What's harder than eventing with a baby?

HotToTrot

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Eventing without one.

A combination of manky weather and awful times meant that my husband chose to stay home with the kids, rather than come with me to Borde Hill. By about midday, though, we were both sceptical that the "divide and conquer" approach had really worked. Husband was ensconced in a corner of Pizza Express, quaffing a large beer and fending off husband-seeking mozzarella missiles, and I was dealing with a seriously leaky boob. The left one, the faulty one, has an overflow system, a bit like the hole at the top of the bath that lets out the water when you've over-filled it. The rain at Borde Hill was coming down by the bucket load, so I figured that a little breast milk would likely not be noticed amidst the general mud, grime and water, and I was happy enough for it to leak. The right one, though, is made of much sterner stuff. The right one was not letting go of any of its hard-fought milk. It just produced more. It grew. It swelled. It was seriously uncomfortable. I tapped at the steering wheel, stuck on the A12 on my way back into London. The traffic wasn't moving. I wouldn't be home for ages. My boob hurt. There was only one obvious solution.

As we all know, horses entail a certain amount of general disarray, particularly when it comes to our cars. We find hay underneath the gear stick. Shavings in the footwell. We probably have some bailer twine nestling in the boot. It's one of many reasons why I won't hear of an upgrade to my mould old Chelsea tractor; I don't feel guilty about popping feed buckets on the passenger seat, or about throwing grooming kit in the glove compartment. And now, sitting in traffic, nowhere near home and with a seriously painful boob, I only felt a little bit bad about just unearthing the wretched boob from underneath my cross-country top, about undoing my seatbelt and, ducking beneath the steering wheel so as not to blind the oncoming motorists, about just having a massive great squeeze. Yeah, I vaguely aimed for the footwell, but it really went everywhere, going forces cheerfully with the baby-vom, wee and other assortment of bodily fluids to which my aged car is regularly subjected.

So for all who've had a bad weekend out competing, just ask yourselves this question: Were you, whilst sitting covered in mud in stationary traffic on the outskirts of London, forced to squirt the entire interior of your car with gallons of unwanted breastmilk? No? Well then go home and don't come back until you're prepared just to put a bit more effort in.

This was not the Chelsea Tractor's only moment of glory that day. No. When I was about 16, my dad pulled a blinding manoeuvre at some horse trials or other, and it's one I've been trying to emulate ever since. We share a fairly "get on with it" attitude, my dad and I, and as the lorries queued to be towed up the muddy hill to the top of the lorry park, we exchanged a look. I jumped out, unloaded my mare, put the ramp back up and our Range Rover, with a lightened load and its diff-lock engaged, sped straight up the hill, under its own steam, overtaking all the marooned lorries and parked happily at the top of the lorry park whilst I trotted along behind with my horse.

Now, at Borde Hill, here was my chance. I'd loaded up P(C)parrot, turned up the hill to the exit, and the car stopped. I revved a bit. No go. Wasn't moving in the mud. Triumphantly, I leapt out, unloaded my horse, marched him over to the parking steward and asked if she could hold him whilst I drove the car and trailer up to the firmer ground. She stared at me blankly. Well, this was ok, it does sometimes take a little while for people to appreciate my sheer genius. Smugly, I explained my plan. I needed her to hold the horse, because my car couldn't get up the muddy hill with the horse on board. Once at the top, I'd come back for the horse and reload him. Still she stared at me. Patiently, I explained again. This time, I thought, she'd understand and, flabbergasted by my utter brilliance, she'd spring into action, full of admiration for my cunning and resourcefulness. I waited eagerly for her awed reaction. Still she stared. Then she said "where are you trying to go?" Clearly, I thought, she'd been so stunned by my total mastery of mud-and-car tactics that she was just too thunderstruck to really understand what I was saying. Finally, she said "Well, the exit's behind you - er, down the hill." Crestfallen, my master plan in tatters and my navigational ability (as always) sorely lacking, I reloaded P(C)parrot, turned glumly round and slunk dejectedly back down the hill.

Next up was Aston and, once again, I went kid-free. This time, though, I had a plan. Not a very dignified plan, but a plan nevertheless. Those of you who've also sat, semi-naked, in a horse trailer and squeezed milk out your boob into a bottle before the showjumping phase will likely sympathise when I say that directional control over the milk can be a little lacking - but that it's perfectly do-able and infinitely preferable to squirting the stuff over the car whilst parked on the A12.

