Knight and I just completed our first horse show and here’s the play by play of the first two days. It was a mixed bag of experiences.

Friday Night: Cool School

Friday after work I drove from LA to south Orange County (not fun) to school Knight (very fun). Upon arrival I drove through a maze of small and medium sized barns, hotwalkers, jumping arenas, dressage arenas, and sun pens and the world’s largest speed bumps moguls to the barn where he and his buddy mare were stabled.

OTTB first horse show

Debut horse show completed. Check. I stayed on. Check. Ribbon received. Check.

Knight was happily munching away on hay in the rented box stall. The first thing my trainer said was, “We’re not jumping him.” She had ridden him earlier in the day and said he was good but not relaxed. He was really amped. She advised we’d take him in as many flat classes as possible to get him out and about and make it easy for him.

OTTB first horse show

I was pumped after a relaxed, flat schooling session. “We got this, Knight!”

I was down with that plan, and so we led him over the gravel path and through the deserty reeds of a private showbarn to Grandmother’s house the showgrounds. (There were still technically no stalls available, but we were able to rent stalls at a neighboring farm, hence the little trek to the show arena).

A few riders practiced warm up rounds in the covered arena where I’d be riding the next day so we schooled in an outdoor side arena where a little girl was having a heck of a time riding a small chestnut.

Knight schooled brilliantly. He felt relaxed and I had a ball. It was that fun feeling of “Wheee!” While practicing baby verticals the little girl came off due to her horse’s spunkiness and Knight was either oblivious to the theatrics or just didn’t really care. I was also impressed he didn’t bat an eyelash at the pit o’ manure which was adjacent to the arena.

OTTB first horse show

Pit o’ stall waste adjacent to arena.

I had a good feeling about Saturday and was thinking we’d duplicate our carefree walk, cute trot, and Valegro canter the next day (ha ha).

Saturday: More Schooling, No Showing

Saturday morning I was reintroduced to the horse show concept of “hurry up and wait.” My trainer had lunged Knight for about 20 minutes earlier in the day and when I hopped on around 1:00 ish (I arrived at 9), I didn’t really hop on. Knight the Docile was too nervous and would not stand still, prancing and back up at the mounting block. I asked my trainer to hop on him first as in that moment my OTTB was too much horse for me.

OTTB first horse show

How does this hairnet thing work again?

She made it look easy to manage a horse-show first timer, commenting on how the announcer on the PA system and the clapping was triggering a PTSD-like response. It hadn’t occurred to me that the last time he had probably heard those noises was at the track! No wonder he was a different horse! I assumed his calm and cool demeanor from Friday would carry over to the rest of the weekend. Not so.

My trainer worked Knight for quite a while both in the covered warm-up ring which would most closely simulate the actual show ring, and in the “stall waste”-adjacent ring and then walking him up and down the pathways between all the arenas.

There was one point when I noticed his eyes were literally bugging out. He was behaving and trotting and cantering, but his facial expression was something I had never seen before. Normally when he’s ridden he looks happy. This was a worried face. He looked like a wide-eyed cartoon version of himself.

I then mounted and schooled in the covered arena. Knight was a coiled spring. I finally was able to replicate the way of going my trainer had modeled for me earlier. Horses cantered past us from both directions and schooled over the warm up fences. I kept talking to him and finally was able to get a few circles of somewhat stretchy trot and not-crazed canter. I honestly felt like I rode well and confidently, but it was not an enjoyable ride. That Friday feeling was gone.

A pigeon dive bombed in front of Knight’s face as we trotted and he didn’t respond. He was trying really hard to listen to me.

I pulled Knight up and went to stand in the middle. My trainer asked how I felt and I said, “I’m fine, but this is not fun. I feel like I’m not nervous even though he is.” She affirmed that I was riding pretty relaxed, but it was like all the stimuli was too much for Knight.

I don’t remember who suggested scratching the three classes first, but I said I am in this for the fun and neither Knight or I were having fun and I didn’t see the point. “We’ll just use this as exposure. He’s being so good with all the other horses cantering past. And this is a baseline.” I said something else like we have the rest of our lives together and there was no deadline.

OTTB first horse show

And so we took him back to the stall and let him get back to his hay and carrots. Sunday would turn out to be a completely different experience from both Friday and Saturday.

OTTB first horse show

“Nom nom nom. This is my favorite part of the show!” -Knight

Check back in for Part Two and the Big Reveal of our results.

Comments: Has anyone else had a horse arrive calm on Day One and then get more amped as the weekend progressed? I’d also be interested in first-time OTTB stories at horse shows and tips for obedient, but worried horses. (Knight lost weight during the weekend too). 

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20 Comments

  1. Liz Goldsmith June 1, 2015 at 1:43 pm - Reply

    Oh my, yes the OTTB and the PA system. That deserves a post for itself! I used to have the “Call to Post” bugle call as my cell phone ring. The first time that Freedom heard that in my pocket (while I was riding) it was electrifying.

    I have taken horses to shows just to get them desensitized. Sometimes we only handwalked them and let them graze. So, while I’m sure it’s disappointing, it’s not completely unusual.

    Can’t wait to hear about Sunday. I do hope he got better!

    • Susan Friedland-Smith June 1, 2015 at 3:19 pm - Reply

      That is hilarious about your cell phone ring tone. You know, it makes me feel better to hear that you just show up at the show and walk and graze. I’m not disappointed really. He was such a good boy 99% of the time. They actually emptied manure into the dumpster while I rode along the rail and he didn’t care. I can’t wait to tell you about Sunday! Thanks for journeying with us. 🙂

  2. Lauren June 1, 2015 at 2:17 pm - Reply

    It took Simon several shows to get rid of that feeling. Even now, he’s like it for the first few minutes but then quickly settles down. I will go away with exposure!

