Monday 12 September 2011

WOW, that was a brilliant day out at the Barskimming One Day Trec Competition!


I’ve done it!

I have completed a Trec event and I had an absolutely wonderful time!


The weather on Sunday was simply awful, with constant rain and wind. Even though we were all soaked to the skin, I think everyone involved enjoyed the day, or least they appeared to. I admit I became very cold by the end of the day, as my waterproofs turned out NOT to be waterproof.


Maud had a ball; she really enjoyed herself, eager to the end. She was pooped by the time we had finished, but would have done more if she had to. Honestly she is a star. As for me, I’m ready for the next competition, but I’ll hold back to let all my kit dry out first. When I got home, after feeding Maud, Ruth and Bazil, then transferring all my stuff out of the lorry and into my car, there were still pools of water at the bottom of the saddlebags! Gosh, it was wet. 


Okay, I’ll not mention the rain again; I think you get the picture.

On the Saturday night, I went with Mum to walk the obstacle phase of the competition. There didn’t seem to be much that I didn’t think Maud could not cope with. The raised S-Bend she had never encountered before so could be an issue, the drop down perhaps she’ll hesitate and look at, the step up, mmm, maybe not with me on her back and the other obstacle out of 16 that I knew she might not be able to do was the reverse. Other than that, I was confident she could do all the other obstacles in her sleep as they say.


On the day, the first phase was CP – Control of Paces. Here my concern was to keep Maud in canter for the full distance, regardless of the speed. I know she tried to throw in a buck, but I’m unsure if she broke the gait. I did ask if we had completed the canter in the fastest time and was told that we hadn’t. Heavens, someone before us had done the canter section faster than Maud!

  
The second phase was the Obstacle course, with sixteen obstacles to negotiate correctly. Hey, not a problem, I do Horse Agility and train my ponies most nights and elementary clicker training too. Only 16 obstacles, that’s easy! WRONG! Oh dear, Maud apart from being very excited, was just not playing the game. She hadn’t seen red and white plastic flags before, either on the ground or on poles, she also hadn’t seen painted onto grass, yellow circles or squares before, and I was asking her to get close to them, even walk over them. Am I mad? Well obviously, as we scored 0 for most elements.  However, I did ask and took the opportunity to lead her in hand over these scary obstacles, which meant an awful lot of mounting and dismounting. 


So now I’m going to make little red and white flags, leave some on the ground and put others on poles in the paddock so that she becomes desensitized to them, and in theory the next time she encounters them, she’ll be cool and hopefully not even notice them. A lesson learned.


The final part of the day was the orienteering section. This was the section I was really looking forward to. A six-kilometer ride round Barskimming estate, new territory, new views.
It should have taken just over an hour to complete, but through experience I told Chris I’d be back in about an hour and a half. I clocked out just after 12pm and was clocked back in at 3:30pm! Okay, I met up with an orienteering pair and we took the wrong turning and ended up at a check-in point for Level 2 competitors only! I left the girls and retraced my steps to where I had met them, found the correct route and made it round the course. 

 
About a kilometer from the finish line I met up with another pair, and the three of us managed to find our way back to the finish line. Hurrah! We were not the last people home, one pair were still out but made it home about 5 minutes after us.  

Chris had a miserable day, spent sitting in the car, reading the paper. His treat for his patience was fish & chips on the way home.

I could not have safely competed this Trec event on the horse, apart from him having Head Shaking Syndrome, his brain would have fried, seeing horses disappear round corners, over hills, trotting past him in the opposite direction. I made the correct choice by taking Maud and the experience gained, helps her education in becoming a well-balanced pony.

A big thank you to Liz and Alan McKay who organized the event, to Rhoda McVey who was the Technical Director, to Lord Strathclyde and William Galbraith of Barskimming Estate for their kind permission to hold the event and finally the volunteers, without their help events such as these just wouldn’t happen. 






Friday 9 September 2011

Three days to go before my first Le Trec competition

Three days to go and it is still raining!

This afternoon I plan to walk Maud in-hand round a 5 mile circuit. I'm not going to ride her as she lives outdoors and will be wet through, also the evening light is disappearing fast now that Autumn is on it's way. Safety first!

Rain is forecast for tomorrow (Saturday) as well, and so I have a feeling the event will be cancelled.

My three Dartmoor Ponies. Right to left - Maud, Ruth & Bazil


Thursday 8 September 2011

Four days to go before my first TREC competition


Maud and me. Photo taken in May 2011

This Sunday, Maud (Sherberton Jollytime) and I will be competing in our first ever Le Trec competition, Level 1, and I'm so excited! It is a one day competition held at Barskimming near Mauchline in Ayrshire.
Although I have a lot of the kit required to compete in a Trec competition already, I did have to buy quite a bit of stuff otherwise I would loose points, and there is no point loosing marks before you even start! The stuff that I had to buy were; first aid kits for Maud and one for myself, saddlebags for all the said stuff, new flexible map case (which I was going to do anyway), batteries for my torch, address tags for us both and a BE Medical Armband. It all adds up at the end of the day, but will be worth it.

Due to the weather this week, my training schedule has gone completely to pott! The rain has been heavy and incessant, and the light levels too low to safely ride out or even walk in hand. The fields also have been water logged and exceedingly slippy too. So I have just been clicker training Maud to stand and stay and other wee bits that will help in the cross country section.

I received my number (16) and start times today. At 10:45 we start with the control of paces (CP) and six minutes later we start the cross country or obstacle phase (PTV). After half an hour, we start the orienteering section (POR), which is the part of the competition I'm really looking forward to. I think we are expected to cover the distance in an hour, which means Maud and I will have to "run like the clappers", as it takes her twice as long to cover a kilometer as it does the horse! However, I plan to try and complete this section in the allotted time, but being accurate is more important and I just want to enjoy myself and take in my surroundings - after all, it is not every day you get to ride around beautiful countryside.

On Saturday afternoon, there is a guided walk around the obstacle course, which will be very useful, knowing what obstacles have been planned and what the ground is like and how it might be after many horses have travelled it. I think by the time it is our turn, the ground will be very chewed up, which will affect how fast and how we approach the elements on the day.

So Saturday night there will be NO gallavanting around town (as if!) as there will be tack to clean, my kit to check, Maud's kit to check, water, buckets, hay nets, the lorry to fuel up, rugs, packed lunch, the COFFEE flask (most important). Oh, and a hundred and one other things to do.