Flora Harris's Blog

Bobs steams round the Advanced at Aston Le WallsRight, I am in huge amounts of trouble for being soooo late with my blog.....apologies! I almost arrived a bit earlier than this as I did actually write it on the way to France, more on that later...but I then managed to delete the whole thing: the joys of technology!!!

So I’ll back-track a bit to Stockland Lovell, which was my next run after Express Eventing. I had Boy in the Intermediate and Mazy in the Novice; Mazy was rather over enthusiastic in the show jumping but jumped a fantastic clear xc to finish just out of the ribbons. Boy was a star again; he was 10th in the Intermediate after a steady run cross country and a clear show jumping. I also picked up some more silver ware for being the best local rider, all in all a good day at the office!

Bobs closes his eyes jumping into the water!Bobs next run was Aston advanced where Boy was also contesting his first event at this level. I had some rather interesting times for my dressage with Boy at 9.30 in the morning. As I don’t have any staff at the moment and I am pretty busy teaching and running around madly, the only way that I was going to get there in time was to leave extremely early. The "morning" is actually a bit generous as I didn’t go to bed at all, and drove through the night catching about 10 minutes sleep in a garage at 3am. I arrived at Aston far from fresh faced clutching a Red Bull: and yep, I still managed to miss my time! Overall the horses went well, though no sleep is not conducive to top results! They both did good tests Bobs especially and they cruised round the cross country, making it feel really easy. Boy just had the one fence but Bobs felt a little flat to have a very uncharacteristic 3 fences, I blamed the sleep deprivation!

The following week I had Jack Downey a student of mine come for some work experience, he was a real star and a huge help around the yard. He has a lovely pony called Bacardi who is very tricky but equally talented and Jack is having some real success, he’s just about to do his first Pre Novice and will hopefully go on to do some pony trials next year.

Boy jumps the drop in his first Advanced at Aston Le WallsGatcombe Festival was very relaxing for me, I went up (pony free!!) on Saturday driving my lovely new Jeep (my prize from winning Express Eventing), to do a course walk for some Foreign students of Danny Anholt at Millfield School. At first I was quite nervous and intimidated, but the kids were great and really got into it asking lots of questions and it ended up being really fun. My wonderful farrier Nick Deacon and his wife Liz then took me out to dinner and on Sunday, I spent the day relaxing in the sun at the press tent, watching the show jumping in the main arena! Sounds really ridiculous as you would think that I might actually appreciate having a weekend not sitting on a hundred horses, but just being at an event especially as big and exciting as Gatcombe makes me want to get out there and do it even more and really adds to my hunger for success!

Next stop was Hartpury for Bobs and Boy, both in the CIC***. Bobs just never really got going in his test, he wasn’t naughty at all, but he was in the indoor arena and I think it just made him go into himself a bit and he didn’t move with the expression he normally has, so we decided it just wasn’t his weekend and withdrew him re routing to the HSBC World Cup CIC*** at Harass Du Pin in France. Boy was a star in the dressage not getting a top mark but a very respectable 57 and I was so pleased because he held it together and tried so hard. Boy negotiates the water at Hartpury 3*He fluffed a few of the transitions and one of the changes didn’t happen, but there is so much more to come and he is improving all the time. In the show jumping he literally went airborne over everything jumping a fabulous clear over what was a pretty testing course. I was quite nervous about his first 3 star cross-country but he gave me such a good ride. However, I was furious however that I made a really silly mistake at the influential double of corners, just missing my line and forcing him to have a run out. Totally not his fault and Blenheim is going to be very exciting for him.

So it was a quick turnaround to get Bobs over to Alex Hua Tian’s (who very kindly gave us a lift to France) and get all the paper work ready for our trip across the water. It was a lovely event with the dressage on a surface and best of all it was fantastically hot and sunny! Bobs did a hugely improved test, I think marked a little harshly but being a World Cup class, the standard was a lot higher and it was great to be able to watch some of the best combinations in Europe show us how to do it. Bobs flew round the cross country, probably the fastest I have ever been but again, I just made a slight mistake and floated him on a turn to a very ‘skinny’ skinny, just abandoning him slightly and he had a glance off, he tried to jump and sort of jumped on the fence but I think he just panicked on takeoff as he wasn’t quite sure where I had gone. ....Boy's round was brilliant!I was soooo annoyed with myself as I had been having and continued to have such an awesome round but after talking it through with Jon Pitts, I felt a lot more positive as I won’t make the same mistake again and I have to be able to move on but most importantly learn from these things.

So It’s now back to reality and I’m working hard in preparation for Blenheim, Bobs and Boy are both feeling great so fingers crossed it all goes to plan.