At Borde Hill, I had discovered that when P(C)arrot's advert had said he could be tricky in the dressage... dear Lord... At Aston, I took him by surprise. Off trailer, walk to dressage, into arena. It was all going reasonably well, in that he was in roughly the right pace, doing faintly the right movements, but I knew that the walk could well be my undoing. Excited beyond belief at Borde Hill, he'd jogged through the walk and exploded into canter when I'd asked for an upwards trot transition. And in canter he had stayed, mainly on the wrong leg, but sometimes not, for the rest of the test. We came to walk. He went to tank off. I dropped my reins. He stayed in walk. We came to H. I thought trot, just thought it, did nothing but lighten my seat and he exploded into trot. I dropped the contact again. He stayed in trot. And that, for us, was a huge improvement.

As I got him ready for the showjumping, I noticed a kind of a presence hanging around. I carried on for a bit, but I realised it was a demon, and it clearly wanted something from me. Better, I thought, to deal with it now, rather than deal with it as I cantered into the ring. I broke off from booting up and went round to the front of the car. "So,", I said, gesturing to the demon to pull up a pew, "what can I do for you?". The demon shovelled itself into the driver's seat next to me and, gazing idly at the dried breast milk that splattered the dashboard, it said, "well, that's an Intermediate Novice track out there. 1.15m. You've only ever done that height on Vito. And it took you over a year to work up to it. Yet you've had this horse for about a month! I think you only did it because Vito was such a good horse. I don't think you can do it on anything else. And this horse has been ridden by a four-star rider. What on earth makes you think he'll jump for you? What if you miss? You'll crash!" "Ok," I said, with a sigh. "You make some good points. Vito was amazing. But if my three years with Vito mean anything at all, then let it be that he taught me well. Make absolutely no mistake" I continued, very firmly, "I can showjump. In my own right, independently of Vito, I can showjump. And no, I am not remotely in the same league as this horse's previous rider, of course not, but I'm good enough. I'm good enough to ride this horse round that track and that, for now, is all I need to be." The demon opened the door and scuttled off away from the breast milk and into the rain, but its visit had unsettled me, and I needed to do more. I thought back to my last lesson and picked out two points, something to give me some structure when I crossed the start line. Keep the revs up, I thought, and keep the inside bend round turns. So I went out, I revved up the canter and P(C)parrot jumped a smashing round for clear.

The first half of the XC was great but then, of course the directional misjudgement came into play and I rode rather aimlessly round a couple of extraneous fields before finally stumbling across a fence with a yellow flag on it, which I thought I'd better jump. P(C)parrot, quite clearly dubious about my navigational ability and probably fed up with his identity crisis as to whether he was a Parrot, a Carrot, a transvestite gelding with a girl's name or just in need of an apostrophe, called on his alter-ego, The Tank, and carted me home before I could say "shoulda switched the snaffle to a gag for this phase."
 
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Absolutely crying with laughter here, much to the amusement of my step dad.

Sounds like you're having a lot of fun with Parrot and the bottle definitely sounds like a better alternative to the foot well :) Well done on the clear in the SJing :D
 
As someone who has a condition that leads to unintentional leaky boobs, I have just spat tea all over my keyboard. Oh how I do love your reports :biggrin3: Hope Parrot gets through his identity crisis too!
 
I just woke up my dog with my laughter. He's not impressed. Does breast milk go sour? How does the car smell now??

Well done for doing so well with P(C)arrot - picking up the ride and going straight into such big courses is amazing!! I think you'll completely defeat that demon in a few more events.
 
Well done, getting a new horse and getting out there at IN is pretty impressive!

As for your writing, will you please sit down and write your first Fiona Walker style novel, I am sure it would be a best seller!
 
Haha, I was reading thinking 'but why is she going up the hill when the exit is at the bottom...?' Good plan though, would definitely have worked if the parking girl had have just humoured you! :)
 
Made my morning :) Im sure you really do take your eventing seriously (you must do to cope with such a hectic schedule), but your write ups are hysterical, absolutely brilliant and Im quite sure are much nearer the truth for a lot of us than we care to admit! You really should consider putting them into a book, it would be a coffee table smash :) Im sure Im not the only one who doesnt know you, but feels as though I do, and all your random family members, vehicles and helpers too. My son is in his 30s but I well remember the painful, leaky boobs and you have my sympathies, the thought of a body protector on top makes me cringe even now! I hope you have loads of fun with the new boy, with or without his rightful apostrophe, and fingers crossed for Vito to bounce back x Please do consider a book, Im sure youve loads of free time :) :)
 
OMG HottoTrot I've never read one of your reports before, I am bookmarking you! My husband and I were only talking last night about the time I left 3 month old DD1 with him for 11 hours to go to Olympia and back. He revealed, for the first time ever after 8 years, exactly how awful his day had been, and I recalled the utter relief of emptying 11 hours worth of milk from my boobs! You are obviously completely insane, it took me 2 years to get back on a horse after having 2 babies, and 8 years to get back out on a XC course. Just think what you will be able to achieve when you have all those ACRES of free time when they go to school. You could write a book!
 