    • Susan Friedland-Smith June 1, 2015 at 3:19 pm - Reply

      That makes me feel better knowing that Simon started out a little “up” too. I am reassured by your comments. 🙂

      • Lauren June 1, 2015 at 8:34 pm

        You should be! It took about a year and a half of snow miles but now he settles right into horse show life.

  3. Jodi June 1, 2015 at 3:13 pm - Reply

    It’s really just a matter of experience and sounds like you made very good for him. The rest is just trial and error, figuring out what situations seem to relax him the most. The fact that he was just a bit tense, but not crazy, is a good sign. He’ll figure it all out soon. Looking forward to reading part 2.

    • Jodi June 1, 2015 at 3:14 pm - Reply

      *made very good decisions for him.

    • Susan Friedland-Smith June 1, 2015 at 3:16 pm - Reply

      Thanks, Jodi. He was soooo good overall. Never unruly (except for the mounting block when he was a prancing beast). It was like his mind went blank and he was not able to stay connected and move properly. He kept grinding his teeth and at one point on Saturday was flipping his head here and there (I don’t experience him that way at home).

  4. Allison Hagen June 1, 2015 at 4:07 pm - Reply

    You and your trainer made a very smart decision! I have done that in the past, my OTTB and I showed all over Orange County but the first time we went to Coto did not go well, it was overcrowded and windy, and I wound up scratching a couple classes. After lunch and lots of walking around we were good to go for our afternoon ones and the second day went fine.

    That looks like Sycamore! I boarded there too 🙂 Those schooling shows were so nice and convenient.

  5. Carolyn Miele June 1, 2015 at 6:56 pm - Reply

    Try giving him a dose of Ulcerguard as well. Changes my mare from a pushy nervous horse at the show to totally boring and quiet !!

  6. Rodney's Saga June 1, 2015 at 8:57 pm - Reply

    My OTTB was fine at shows. Then we went went to a show held ON a racetrack …

  7. Rodney's Saga June 1, 2015 at 9:03 pm - Reply

    Waiting to hear about day #3!

  8. magreenlee June 1, 2015 at 10:37 pm - Reply

    It sounds like Sunday went better… and there was a mention of ribbon somewhere…

  9. Nicole Sharpe June 1, 2015 at 10:49 pm - Reply

    Murray and I haven’t been to a ton of shows, but we’ve done a lot of schooling outings. Our first show he was fine, but I ended up not riding because he was off, and he was very happy to just stand by the trailer and eat alfalfa. Sometime during April/May 2014 he lost his brain during a schooling outing and didn’t get it back until April of this year, by my reckoning. Depending on how much activity was around him his behavior varied from looky and spooky to downright ridiculous — backing up, refusing to go forward, and that terrifying whale-eye-nervous-sweat that makes me feel terrible for him. Murray enjoyed the classes at the shows — he loves XC and loves stadium — he was just made really nervous by all the activity around him. So we worked on lots of distracting exercises and having him focus his energy on what I wanted him to do instead of what other horses were doing. I also make lots of accommodations for him.

    Practice makes perfect! I am so glad you were willing to scrap your showing plans and do what Knight needed to acclimate to the show environment. This will help immensely in the long run! And such a good choice for both of you. 😀

  10. emma June 2, 2015 at 8:02 am - Reply

    friday sounds like the perfect warm up – cool calm and collected! saturday went well too, all things considered. he worked a little bit and tried hard, and was rewarded by a release from the show atmosphere pressure. hopefully that approach will help him figure the show experience out. can’t wait to read about sunday!

  11. Centered in the Saddle June 2, 2015 at 8:17 am - Reply

    I have definitely had a similar experience, though not with an OTTB. My most recent show, the mare I ride, Twinkle, was a rockstar in the warmup on Friday, taking every jump like a cool customer. Then on Saturday…immediate disqualification for 3 refusals right off the bat.

    But, just like you worked with the horse you had each day and tried to make the experience positive for Knight, I decided to drop down a division for lower jumps, and we ended up doing very well and having lots of fun. Like you said, that’s what it’s all about!

  12. firnhyde June 2, 2015 at 11:43 pm - Reply

    I have so much sympathy. My OTTB was so well behaved in the warmup ring at his first show. Then we trotted up to our first cross-rail in our first class and he had a MELTDOWN. Call it performance anxiety, call it PTSD, call it stage fright – whatever it was, it made him scoot backwards whilst flinging his head and panicking. If it was my little grey mare I would have whacked her butt and told her to get on with it. This approach fails epically with him, so I put my hand on his neck (necessitating nerves of steel as mostly I just wanted to hang on for dear life) and spoke to him. He stopped, flicked an ear back at me, and then trotted calmly forwards. He proceeded to jump three clear relaxed rounds. It was like he thought he was back at the track, but when I reminded him that it was me on him, he realised everything would be okay. Dear daft animal.

  13. Tracy - Fly On Over June 3, 2015 at 7:51 am - Reply

    I’ve not had much experience with green horses, but I can say that my goal is always to have fun, be safe and make the experience enjoyable for both myself and my horse. Sometimes that means a big adjustment in plan! Kudos to you for using all of the options at your disposal to ensure that you both had a good experience, even if it wasn’t what you’d hoped for.

  14. carey June 3, 2015 at 2:04 pm - Reply

    I’m catching up!
    First off, your boots look fantastic!
    Secondly, bummer it didn’t go as planned, but it still sounds like you made it a positive experience for both of you. Can’t wait to hear about Sunday…..

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I'm Susan and this is my horse Knight. We have been a blogging team since 2015 and we're glad you're here. Tally ho!

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