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Eventer Flora Harris and Bobs in their dressage to music testI’m not quite sure where to start with my Express Eventing experience which was a pretty good weekend for Team Harris! I left reasonably early on the Saturday morning as I was stopping on the way at Millfield School to practise my dressage test. Danny Anholt, who is director of riding at Millfield (my old school), has been so helpful in my preparations. He and his staff designed and built an enormous show jumping and simulated cross country course the week before the competition, and even got a whole load of students to come and act as ‘rent a crowd’ to give me some atmosphere and a real opportunity to practise under pressure. And then they also put up, at about five minutes' notice, a new long arena complete with flowers and white boards for me to come and use on my way. Fantastic!

It was quite a long trek up to Stoneleigh, but Bobs (Law Choice) was soon settled in his stable and it was off for a riders’ meeting. E3, the company who was organising the whole thing, were so welcoming as were all the people from the Festival of the Horse. We were all taxied off to the Hilton, no less, for a welcome dinner and had a fantastic evening with lots of excellent food and a little bit of excellent alcohol too!

Bobs looked after Flora in the simulated cross country phase!It was an early start as the course was open from 6.30 till 8am for us to walk, before some of the fences were taken out again so that the dressage phase could take place. I left Charlotte Pitt, who very kindly came and groomed for me for the day, in charge of Bobs and made my way down to the arena, cup of tea in hand! Most of the other competitors walked the course a few times and then brought their horses into the ring to work them for a familiarisation period. I decided to bypass this with Bobs for two reasons; firstly because I wanted the spookiness of the arena to lift him and sharpen him up a bit so I didn’t want him to become too used to it in there, and also because I really, really needed that hour and a half to learn what was a seriously complicated course!! 17 fences and 99 seconds sounds reasonably straightforward, but it was easily the most complex thing I have had to remember and that includes the Blenheim dressage test! The difficulty was that you were jumping a few of the fences more than once and in different directions and then turning different ways afterwards, so for me, with dyslexia especially, it was going to be tricky remembering the order and sequence of the course.

The dressage started and I had quite a good draw being seventh in, just after halfway. My dressage trainer, Brigid Grant, came to help me work in and of course I still had fellow blogger Anna Ross Davies’s words about sitting up and riding to the phrasing of the music ringing in my ears! It seemed like such a big occasion as there were a lot of people in the stands and also none other than Clare Balding judging the artistic quality of the tests, so the pressure was certainly on! I didn’t really get to watch any tests before me as I was busy working in, but the reception that Duarte Seabra received after his test was awesome so I knew that I had to pull something out of the bag! Riding into the arena Bobs suddenly felt pretty wild and I sent up a quick prayer that I hadn’t been too brave in not bringing him in earlier in the day. He settled really well though and I am so proud of the way he not only coped but really rose to the occasion.

I found riding to the music so much fun, but it did mean there were a lot of things to think about and I was a little bit ahead of the music most of the way through. I made a couple of mistakes and fluffed one of the tempi changes, and when it came to the walk I was a mile too early but I just waited until I heard the cue for the transition and then made up a random walk movement as I went along... Good old Bobs just ambled across the arena thinking it was all relatively normal! When I’d finished I knew it was ok, but I wasn’t expecting such a reception from the crowd and also such good marks. The scoring system was very complicated but I ended up with 28 out of 30 from Clare for artistic impression and finished the dressage lying in second to Duarte by 3 marks, with Alex Hua Tian hot on my heels just 0.5 penalties behind.

We were able to walk the course briefly again before the start of the cross country. I was majorly panicking because I thought I was going to forget it, but once again Jon Pitts was able to offer me some words of wisdom (I think they were something along the lines of "just get on with it!") and so I chilled out in the riders’ stand to watch the first few go. It was great that the cross country was in reverse order so that the better tests really felt the benefit and were able to see how the course and the times were riding. The time was quite a talking point. The speed was set at 425mpm and the optimum time was 99 seconds. There was a 10 second window, from 94 seconds to 104 seconds, in which you could finish without any time penalties, but either side of this 0.25 penalties were added per second. All fairly straightforward, except that we had to guess completely as we couldn’t wear any watches. It was a weird scenario as it was a faster speed than show jumping but slower than even a Novice cross country, but in the end it rode really well and five combinations including me and Bobs managed Bobs put in a fantastic clear show jumping including the joker fence!to come home completely penalty free. Bobs jumped so well, really taking on all the fences and staying dead straight on all his angles and lines. I thought he could go either way and be totally put off by the crowds, music and commentary but he stayed so focused and definitely looked after me. I am really glad I was so meticulous about walking the course as I very nearly lost my way towards the end, missing two important turns which meant I had to really burn down the final line. Nevertheless we were clear inside the time.