I just woke up my dog with my laughter. He's not impressed. Does breast milk go sour? How does the car smell now??

Well done for doing so well with P(C)arrot - picking up the ride and going straight into such big courses is amazing!! I think you'll completely defeat that demon in a few more events.

I have to admit, that's the bit that's got me most intrigued about the story. Are you now driving around in a sour smelling Chelsea tractor? I know horse people do the maddest thing but this one def takes the slightly soggy biscuit! But well done on overcoming your demon and cracking on with it.
 
Oh hottotrot you brighten up anyday! :)

I hear breast pumps take away the need for directional squirting- just a thought :)
 
Great report as ever.
The breast feeding takes me right back to when I had my daughter at university and I would sit in every lecture/seminar or tutorial praying that no one would ask a question that would need a lot of explaining and cause the session to run over. Whenever it did, my breasts would start leaking and I'd pray no one would notice as I ran back to my flat with wet patches.I used to express excess milk into ice cube holders and freeze it for when I had a day of lectures.
 
Breast milk in the car. bahah. Did you not have a bucket to hand you could have squeezed yourself into? That may have made you look like a cow though. ;)

Funny as always. I kept reading it as PC Carrot though. Gah! :p
 
I love the demon. I can see him, little and red with large pointy ears, crouching behind you, peeking from above the trailer ramp and sitting on the plastic bit above the trailer wheels watching. But then you sent him packing ....

You'r write ups are a must have, thank you for entertaining us.
 
Fab post!

Gawd I remember the leaky boob problem. Though I never evented (let alone rode) with them... everyday life was hard enough - back at work I had to excuse myself regularly to go and express.

I don't know how you do it. Majorly impressed!
 
Brilliant report, as usual, had me almost spitting out coffee with laughter. I too remember the leaky boobs problem, but wasn't riding and competing with them ! you are truly an inspiration. loving your new boy as well.
 
I know you must love your city job, and might not have much spare time, but when you do finally write your book, I will certainly buy it. Maybe rather than have to have another baby when Vito is fully recovered, a writing sabbatical might give you time to fit in some extra eventing (with your string of 2 horses and 2 kids) to ensure plenty of new plot-lines?
 
Absolutely crying with laughter here, much to the amusement of my step dad.

Sounds like you're having a lot of fun with Parrot and the bottle definitely sounds like a better alternative to the foot well :) Well done on the clear in the SJing :D

Thanks!

As ever, a thoroughly entertaining report from you, thank you for taking the time to write it :)

Thank you!

As someone who has a condition that leads to unintentional leaky boobs, I have just spat tea all over my keyboard. Oh how I do love your reports :biggrin3: Hope Parrot gets through his identity crisis too!

Argh! Uh, why?

So funny;o}

Hum!

These posts so need to be copy and pasted into a book!

Great entertaining read as ever. :D

Thanks!

Brilliant, when our debut ode goes wrong next week I will remind myself that every thing is fine, there is no breast milk.

Gd luck!

As ever, so well written :D

Thanks!

I just woke up my dog with my laughter. He's not impressed. Does breast milk go sour? How does the car smell now??

Well done for doing so well with P(C)arrot - picking up the ride and going straight into such big courses is amazing!! I think you'll completely defeat that demon in a few more events.

Oh don't - the car is DISGUSTING. I might have to clean it or something.

Well done, getting a new horse and getting out there at IN is pretty impressive!

As for your writing, will you please sit down and write your first Fiona Walker style novel, I am sure it would be a best seller!

Thanks - well he is pretty easy to ride, so not as impressive as it sounds!

Haha, I was reading thinking 'but why is she going up the hill when the exit is at the bottom...?' Good plan though, would definitely have worked if the parking girl had have just humoured you! :)

Yes.... Getting lost, as always....

Fabulous report as always! What a way to start Monday morning - made me smile LOTS!

Thanks!

really enjoyed that. Thank you and well done!

Thank you.

