Vittoria Panizzon's Blog

Vittoria and Nina get ready for a hack!Well... where to start? An awful lot has happened on the yard since my last proper update! I never get home before supper time at best, and even then overdue paperwork and bills await me as well as hungry mouths of working pupils, guests and housemates. By the time I try to write my blog I fall asleep at the computer and really need to get a minimum few hours sleep before the following day!

Italian young rider Isabella helped me in the spring, but then went back to Italy at the end of May, she had been rather unlucky with her mare, but I felt there could have been plenty to achieve in the second half of the season to make the whole visit worthwhile, had she stayed. Anyway, I was certainly going to miss her company and excellent help! But short term I had a bit of a panic as I only had ten days notice to sort a new housemate, yard helper and livery! Isabella at an eventLuckily things stretched to two weeks so I then only had one week to cover on my own before my friend Toria came to the rescue for the month of June. That week was a rather wearing one! Plenty of late ends to the day but at least I was lucky enough to be helped by another friend, Serena, the day I was running 3 horses at Aston le Walls, she did brilliantly and the three BE100s were all placed.

Nina and Torio grab a cuppa' in the lorryToria is a very dear friend of mine and it was a real treat having her company for a month, she responded to my facebook plea for help and came to the rescue after finishing her degree. Sadly she couldn't stay long term, though the saving grace was that we would both be saved a 'fat' ending, as we love all the same food and were getting badly addicted to sugary mango and lemon drizzle cake inbetween large feasts of steak from her family's herd of cattle! We had a lovely chatty month together and her young horse Hector made great progress, we also had a few laughs teasing the boys at home, as were had two Toms and two Victorias living in the same house, most confusing for everyone else! Thank goodness for nicknames!

Rachel having a jumping lesson (and star of one of the Horse Hero videos)Nina, who I have taught in the pony club in the past sent me her horse, George, during her exams. I had introduced him to eventing last year for his previous owners before Nina bought him. He can be good fun to ride but had had the odd naughty moment more recently so I had a good time bossing him around a few months! I gave him a few successful runs to get him ready for Nina's busy pony club holiday schedule! She also came to be a working pupil for a couple of weeks with was a great treat as she is fun company and very efficient on the yard. Nina and Tor got on well too so we all had a good time, especially on my yard open day / housewarming - it was a beautiful sunny Sunday and A newly painted and tidy tack room!lots of friends came to visit the immaculately scrubbed stable yard and hear a little presentation on each horse followed, of course, by a party in my cottage. In hindsight Sundays are not the best choice as several people end up failing to attend due to hangovers, but I suppose it meant things didn't get too late and messy that night!

I again ended up with a week gap between working pupils but this time Rhona came to the rescue. She is Bug's biggest fan and may not have realised what she was letting herself into when she agreed to come and stay after a drink or two at my yard open day! She brought her delightful 30yr old pony Flight who so loved the green Cotswold fields it took half an hour to load him in the trailer when the time came to go home! Rhona did brilliantly - Vittoria and her Olympic partner Bug, who is having a 'gap' year!quite a full yard meant rather more mucking out and riding than she was used to so she became very fit in a few days and left with strong resolutions to keep things up at home! I also had to persuade her not to pamper each horse too diligently or we would never finish, but Bug did of course get treated to several one-to-one pamper sessions and rescued from boredom in the field with the retired horses he considers to be riff-raff! The climax of her visit was Pennyz debut at Intermediate level with the second place at Glanusk (recounted in my previous blog entry). I also owe Rhona a great photographic service!

Rachael helped me for July, yet another wonderful working pupil... she is only 16 and lives in Orkney and despite never even having had her own pony she rides absolutely beautifully! She has a great seat, quiet Pennyz tolerating the dressage at the Gatcombe Novice Champs'hands and a good feel so she is one of the very few people who could cope hacking bouncy Pennyz at full fitness! A relief for me as it occasionally gave me a break from having to get seasick being bounced about by her out hacking. As the season goes on and she gets fitter she gets more of a handful at home and flatwork goes right off the menu, she is firmly convinced she is a racehorse and would like to join Richard Phillips's string when we pass them in the morning! Luckily she is quite different at events providing I don't make her endure more than ten minutes dressage warm-up, but it does mean getting things right in the ring without much practice outside! Anyhow Rachael was brilliant, so independant and great at getting on with things, as well as very convincing in her willingness to sleep on the mattress in the sitting room, as during much of her stay I had to leave the spare room to paying guests. Another string to Rachael's bow is a talent for neck and shoulder massage...I miss her!