It was a fairly quick changeover before the show jumping and again I spent quite a long time walking the course and also doing maths to try and work out how the 'eraser' fence could affect my score. The course was set at about 1.25, with the final fence having two options. A decent oxer or a very large and gappy white upright facing into the crowd set at about 1.35m. This was the joker or eraser fence, which removed 4 penalties from your score if jumped clear, but if you knocked it down you added 4. So if you had a pole then you could remove it by jumping the joker clear and thus having a ‘clear’ round. A clear round including jumping the joker fence clear was the best scenario as it removed 4 penalties from your dressage and cross country score, which in my case was just my dressage score.

The course didn’t start off jumping that well with quite a few penalties spread evenly, and no one managing to clear the joker fence until Tamsyn Hutchins came in and jumped a super clear. Alex was still only 0.5 penalties behind me and Duarte less than a fence in front so it was seriously close. Alex jumped a beautiful round but hit the joker to end with 4 faults, taking the pressure off me slightly. I knew I had to jump clear to put the pressure on Duarte, but jumping the joker, although a risk for me, would force him to have to take it on too. I cantered into the ring pretty undecided, which may not have been the best thing to do, but overall I felt cooler and calmer than in my show jumping at Bramham. (Sounds ridiculous but this is something I am most pleased about!) Bobs jumped out of his skin yet again, I made a couple of errors in a related line and added one stride but he was so careful all the way and I decided that he deserved the chance to show everyone what he could do so I turned to the joker. I need not have worried at all as he pinged over it and finished clear (ie. -4!) and inside the time. I had now reduced my score to 18 so Duarte had to jump clear with the joker, and when he hit the third fence I knew I had won!!

Flora Harris and Bobs with owner Jane Keir, mum Caroline, Jon Peace and Mr KeatingeIt was an amazing feeling and I am so pleased for my mother and Jane Keir, Bobs’ owner, as they were ecstatic jumping up and down like complete loons!! Things happened pretty quickly then as Bobs and I were kitted out in all our prize giving gear, me in a sash that I kept tripping over and Bobs in a rug that he eyed up very carefully for chewing potential! We walked into the prize giving to some very dramatic music but I couldn’t keep a straight face and just kept laughing at how surreal the whole experience was! I knew the horse was capable of a great result but I never ever expected to win so it was such a shock! I seriously couldn’t believe it when I was presented with a £5000 enormous cheque, standing next to a CAR!!

Lap of honour!!I had a brief interview with Clare Balding, which I thought was going to be very scary as I’m always seeing Clare on the telly, but she is really lovely and puts you instantly at ease. Bobs really enjoyed the lap of honour and decided to spook at all the speakers, but he clearly loved the attention from the crowd and was a very happy boy. I think he thought we were all rather insane the way we kept hugging him and telling him how marvellous he was. The lap of honour in the new car was terrifying, much worse than the actual competition itself!! I could just see myself ploughing my way into the stands! After the prize giving there were some press interviews and possibly the most mortifying (and my first) photo shoot. I am not very photogenic and usually try to avoid cameras like the plague, but there was no getting out of it on this occasion.

One of the prizes was the use of a Jeep for a year!So many people made the day possible, not least Jon Peace who came up with the whole concept of Express Eventing. His generous sponsorship is what enabled the whole thing to come off and I can’t thank him enough. The event was also generously supported by a number of other sponsors and the organisational team of E3 Events did such a tremendous job. Personally I have been so lucky to have been supported by an amazing team of people. Brigid was a huge help all day, just chatting things through and doing the important maths part, Jon was always on the end of the phone, my mother, uncle, and young cousin Faye (who gave me these lovely photos) were all there supporting me, as well as Jane and Susannah and Leah Downey who are great friends and also own another of my rides. It was a fantastic group of riders who all took part and most of all it was so much fun!

Bobs was a superstar all day, I feel very privileged to have such a generous and talented horse in my yard, and I am just so excited about him as there is much, much more still to come... onwards and upwards!

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Flora and Boy finished a brilliant 3rd in the Longleat Intermediate!I really must sound like a stuck record but things have yet again been pretty darn busy! Straight after Bramham we were almost immediately back out in the lorry, this time with Maisie and Gladys in the BE100 at Great Tew. Gladys was competing HC in a confidence giving run as she has had a little set back with her show jumping, and Maisie was just in the normal class. They were both fab on the flat, Gladys being the only horse in the 20’s with a 28, and Maisie on a 30. Gladys jumped a fantastic double clear and would have won by over 6 marks. Maisie also jumped really well, just rolling a pole and jumping a super and very speedy clear on the cross country. She finished equal 9th.

