his nanny which caused said babysitter to leap forward and buck. Brian jumped out of his skin but then that was it…carried on marching around the fields like nothing had happened. Gave me a chance for the heart rate to come back down 😅

31B8DD4D-07E0-416D-990F-596EA10A947C.jpeg
 

Kunoichi73

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Hi! I'm so excited to join this thread. Here's Charlie, 17.1+hh staying flat racer, 7 years old. Won once with Frankie Dettori, stopped racing, sound, after his owner ran out of money.. Bought from the trainer after being let down for a few months.,

Arrived today, Starts his retraining process tomorrow.

View attachment 113707View attachment 113708
He's lovely. Good luck with him! 😃
 

J_sarahd

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I’ve posted this on the weekend thread but thought I’d post it here too.

Nova and I went for our first outing together yesterday. It was an RoR pole clinic, which was ideal. I genuinely had no expectations of how it would go and was extremely nervous. Many of you will know we’ve had a few issues over the last few months but she’s had the all-clear to crack on. But she is still as sharp as anything so I was worried that she would just have a moment in the arena and I’d lose control or topple off.

She didn’t travel very well - she is fine if we are moving but as soon as we are still, she gets impatient. And then when I took her off the trailer, she was very anxious - calling, spinning, pawing. I was tempted to call it a day there as I was very nervous to get on her. But I tacked her up and took her to the school and led her around, working on keeping her attention through halts, backing up and changes of direction. She took a disliking to a tyre jump just outside the arena, so that took a few minutes to work through. But after 5 or so minutes, she let out a sigh and relaxed her body so I thought I should get on. Walked her round the arena and she was so chilled. Trotted on both reins, keeping to a 20m circle at first until I felt brave to trot the whole arena.

Then we started poles and there wasn’t a single time that she felt iffy about going over the poles. When I bought her, she was terrified of poles so the fact she will go over “new” poles is so exciting. There were times when we were stood around chatting and I expected her to then nap once it was my time to go, but she didn’t at all. We were the only combination who didn’t canter but I always feel you should leave clinics wanting more, not feeling disheartened.

Very proud of her. I’m not proud of my riding as I rode with the handbrake on a little bit and my reins are like washing lines. And I wonder why she goes around like a giraffe! 986AC80F-878D-43CA-8965-23DD5B67AE36.jpeg7FD71A2B-3B9D-4FA0-ADF4-18504E06B3A7.jpeg
 

LEC

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Better to have long reins and forwards relaxed than be holding onto the mouth and tense. The body shape and contact and be improved, relaxation can’t be if you don’t make the experiences positive ones.
 

J_sarahd

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Yeah, I’d rather have long reins, a giraffe impression and a happy, positive experience than short reins, strong contact and a stressed Nova. I can work on head carriage, suppleness etc at home, these outings are about creating positive experiences at the moment!!
 

ycbm

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Yeah, I’d rather have long reins, a giraffe impression and a happy, positive experience than short reins, strong contact and a stressed Nova. I can work on head carriage, suppleness etc at home, these outings are about creating positive experiences at the moment!!

Short reins when all they've known is racing is often taken as a cue to go forward faster. I've discovered mine won't lead from in front. I was afraid he was saying he didn't want to go back into his stable but I think it's a hangover from being loaded into stalls on the racetrack.
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J_sarahd

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Oh, yeah I’ve definitely learnt that the hard way when Nova is out hacking and see feels a bit silly so I shorten my reins and it makes her worse! I always say to people that you don’t understand how different ex racehorses are to other horses until you have one!
 
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Oh, yeah I’ve definitely learnt that the hard way when Nova is out hacking and see feels a bit silly so I shorten my reins and it makes her worse! I always say to people that you don’t understand how different ex racehorses are to other horses until you have one!

That's because when we are tootling too and from the gallops we ride without stirrups, reins in one hand chatting away to the people around you paying the horse very little attention 😂 it's a hard thing to do when your horse dicks about when your not used to it but honestly - sack of spuds is quite often the best way forward.
 

