Tiana Coudray Eventing
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Press
  • Gallery
  • Horses
    • Current Horses
    • Past Horses
  • Facilities
  • Sponsors
  • Contact

NEWS

The most flexible blog ever

Tiana Coudray Eventing
Tiana impresses at Aachen

Tiana Impresses at Aachen

Another great competition result for Tiana and Ringwood Magister!

Read more
July 12, 2013
News

Heading to Germany
June 23, 2013

I can’t believe it is already summer. Where has the time gone? A long and snowy winter led to a similarly snowy spring. We were snowed upon at three of my four spring horse trials. But after last year’s numerous event cancellations, British Eventing membership as a whole was determined to ride on, no matter what the conditions! So ride we did. I felt particularly sorry for Astier Nicholas when he arrived from the south of France to base with us for the two months leading up to Badminton. Amid gale force winds, ice, snow, and hail, I saw a familiar look of “what am I doing here?” as he got out of his lorry. So when Badminton week came around with the first solid week of warm and sunny weather in the last two years, we could hardly believe our luck!

As it turned out, Badminton was lucky for me in more ways than just the weather. In undoubtedly the most competitive field Badminton has ever seen, amongst an astounding number of Olympic, European, and World medalists, Finn and I managed an exceptionally solid and competitive performance. After two days of foot perfect competition, and what should have been a fantastic 6th place finish, our ultimate result was marred by an out-of-character two rails in show jumping. While a 17th place finish is still something to celebrate, I can’t help but feel how much slipped away from us on the final day. I am so proud of how Finn went all weekend, with a solid dressage, and what was called the “round of the day” cross country. I am thrilled with how fit and sound he came through it all. Even his show jumping could hardly be called his fault. More than anything, it was an unfortunate time to learn a lot about how to warm up and how to prepare him to go into the ring. Sadly, our rails were “had” before we ever entered the ring. But if there’s anything I know about horses, it’s that you have to savor the good times when they happen. As the New Zealand team coach said to me after cross country, “enjoy it, rides like that don’t happen very often.” It seems his words were a bit too fortuitous.

When we came home, with Finn fit and well and our first Badminton under our belt, all sights moved to the future. I received the message from the USEF that we had been selected for the Nations Cup team at Aachen, Germany, and my other Advanced horse, Ken, was entered for the prestigious CCI 3* at Bramham. My other exciting prospect, Doris, was proving as good as we could hope, flying around her first three Intermediates easily, and aiming for 2*. It seemed all my goals for the year were aligned so far. But with a sharp bursting of my happiness bubble, Ken went very lame. After all the standard diagnostics turned up nothing, we took him in for an MRI which showed he has a race horse bone injury rarely or never seen in Eventers and that was developing, unbeknownst to us, long before we bought him last year. Ken’s only treatment options were to do surgery and to give him a long period of complete rest with a less than optimistic prognosis for the future. He made it through surgery and recovery well, and is behaving better than expected on box rest. I know it’s easy to say, but he had as good a chance as any to win Bramham, and be headed to the World Equestrian Games next year. Instead, the crushing disappointment of seeing him “standing in” is a bitter pill to swallow. The only thing to do is give him every chance at a full recovery and then wait and see.

So with the departure for Aachen Germany fast approaching, Finn seems fighting fit and ready to go. We had a couple easy weeks after Badminton, and now he is happy to be back in full work. He had an easy run in the open intermediate last weekend at Nunney International Horse Trials where we lead the dressage by a mile, show jumped beautifully, and then we went intentionally slow but easily around the cross country. I have him fully “wrapped up in cotton wool” at this point and can’t wait to get to Germany. With a team of Clark Montgomery, Will Faudre, Marilyn Little, and myself, we will be looking to have a very competitive team performance. It is an honor to be selected for the USA’s first ever team to Aachen and it should be an amazing experience.

Aachen Nations Cup

Tiana is named to the USA team for the Nations Cup in Germany.

Read more
June 22, 2013
News

Greetings from England
Chipping Sodbury
March 12, 2013

Here’s a brief recap of the year so far.

The year started with snow.



and more snow…

tractor-driving-lesson-1

Tractor driving lessons @ Chescombe Farm

Tractor-Driving-Lesson-2

Thank you everyone for helping to keep our school useable.


