Out for a Lesson

Last Saturday Galahad and I went out for our first trec lesson.  It was a beautiful morning but still really cold – I spent my entire lesson litterally shivering in the saddle.  Which is probably why Galahad was a bit more spooky than he has been recently.  He still behaved pretty well though  and most of the obstacles went well.

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We managed to do the neck rein obstacle in trot for the first time away from home.  This time it was just a tear drop shape rather than the figure of eight we normally have but it still felt like a great achievement.  Sadly there wasn’t a ditch this time so we couldn’t show how much we have been working on it.

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The only obstacles we really struggled with were the gate and the maypole – where the rider picks up the end of a rope and carries it in a circle round the other end.  Galahad has started having a problem with the rope but we really progressed during the lesson.  To start with we couldn’t even stop near the stand holding the rope but we ended up being able to pick it up – just not move very far.  We had better start working on that next!

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We also had a mini competition at the end of the lesson.  In the control of paces section Galahad shied out of the corridor we were meant to canter along and then broke into a trot right on the finish line when we were meant to be walking.  The instructor found it hilarious!  We really need to work on that too – we can get decent marks for the canter when we do it properly.

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We still had a great day though and I am looking forward to doing it again.

Trec Training

This weekend I will be taking Galahad to another trec event.  It will be his first outing since August and the first trec PTV (basically an obstacle course) for almost a year.

I haven’t really practised a huge amount over obstacle since then.  The idea of the obstacle course is to recreate the sort of things we might find out hacking and obviously we get to do a lot of that.  We are well versed in opening gates and I try to make sure we walk over all sorts of different surfaces.  We are also very much used to riding under low branches!

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The trouble is that doesn’t necessarily transfer well to the man-made obstacle course.  Take the gate opening.  Galahad has got very good at this and unless the gate is particularly tricky I rarely have to dismount nowadays.  In a competition though, marks are lost every time the rider lets go of the gate.  Galahad is not too keen on the gate closing behind him so at the moment I normally have to let go.  It is fine for hacking but not so great for competition.

Apart from that, sometimes the gate is not a real gate at all but made of rope.  Galahad doesn’t like them much either, although he was getting better.  I think he has regressed over the winter but that is entirely my fault for not working on it.  I did build a little course in the last couple of days so at least we aren’t going in entirely unprepared.

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This is my sister and Cookster on their first attempt at my rope gate.  They made it look easy – perhaps I should take Cookster to compete instead of Galahad!

I know we will have fun and it will be interesting to see how we do compared to last year.  There will almost certainly be some brand new obstacles we have never seen before anyway!

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I couldn’t find the tarpaulin so used feed sacks instead.  The puppy though she would be helpful!