Austin Eventing: A Karen O’Connor Clinic from Rider and Auditor Perspectives

Austin Eventing and Lisa Marie Bauman recently participated in a clinic with Karen O'Connor. After the clinic, Austin Eventing posted a unique perspective on the clinic from both an auditor and a rider's point of view. We can certainly all relate to the nerves that come with taking a lesson with the likes of Karen O'Connor, but we are happy to report that Karen truly got the best out of each and every horse and rider as only Karen can do. Many thanks to Lisa for sharing this post with us. Do you have a story you'd like to share? Send it to [email protected].

Karen O'Connor in her teaching element. Photo courtesy of Austin Eventing. Karen O'Connor in her teaching element. Photo courtesy of Austin Eventing.

Day 1: Dressage

Auditor: 

Karen O’Connor’s in the house—I mean the arena-and she’s setting the bar. Wait, who am I kidding? She is the bar. Now she’s chatting with each horse and rider pair, asking about their trouble spots, adjusting a cheek piece here, suggesting a different bit there, and they’re calmly talking to her. And they’re are off around the arena, striving for a steady tempo, following the horse’s motions with their arms—soft elbows, elastic arms.

Before I know it, the session is over and they’ve accomplished more in forty minutes than they’ll probably accomplish in next six months.

Rider:

Oh my God, were we supposed to be braided?! Why is that little girl braided?!  Oh, thank God, she is not part of the clinic.  I don’t think she is anyway.  Is she?  Is it a sign of disrespect if I don’t take the tail bag off my horse?  Seriously, this is the ONE time, my grey horse rolls? Oh my god, it’s Karen O’Connor.  That’s her. I can see her piercing eyes from here.  I hope they are running on time.  I don’t want to be late.  Stop pacing.  I have to stop pacing.  I have 2 hours before my ride.  Where is the other girl I am riding with?

Still no sign of the other girl I am riding with.  Should I be nervous?  Did they move locations?  No, that’s Karen in the arena, but where is the other girl?  Am I even registered in this clinic?

Ok, well, I’m getting on.  My horse is starting to show off her piaffe skills while I am attempting to mount.  This is going to be a long morning. At least there is another girl in my dressage lesson.

There is no one else in my lesson?  I’m having a private lesson with Karen?

I suddenly feel nauseous.

What is my name?  Good question.  I’m looking frantically around the arena at faces smiling at me.  All sounds are muffled by the deafening roar increasing in my ears.  My mouth is moving, but I have no control over the words coming out, much less comprehension of technical questions.  Somehow I must be answering in a coherent fashion, though how absolutely alludes me.  I feel as if I am watching myself on TV and am not actively participating in this lesson.

Canter?  Do you have a sedative?  No, for me.  The horse is always like this.

That is all I remember before the darkness set in.

Day 2:  Stadium Jumping

Auditor:

Circle of death with just one jump on a fifteen meter circle—amazing what that can do for yielding your horse’s shoulder. Straight lines, bending lines, and turns. Regulate your tempo, count your strides and execute your point of turn to get your line of direction. Karen packs it all into a coursework session that sharpens each pair’s stadium jumping skills. It’s amazing how much she pulls out of each and everypair.

Rider:

Even though I’m convinced I blacked out mid dressage lesson, it appears I made it through unscathed and possibly showed improvement. I have no reason to believe this, as I don’t remember the second half of the ride. Regardless, I have survived Day 1 of the Karen O’Connor clinic.  I think.

Now the real terror sets in.  My hands are shaking with mild tremors so I shove them further into my pockets, so as to not alert the EMTs that I might at any point have a seizure.

I keep telling myself that I am here to get help.  She is here to help me.

My horse is a runaway.

I will be sitting on a freight train with no brakes.

Dear God, I swear I have jumped before.  No, this is not my horse’s first time in an arena.  Is that smoke coming out of her nose in the stall?  I’m pretty sure I smell fire.  I think it’s coming from my mare’s eyes.

How many feet apart are those fences?  It doesn’t matter, we are going to be going to fast to count.  What are strides?  I blink and stand in the middle of the lesson before, in wonderment of their horses’ maneuverability.  They can halt.  I’m in trouble.

Day 3:  Cross Country

Auditor:

The phase that everyone who calls themselves a three day eventer lives for. From refining your gallop position to setting your pace, from tackling up and down banksto the ever terrifying trakehner, there’s no better way to hone your skills than with five time Olympian Karen O’Connor. She doesn’t back down from the challenge of getting every horse and rider through each obstacle and neither do the horse and riders. It’s a combination of go-for-it students and take-no-prisoners clinician that leaves everyone feeling like there’s nothing on the cross country cross that they can’t handle by the time the session has ended.

Rider:

Galloping can only help me at this point.  I’m trying to ignore the fact that my mare reared immediately in warm up. I keep checking my air vest. I might need that. Medical arm band? Definitely. Check.

My eyes start to focus again and my breathing starts to dip slightly below hyperventilating.

We are here for the cross country.

Deep breath again.

Here we gooooooooo….  click, click, click.  It all falls into place.

To follow along with more Austin Eventing adventures, check out their blog.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments