In the past, our Welsh shows have had all of the English under saddle classes on the same day, and typically the English Pleasure division (2-3 flat classes) goes before Ridden Cob, which is a class that demands a fiery and forward mount.
Me showing a very young, very green, Castleberrys Aviator in Ridden Cob in 2011, my first time doing the class |
This year, they decided to put Ridden Cob as the last class of the day on Friday after the halter classes, and English Pleasure on Saturday, which meant Ridden Cob was the first thing Connor got to do all weekend and really was the first time I'd ridden him hard in...two weeks?
Oh my god, you can hear him yelling "WHEEEEEEEEEE" from here, lol. This and all of the following photos in this post are courtesy of Leah |
Out of all the things we do at the Hoosier Horse Park, this Welsh show is the only time we ever show in this indoor arena. And I swear, the moment the judge called for the canter in the rail portion of Ridden Cob (which is a standard w/t/c rail class, followed by a pattern that includes a hand gallop, followed by stripping tack for conformation judging), Connor was like "F*** YEAH I KNOW WHAT THIS RING IS FOR!!!!!!!!"
WHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE |
He knew, I could feel it, that this class was going to ask for a hand gallop. I contained him as best I could in the rail portion of the canter, and then we had a brief cooling off period where the judge lined us up and went over the pattern, which was the usual walk down the long side on the left rein to the corner, trot the short side, lengthened trot across the diagonal, right lead canter the short side, lengthen trot across the other diagonal, left lead canter the other short side, then hand gallop to halt on the long side.
I volunteered to go first for the pattern because I knew there was no way he was going to stand quietly on the rail that long. And as we picked up the right lead canter after the first lengthening across the diagonal, I saw that there were people sitting on the haybales that divided the warm-up area from the show ring, and I knew shit was about to go sideways. I know this horse, and I could feel that spook coming from miles, counties, states away.
Juuuuuuust Connor things |
I actually didn't realize it at the time, but he spooked at the haybale people and swapped his lead so smoothly, and then counter cantered so balanced, I didn't even notice. Not that I had much time to notice - there were only a handful of canter strides before I had to bring him back to a lengthened trot, and I spent half of them recovering from the spook.
As we approached the last long side, I could feel him gearing up for the hand gallop in a way he never had in Ridden Cob before. He knew what we were there for! I leaned forward, put my leg on and clucked at the top of the long side and he FLEW for me - to the point that I wondered if I'd be able to pull him up in time or if we'd be jumping the hay bales at the end.
We did stop in time (no points off for saying "WHOA" in Welsh, thank goodness), and I was so proud of him. Every other time we've done Ridden Cob, he's been too spent after the English Pleasure division to give me much, but THAT - that was some Welsh Dragon coming out!
Showing in the conformation portion of Ridden Cob |
In the lineup, the judge came up to me and said, "You know you would've won that class, but I can't overlook the blown lead and the spook." That was the first time I was made aware that he blew a lead, so I was pretty confused until I saw the photos later, lol.
But we still took Reserve which was good enough to get us into the Ridden Welsh Championship (combining the winners of Ridden Welsh Pony and Ridden Cob), where Connor was much better behaved after getting that hand gallop out of his system.
Interestingly, in this class the judge called for a canter, and then she called for "reverse at the canter." Now, I had never heard a judge call this at a Welsh show, and in my head, I'm like, "Is this a trick question? Do they want a counter canter, or do they want a lead change?" Second Level (and #IHSAsurvivor) me was like welp, I'm not going to risk it, we're going to stay on this lead, because if she wanted a lead change, surely she would have said it explicitly, otherwise this must be a trick question.
Wrong. And as punishment for being wrong, we got to do a counter canter hand gallop shortly after (which was, to be clear, not what the judge wanted). Connor though, said f*** this s*** and threw in a flying lead change to put us on the right lead for the second half of the hand gallop. I just let it roll - it was a clean change, why would I get after him?
And we won.
I mean look at the little guy, leg on each corner like a proper Cob |
As the judge was leaving the ring, I stopped her and asked her if she would clarify what she meant with the reverse at the canter just so that I would know for the future. I'm going to paraphrase here, but she said she was looking for "whatever the horse was capable of - a simple, a flying - but I did want a lead change. Everyone had some issues in that class, but you won based on the overall picture. Really, he won based on the merits of his hand gallop. So often you see ponies just speed up the canter, or get flat and strung out, but his was animated, true, and balanced, and a joy to watch. This horse is incredibly fit and at a perfect weight and just looks wonderful, and you can tell that you've taken no shortcuts in his training, he's not just going around in a frame. Truly a pleasure to watch." And this was the judge that breeds Cobs.
I almost teared up on the spot, and I am tearing up writing about it, tbh. You guys know how up and down our journey has been over the years as I took the slow road learning along with him. For a judge to say that she can tell we've taken no shortcuts meant more to me than any of the ribbons we won last weekend.
The Best Boy |
And that wrapped up the first day of Welsh showing!
Hell, I teared up at the judge's words, and he's not even my horse!
ReplyDelete<3 It was so kind of her, I didn't ask for any of that feedback except for the clarification on the confusing command.
DeleteThis is wonderful. What a grand team you have become.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteI love his ears slammed forward in all the hand gallop pictures. You can tell that's a pony that loves what he's doing!
ReplyDeleteMe too, lol. I have a post in my head about this, but it was really fun to see him doing classes designed to show off what makes him him, as a Welsh Cob.
DeleteI just KNEW at the end of the first ridden cob the judge was coming over to tell you you would have had it in the bag if not for that unfortunate spook/swap 😭 and I was equally as confused by the "reverse at the canter" command, ughh. But it was definitely so cool that not only did she come answer your questions about that, but that she had so many great things to say about your training of Connor! It was such a cool class to watch 😁
ReplyDeleteI really appreciated her saying all of that, she definitely didn't have to, but as someone who only shows Welsh once a year, it was so helpful.
DeleteCongratulations!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteWhat a ab fab result and bang-up summary of it all! I don't know how much breed stuff I'll do with Stella (NOTHING in hand, as I did that with my first Morgan and it took a LONG time to train the 'halt and park' out of him for dressage), but to have dressage-as-the-best-foundation-for-any-discipline confirmed as that judge did would indeed be the best compliment ever. I didn't think I could be more thrilled for you after the Disco post, but I was wrong!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Believe it or not I still have I think four or five more posts on Heartland, lol, we're nowhere near done. I am definitely grateful that Welsh in-hand generally pins performance horses well, except it drives me crazy that I have to leave feathers on for it!
DeleteYou can tell how much fun Connor is having in that hand gallop! So fun, and what great compliments from the judge! Bummer about the hay bale dwellers though.
ReplyDeleteIt's okay, it happens. The great thing about Welsh shows is I'm one of the few people there that doesn't care about the points, lol. It's just fun for me to do and to get whatever points I can for his sire/Lisa's program.
Deletewheeeeeee!! I'm not actually sure I would have ridden a hand gallop anything other than fast and flat.
ReplyDeleteI can't say I've really done much specifically to develop it, so I guess I'll pin it on CGP's efforts to improve the canter?
DeleteWhat a weekend!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations!!!!
Congrats!!! There's just a whole other adrenaline rush to breed showing. Gotta love it!
ReplyDeleteIt's great, and I don't get to do it nearly enough. This is the only Welsh show within 6 hours of me.
DeleteWhat a great show to round off the year!
ReplyDeleteVery much so!
DeleteI love this post too!! How cool to have such a different show to take him to, and such knowledge judge.
ReplyDelete