Made my morning :) Im sure you really do take your eventing seriously (you must do to cope with such a hectic schedule), but your write ups are hysterical, absolutely brilliant and Im quite sure are much nearer the truth for a lot of us than we care to admit! You really should consider putting them into a book, it would be a coffee table smash :) Im sure Im not the only one who doesnt know you, but feels as though I do, and all your random family members, vehicles and helpers too. My son is in his 30s but I well remember the painful, leaky boobs and you have my sympathies, the thought of a body protector on top makes me cringe even now! I hope you have loads of fun with the new boy, with or without his rightful apostrophe, and fingers crossed for Vito to bounce back x Please do consider a book, Im sure youve loads of free time :) :)

I just can't take myself seriously - I am too much of a disaster zone.

OMG HottoTrot I've never read one of your reports before, I am bookmarking you! My husband and I were only talking last night about the time I left 3 month old DD1 with him for 11 hours to go to Olympia and back. He revealed, for the first time ever after 8 years, exactly how awful his day had been, and I recalled the utter relief of emptying 11 hours worth of milk from my boobs! You are obviously completely insane, it took me 2 years to get back on a horse after having 2 babies, and 8 years to get back out on a XC course. Just think what you will be able to achieve when you have all those ACRES of free time when they go to school. You could write a book!

11 hours is a long time at three months!

Hilarious! Brightened my lunch time :)

Thanks.

I have to admit, that's the bit that's got me most intrigued about the story. Are you now driving around in a sour smelling Chelsea tractor? I know horse people do the maddest thing but this one def takes the slightly soggy biscuit! But well done on overcoming your demon and cracking on with it.

The Chelsea Tractor is already covered in toddler-vomit and baby-wee, so it doesn't smell much worse, but is quite rank.

Oh hottotrot you brighten up anyday! :)

I hear breast pumps take away the need for directional squirting- just a thought :)

No mains socket in the Chelsea Tractor and its battery function has died! But yes, you are quite right, it would have been v useful!

Great report as ever.
The breast feeding takes me right back to when I had my daughter at university and I would sit in every lecture/seminar or tutorial praying that no one would ask a question that would need a lot of explaining and cause the session to run over. Whenever it did, my breasts would start leaking and I'd pray no one would notice as I ran back to my flat with wet patches.I used to express excess milk into ice cube holders and freeze it for when I had a day of lectures.

Leaky boobs are quite embarrassing, aren't they!

Breast milk in the car. bahah. Did you not have a bucket to hand you could have squeezed yourself into? That may have made you look like a cow though. ;)

Funny as always. I kept reading it as PC Carrot though. Gah! :p

No - I don't think I could have got one under the steering wheel!

I love the demon. I can see him, little and red with large pointy ears, crouching behind you, peeking from above the trailer ramp and sitting on the plastic bit above the trailer wheels watching. But then you sent him packing ....

You'r write ups are a must have, thank you for entertaining us.

Yes, sneaky thing. Was annoyed that he turned up.

Great as usual - though i was left wondering how it was going with baby!?

Baby was probably nicking husband's beer.

Fab post!

Gawd I remember the leaky boob problem. Though I never evented (let alone rode) with them... everyday life was hard enough - back at work I had to excuse myself regularly to go and express.

I don't know how you do it. Majorly impressed!

And breast pads fall out when I undo my bra, so they're no use!

Brilliant report, as usual, had me almost spitting out coffee with laughter. I too remember the leaky boobs problem, but wasn't riding and competing with them ! you are truly an inspiration. loving your new boy as well.

Glad so many people have also had leaking issues!

I know you must love your city job, and might not have much spare time, but when you do finally write your book, I will certainly buy it. Maybe rather than have to have another baby when Vito is fully recovered, a writing sabbatical might give you time to fit in some extra eventing (with your string of 2 horses and 2 kids) to ensure plenty of new plot-lines?

Book versus baby...!

Brilliant report! Crying with laughter ������

Thanks!
 
Clear round sj, well done!! It sounds like you are getting on well with P/Carrot especially with the alternative approach to dressage. You must be so well organised to event with two little people to care for two, I'm amazed the leaky boob is all that goes wrong and after all you have no control over that!
 
Clear round sj, well done!! It sounds like you are getting on well with P/Carrot especially with the alternative approach to dressage. You must be so well organised to event with two little people to care for two, I'm amazed the leaky boob is all that goes wrong and after all you have no control over that!

Oh, I don't know. Most things tend to go wrong, most of the time...!
 
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