...and bouncing round the tricky show jumping trackUnfortunately I only managed to kidnap her 'till Gatcombe, a great note to finish on as Pennyz was 6th in the Novice Championships! A respectable dressage despite a hailstorm, a lovely show jumping round with just an unfortunate pole on the last planks that everyone else had down (annoying, as she normally only has a pole down when I do something stupid) and an exhilarating cross country round (she flew round 2 secs inside the time - not bad for Gatcombe hills) which made for a thrilling day and a very excited owner.

...and winging her way around the cross country!Sadly Rachael has now had to go back to school, but I am sure I can tempt her back from Orkney next year! Luckily I have a great replacement in Roxy, who has only been with me a week but is learning very fast and getting on very well with everyone, she even gets a proper bedroom as I have had the garage converted to provide extra accommodation so that I can keep the two spare rooms in the cottage rented out full time, so Roxy has a retreat when she gets bored of us as well as a proper bed to sleep in! I have been lucky with so many lovely helpers coming to the rescue, the downside is that at each changeover the new arrival needs a while to adjust to the workload, it takes a while to get faster and more time efficient as well as coping with my long hours of fitness hacking so I am delighted Roxy can stay the rest of the season which will allow me to concentrate more on the horses and not worry about helping newcomers get to know the yard.

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Italian event rider Vittoria Pannizon and Pennyz came second in the Intermediate at Glanusk!I am still buzzing from Sunday... Pennyz was second in her first Intermediate at Glanusk in Wales!! It was also my first Intermediate run in over a year! I had chosen this venue for her upgrade because being a new event I mistakenly expected a fairly kind course... instead I feel very much like I have negotiated a 3* course. (A whole level and a half higher!) I am glad my lack of sleep didn't affect my riding or encourage any blond moments!

The Saturday got more and more hectic as it progressed. I had the yard sorted just before some people came to see Sunshine (a BE100 horse I am selling), but then Rhona, my generous helper for the week, had a bad reaction to a wasp sting and had to take it easy for a few hours. By the time I had ridden more horses I only just had Sunshine sparkling again in time for more people coming to try him! Both people really liked him, but to ensure my stress levels went sky high he decided to cough and choke every time he worked in the dusty arena... so embarrassing! Did he really have to choose that day to be unhealthy for the first time?! I hate selling horses, things like this always happen. Luckily he managed to impress both buyers, who were junior girls and well suited to him.

Let's go girl!By the time Rhona (who felt a little better) and I had finished washing Pennyz and doing evening stables for ten horses it was past supper time and Rhona was fading fast, so I took her to get a Chinese takeaway and dropped her back at home before going back to the yard to load the lorry and plait Pennyz. I got home at midnight, and still needed to pack my stuff! This was not ideal as I had to be back on the yard by 6am to feed all the horses and prepare Pennyz for travelling. Luckily turning all the horses out at night and having all the stables ready saves much time in the morning!

Pennyz did quite a good dressage considering she is new at this level. A longer warm up than planned (Pennyz gets bored of dressage after ten minutes, as do I) and tripping up on the way in didn't help, but a 35 was very reasonable. I was then delighted with a clear show jumping, everything felt very grown up in the tiny practice ring where everyone was trying oversized jumps, but Pennyz then bounced round the course so beautifully she made me smile all the way. I felt quite smug on a proper show jumper! This came in handy cross country too... I walked the course and didn't want to worry Sally (her owner) as we know Pennyz is a terrific jumper, but it certainly was a Vittoria and Pennyz on the challenging cross country coursewhole stratosphere apart from the Novices we have done! There were many very testing technical combinations and it was also a long galloping course, beautifully presented without a doubt, but just not an ideal first Intermediate. Many people gave me sympathetic looks when I said it was her first, and that I was out of practice!

The cross country warm up didn't help. It was great to see lots of friends, but everyone kept demolishing the tricky hanging logs at the second water as they were designed to be frangible and the course kept getting held to rebuild them! I walked round and round for an hour waiting, hearing tales of difficulties out there! Eventually we set off, and as she soared over the huge open ditch hedge at fence 3 I knew we'd be fine. She sailed over anything I pointed her at and is such a good jumper I didn't have to worry about stridings or frangible fences! I took two longer routes to avoid frightening her on demanding obstacles on her first attempt, but still only had 7 time faults without even pushing her! This, along with the show jumping clear, pulled us right up to second!! The competition had been depleted with many not surviving the cross country so we were all terribly Vittoria Pannizon and Pennyz in the beautiful Welsh countrysideproud! I feel grown up again, I felt adrenaline and almost nerves and loved galloping round a long flowing course again with a proper challenge!