Next stop Longleat, with three on board. Boy was in the Intermediate, he was a total star all weekend and finished 3rd with an awesome double clear. He is feeling better and better and I can’t wait to see how much more he has to give. Gladys was in the Novice, she scored 30 to lie 2nd after dressage, the judge even called me over to say how smart she was which is pretty encouraging! Unfortunately it was not to be and after jumping the first half of the show jumping beautifully, she frightened herself slightly by having a rail and then just got a little tense. I decided to withdraw her cross country as she didn’t really need the run unless she was going to win, and I have decided just to take her show jumping for a while. Maisie was in the BE100 - another really lovely test followed by a much softer show jumping and a clear cross country left us just outside the ribbons.

Eventer Flora Harris and Boy fly cross country for 6th place at Salperton!Boy’s next run was Salperton. My farrier Nick Deacon and his wife very kindly came to groom for me, and they were certainly useful as I managed to arrive about an hour late! Once again he was a really good pony and barring a massive rider error in the show jumping we had another successful day finishing 6th in the Intermediate.

A few weeks ago I was invited to compete in the Express Eventing competition up at Stoneleigh in Warwickshire. It comprises of a self written dressage test to music, a simulated arena cross country test and then a round of show jumps. (With a twist apparently but I’m not quite sure what it is yet, oh and Horse Hero will be there filming!) As I have never done dressage to music before, and my musical skills resemble something of a sloth with a violin, Jon Pitts came to the rescue once again and introduced me to fellow Horse Hero blogger and top international dressage rider Anna Ross Davies. Anna very kindly offered to help me out, so I made the long trip over to Slapton to get cracking.

Anna is a fantastic trainer as well as a world class competitor so I was quite nervous. I took Bobs who I’m riding at Express Eventing and also Gladys... I thought with Bobs’ slightly cob like movement Gladys with her flash trot might redeem me slightly. I had what can only be described as a serious grilling and after riding two I felt as thought I had ridden 20. I don’t think I overly impressed but I was left with my mind buzzing and totally inspired as to how to improve and what I had to work on... there was a very long list!! From Anna’s I went straight up to Richard Davison’s yard near Nottingham for an official "Express Eventing training and PR day". Again this was a really useful session and Richard very kindly put us up in his beautiful yard for the night. His indoor school is to die for and looks like something out of a health spa with all white walls and flowers... no wonder all the horses go so well!

Maisie going clear at Longleat, she has been going very well!Back to Somerset and yet another quick change of horses and I was off to a BSJA show in Wiltshire. Gladys and Maisie just need a little more ring time so that they are less spooky and although I nearly melted on what was the hottest day of the year so far, they both went really well being placed first and second in the Newcomers and just having a pole in the 1.15.

The next week I was lucky enough to be able to go back to Anna’s, this time to write the floor plan for the test and get some music sorted. I was a bit worried about remembering everything from the last lessons I had, but I think it went really well and Anna just whipped up a whole test and music in about five minutes! It’s really awesome and I would never have been able to come up with anything so sophisticated. Aside from writing the test, we worked hard on my position as although I think that I have the strength to sit and hold myself correctly, I haven’t necessarily been implementing it all the time on the horses. We also worked on Gladys’s collection and lateral suppleness. Anna gave me some really useful exercises that have helped me get her around my inside leg without reverting to the rein all the time.

I’ve now got a cd of my music that I’ll be using up at Stoneleigh. It’s important to know the music really really well so I can ride to the phrasing and also know your cues for each of the transitions, so I’ve been listening to it endlessly... I think the sheep of Somerset will start dancing soon the amount of times I’ve had it on repeat!

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Flora Harris and Law Choice (Bobs) cross country at Chatsworth CIC***So much has been going on, I hardly know where to start! After Belton, Bobs’ (Law Choice) went to Chatsworth to compete in the CIC***. I gave Kate Jupp a lift as she lives locally to me, and because Chatsworth is a long old way away, it was a great help to share the cost of the diesel. We had a slightly interesting journey as the sat nav (which has since been thrown out of the window) decided to direct us to a tiny humpback bridge, which would have beached the lorry, so after some nifty reversing (my truck is 40ft long and I had to go backwards for nearly a mile) we finally reached the stabling. It was definitely worth the tricky journey, however, as the stabling was great and they even put on a BBQ for us as a welcome!