Gamebird

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That's because when we are tootling too and from the gallops we ride without stirrups, reins in one hand chatting away to the people around you paying the horse very little attention 😂 it's a hard thing to do when your horse dicks about when your not used to it but honestly - sack of spuds is quite often the best way forward.
I teach all my breakers to do this very early on. Almost before they go in the school I want them to be able to hack up and down the drive on a long rein with me messing around on FB on my phone! It's a great life skill. It gives them the responsibility to go forward and get on with it with zero input from the rider, and stops you fiddling about with them all the time and pissing them off.
 

humblepie

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Short reins when all they've known is racing is often taken as a cue to go forward faster. I've discovered mine won't lead from in front. I was afraid he was saying he didn't want to go back into his stable but I think it's a hangover from being loaded into stalls on the racetrack.
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Really funny I was only thinking about the short reins cue this morning in the light of this thread as we were wandering a long a track before turning back up for a canter.
 

Gamebird

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Well I get to join in now too! Very happy to have been trusted with this chap in his retirement. He's been pretty successful, though fairly lightly raced, winning his PTP, bumper, over hurdles and fences - most recently last month at the Punchestown Festival.

I haven't ridden him yet - he only arrived yesterday and I promised my husband that I wouldn't get on if there was no-one at home - but I sorted out some tack tonight and he's been on the walker. He has a very small niggle, and needs to do 3 or 4 weeks walking, after which I think he deserves a month or two in the field.

I've had many ex-racers before, but I think this is the first I've actually had for me, rather than to produce and sell on. I'm very much looking forward to it, and to having the time to take things slowly. My background was originally eventing, but in the last 8 or 10 years has been almost exclusively open team chasing and hunt racing. This chap can do whatever he chooses, discipline-wise. I dare say he'll be on the start line of a team chase at some point, but I'd love for him to be a well-rounded all-rounder and all round fun horse. Fingers crossed!

Reduced tack.jpgreduced3.jpg
 
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Well I get to join in now too! Very happy to have been trusted with this chap in his retirement. He's been pretty successful, though fairly lightly raced, winning his PTP, bumper, over hurdles and fences - most recently last month at the Punchestown Festival.

I haven't ridden him yet - he only arrived yesterday and I promised my husband that I wouldn't get on if there was no-one at home - but I sorted out some tack tonight and he's been on the walker. He has a very small niggle, and needs to do 3 or 4 weeks walking, after which I think he deserves a month or two in the field.

I've had many ex-racers before, but I think this is the first I've actually had for me, rather than to produce and sell on. I'm very much looking forward to it, and to having the time to take things slowly. My background was originally eventing, but in the last 8 or 10 years has been almost exclusively open team chasing and hunt racing. This chap can do whatever he chooses, discipline-wise. I dare say he'll be on the start line of a team chase at some point, but I'd love for him to be a well-rounded all-rounder and all round fun horse. Fingers crossed!

View attachment 114327View attachment 114326

The front of his face looks so much like Arthur!

He looks a cracking sort! Enjoy having your own horse for a change.
 

ycbm

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Well I get to join in now too! Very happy to have been trusted with this chap in his retirement. He's been pretty successful, though fairly lightly raced, winning his PTP, bumper, over hurdles and fences - most recently last month at the Punchestown Festival.

I haven't ridden him yet - he only arrived yesterday and I promised my husband that I wouldn't get on if there was no-one at home - but I sorted out some tack tonight and he's been on the walker. He has a very small niggle, and needs to do 3 or 4 weeks walking, after which I think he deserves a month or two in the field.

I've had many ex-racers before, but I think this is the first I've actually had for me, rather than to produce and sell on. I'm very much looking forward to it, and to having the time to take things slowly. My background was originally eventing, but in the last 8 or 10 years has been almost exclusively open team chasing and hunt racing. This chap can do whatever he chooses, discipline-wise. I dare say he'll be on the start line of a team chase at some point, but I'd love for him to be a well-rounded all-rounder and all round fun horse. Fingers crossed!

View attachment 114327View attachment 114326


Congratulations!.
 
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