Sally was bouncing with proud excitement, as was I, and I'm honoured to have jumped Pennyz' first little grid of jumps last year and now to have ridden her round her first intermediate. Rhona did brilliantly, making her white and sparkly and also being our personal photographer! My uni’ friend, Sarah, also came to support which must have brought us luck.

I managed to drive the lorry two hours home again keeping my eyes open before doing evening stables as quickly as possible in order to collapse at home by supper time! Even after eight hours sleep Monday morning was a real struggle! Judging by dawn appearing as I finish writing this, today is going to be even worse!

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Well it’s a very hectic week... I have been puzzling over possible yard opening and house warming party dates for months and eventually settled for Sunday 20th June for both in order to kill two birds with one stone. It’s a rare occasion all my housemates are around (very important to have plenty of slave labour!) and it is also Adlestrop village open day.

A weekend date is not good for eventers as many will be at Longleat or Catton, but then weekdays don’t suit those with more normal jobs, so I can’t win either way! I am also in the midst of sorting drinks and nibbles and spotless ponies, I hope! Just to ensure I don’t have a spare minute I am also running three horses in the Novice at Longleat on Saturday and I'm accompanying George with his owner Nina to run in the BE100 on Friday!

At least I got my new computer yesterday (my old one broke definitively months ago...) so I am trying to catch up with my blog, update my website and print off photos for the horses’ stables!

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Vittoria and Sunshine who has moved up to Pre NoviceMy late April events took a rather embarassing turn, in fact I had some blond moments that were so cringeworthy I am too ashamed to recount them! Suffice to say there are some "E"s on my record that have nothing to do with horse performance! At first I blamed lack of sleep after late evenings plaiting and washing, but then I decided foolish errors were determined to happen in threes as much rest with extra paid yard help and extra course revision on the day still didn't avert two further episodes. Luckily I got over the desire for the earth to swallow me and touch wood the embarassing spell is over now.

Sunshine jumped easily round Intros and has moved up to Pre Novice. He was a little surprised to have to jump higher over the show jumps, but is completely unfazed by the cross country and is well liked by dressage judges. He will soon be ready to sell as a delightful Junior horse. Scar had Pre Novice double clears followed by a less successful first Novice of the season due to a huge show jumping course and disorganised practice ring. He made up for this with a very good run at Mattingley obtaining a placing, I hope he also finds a good new home soon.

Italian team eventer Vittoria Pannizon with Kiwi

Vittoria with dressage horse turned eventer Nino

Kiwi ingeniously managed to avoid any work for several weeks by catching a virus followed by a cough. At least this enabled him to put back on all the weight he'd lost out hunting (he was so bouncy I had to keep him out all day), so he now looks like a show horse! He has finally had two runs, the most recent one ridden by Isabella who did a brilliant job producing a double clear! Sadly, he will have to go too, as I can't afford to be paying for so many horses myself, and I need some more stable space now as well.

Nino showing his dressage credentialsThe yard had an interesting addition in March, a German bred Hanoverian ex-dressage horse! Nino belongs to Louise Woof and is a large chestnut gelding who didn't take to the pressures of pure dressage (who can blame him?!). A friend suggested he be sent to me to attempt eventing instead as he appeared to have jumping ability. In the meantime he has mostly been sitting in a field for a while so he is now 13 and arrived looking very roly poly compared to the skinny ex-racehorses, but I am sure would not have looked out of place in a dressage environment. It was actually refreshing to have a huge crested neck to admire, and although I couldn't hug my arms round it, the rest of the Nino learning how to jump!yard could all benefit from a bit of it! I guess I am just too used to Thoroughbreds. I also had a shock when I first rode him, he has the hugest trot I have ever experienced so I nearly got bounced right out the saddle! He is certainly flashy and has been turning heads ever since!

Needless to say Nino went straight on a crash diet and a fitness course, I also investigated his jumping and taught him to hack. On day one we encountered ridge and furrow... this led to panic, he stood on the ridges with absolutely no idea how to negotiate the furrows! Two months later he is a completely different horse, loves hacking and variety, is more willing to negotiate new situations, jumps confidently and easily and looks pretty much like a smart eventer! He has decreased two rug sizes and now fits Nino looking good in the air!many of my horses' rugs and girths! All this transformation has culminated in winning his first Open BE90 at Mount Ballan recently!! A 24 dressage gave room for a pole down (I think the jumps were too small so Nino's concentration wasn't at its best) and he took the cross country in his stride, you'd never guess he was an eventing virgin! I actually find the dressage challenging on him, warmbloods seem to work by pressing slightly different buttons and things happen in extremes, so when I try and steady him I sometimes feel like he is threatening to launch into passage!

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