My test wasn’t until late on the Saturday afternoon and Mum and Jane Kier (Bobs’ owner) had driven up from London to see their superstar perform. He was really good and produced a nice accurate test, if a tiny bit flat. But overall I was pleased and he was lying 7th in a big class with a lot of top senior riders. The course was flipping huge but this was my third three star CIC so I’ve become slightly more numbed to the enormous size of the fences. The one that went six inches over my head however still made me feel slightly green.

After another fab clear round in the show jumping where he went literally airborne, we set off cross country feeling fairly sick, well I certainly did! I must sound like a stuck record but he was awesome yet again, going direct everywhere and finishing full of running, even if I did have to navigate around a mother, baby and pram, two fences from home! I was a bit disappointed to pick up 20 time faults but after looking at the score board I was still pretty quick and ended up finishing 6th! I also won the best U25 prize. Not a bad day at the office!

The other ponies have also been busy. Gladys has had a slight confidence issue in the show jumping but after some really successful BS shows is back on the road to being marvellous again. Maisie has also been busy and is growing in confidence all the time, perhaps sometimes a little too sure of herself but I am in no doubt that a big result is around the corner! Every time I jump her I have to resist the temptation to go higher and higher as she just seems to have such endless scope. Boy is feeling better than ever, he achieved a personal best in the dressage at Hambleden and after a clear round show jumping I was well in the hunt. Unfortunately a pilot error lead to an omission of a fence, so that was the end of that, but I redeemed myself with a double clear at Aston le Walls and then a top ride at Pontispool. He now heads to Longleat and Salperton and then contests his first Advanced at Aston. Keep your eye on him - he’s gonna be a good un!

We have had a bit of bad luck involving my Grandfather’s brood mare Dizzy. She was in foal to Ben’s Afaere and was at stud ready for foaling when she developed really severe colic. We got her through the night with some really strong painkillers, but she was no better at all the next morning so we unfortunately had to have her put down if there was any chance of saving the foal. We managed to get the filly foal out and she looked pretty good for a while, but died that evening due to respiratory issues. It’s such a shame as they were both lovely.

Flora Harris and Bobs in the dressage arena at BramhamSo to Bramham. I had been working incredibly hard to be totally prepared and Bobs and I were both feeling on flying form. We set off on Wednesday morning for the long drive up to Yorkshire and I also took Gladys with me to keep her tuned up. Bobs felt pretty wild when we got there but this is normally a good thing as he can be a bit flat and lazy. He trotted up great and then it was my test on the Friday. The judges seemed to be marking really high so I was quite nervous, especially as this was probably the biggest occasion that I had ridden at since my memory lapse at Blenheim last year. I had no need to worry as he was fantastic and really rose to the occasion. There were plenty of mistakes and areas to be improved on, but I was pleased overall and ended up in 5th after dressage so well in touch.

The course was something else entirely; it was by far the biggest and most testing thing that I’ve jumped and the rumours floating round the lorry park about it being completely unjumpable and bigger than Badminton had quite a lot of truth in them!! I don’t think that I have ever been so Flora and Bobs fly an enormous fence at Bramhamnervous, but thankfully fellow blogger Jon Pitts and I were speaking regularly about how I was mentally preparing and approaching each stage of the competition. It was very important that I held on to my self-belief and recognised what a good season I had been having on the run up to Bramham, so there was no reason why I couldn’t perform at my best.

I set off feeling terrified but overall very determined... I was not going to cock this up! I went long at the water at fence 5 but apart from that I had the most amazing ride and stuck to my plan about being more positive and less interfering into my fences in order to save more time. Coming into the third last, a ridiculously huge ditch and brush palisade, the jump judge stepped out with her red flag. It was a complete nightmare as Bobs was really tired by this point and to stop him for 10 minutes and then have to pick him back up and ask him to jump some more huge fences felt really mean. He managed it, however, and we came home with 4 time faults, faster than I had dared hope and we ended the day in 3rd.

Flora and Bobs show jumped well to finish 4th at BramhamThe show jumping was big and technical and started out causing a huge amount of trouble. Bobs felt a little tired but jumped his socks off and didn’t feel like touching a pole. But I made a real mistake at the planks and we had it down. I think he just took his eye off the fence for a second as I was asking for one more stride and he tipped it in front. It was a shame as that 4 faults dropped me down to 4th but overall I am thrilled with how he went and really excited about what is to come from him. I am also now qualified for Badminton... that's a seriously scary thought!!

There is still loads to be doing now we’re home from Bramham. It feels like we’ve got to get back to reality, as when you’re away you seem to be in a sort of three day bubble! I am really thrilled to have been invited to Express Eventing and preparations for that have already begun, and my other ponies are all ready and raring to go - just looking at the diary is making me feel tired!

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