Training Sessions in England

By John on February 4, 2013 1:22 PM , Filed Under Eventing Nation

In the past, when US riders have headed over to train permanently in England, they did so with the full understanding that they were more or less unplugging from the US team system.  They were trading attention from the team for the best competitive environment in the world.  Like so many other traditions of the past, having to make that trade-off has died with the new US eventing program.  Instead of taking a weekend off, David hopped on a plane after the Ocala sessions and went to England to coach up British based riders Jules Stiller, Clark Montgomery, and Tiana Coudray.  Tiana was kind enough to write to us about her experience from the training sessions.  As always, Tiana brings a level of understanding to training that belies her age.  Thanks for writing this Tiana and thank you for reading.
—-

From Tiana:

jog-at-rolex
To start off, my report of our training session is going to be a little different from the California and Ocala recaps. We only had Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning, and, with just myself, Clark Montgomery, and Julian Stiller, it was a very small group, so lessons changed over fast. I had three horses and Jules and Clark each rode two so there was very little time to watch anyone else. Most of all, in place of the oppressive 70* weather and cancer-causing UV rays everyone has had to endure so far back home, we’re in the UK. This means that for anything to take place, it requires a full kettle of boiling water, a ready supply of tea or coffee, and 6 more layers of winter clothing. Frequent discussion about the weather, although not required, is highly recommended. For myself and Jules, this all is a prerequisite and doesn’t require much thought anymore. I wonder for Clark however if the consequences of his new relocation to the UK are still sinking in. Ah, what we do for the love of our sport!

At any rate, I was eager and anxious for this weekend to come as I have never ridden with David before. So while many American riders have grown up under the O’Connors and consider David and Karen a pair of surrogate parents, for me, this was David 1.0.  I like knowing what is expected of me, what a teacher is looking for, and I really like knowing the answers to the test.  When you ride with a new coach, you are starting from scratch.  You start with building an understanding with each other of expectations and respect, and until you are both on the same page you cannot begin to move forward.  With a coach I know really well, I can start a sentence and they could finish it, and visa versa.  You have history and context for where you have come from and where you are headed.  I can do my homework and come to class ready with the answers because I know what is expected.  Seeing Clark with David, this is the relationship they have. For Jules, myself, and many riders across America, that understanding has to start now. In the process, things you know and do well can turn into a game of Twister.  The aids for trot turn into “Right Hand Green, Left Foot Blue, try not to topple over.”  Simple movements become mechanical and artificial as you break apart things that usually happen all as one.  By my third dressage lesson Saturday, I thought David and myself were starting to speak the same language and understand one another.  But then Sunday we were jumping, and that brought on more unknowns.

In my first lesson, David changed my gag rein onto the snaffle, and when Finian bolted with me across the school thinking this was hilarious, David said to me “twist your hips.”  As I attempted a rendition of the twist and shout to no avail at full gallop, David shouted “NO, TWIST YOUR HIPS!!!”  So I tried more vigorously, as around the arena we went.  Strangely this didn’t have the affect he and I were seeking.  Clark was forced to sit for 15 minutes while David and I got ourselves back on the same page, Loughan Glen wearing a knowing look on his face.  As I rode my second and third horses, just like the day prior, things came easier and quicker.  I found I understood more and more what David was asking to see, and that we were able to have a good discussion at the end about all three horses and what the homework is for each one.

I know that you have to lay a solid foundation before you can build a good structure, and this training session, for me, was the beginning stages of that foundation.  Hopefully, by the next time David sees me and the horses, we will have done our homework properly and we will have progressed to David 2.0 or further.  I will say that without exception, all the horses looked wonderful and very exciting for the future. With as good a group of horses as we all have, we can honestly plan to take on not just the UK, but the World.  Lastly, thank you to David, Jules, and everyone else involved for allowing us to have a great two days of lessons at a superb facility.

 3-4-13 – Facebook update

isleham-1

Great start to the season at Isleham horse trials for Finn and Ken.  Finn gave me a great feel all three phases and Ken was fab for two out of the three. I’ve also discovered what bit DOESN’T work for cross country. Trial and error. Guess we’ll be digging through the bit box before next event.

March 12, 2013
Journal

Christmas dinner

England  Christmas dinner at the farm.  Tiana proves once again her exceptional culinary talents with a beautiful Leg of Lamb and 8 fabulous and “oh so proper English” side dishes.  We are stuffed to the gills and happy to be enjoying a …

Read more
December 25, 2012
News

England
October 14, 2012
 

After the whirlwind that was the Olympics, it took a while for life to get back to normality.  In August I began to find the swing of things again when Doris won the Novice division (that’s Prelim. in the States) at Solihull Horse Trials.  She is a six year old that Nick bred out of his great mare Saxon Love.  She was orphaned the day after she was born and as the only living part of the mare that was so special to Nick, Doris got the name Saxon Legacy and some very big shoes to fill.  Following Solihull, we went to the CIC1* at Gatcombe Park where she finished 9th out of 118 entries!  She was one of very few to finish on her dressage score, and even more importantly, got a qualifying result for the Young Horse World Championships at Le Lion D’Anger in France.  So while Finn has had a leisurely holiday for the later part of the summer, all the pressure has been on Doris to prepare for her BIG adventure across the channel.  I hope Finn has been giving her some tips!  Nick also qualified The Court Jester for the 7 year old championships so we’re each looking forward to having a ride at what is said to be an incredible event. 

The lorry is loaded, the horses all wrapped up in bubble wrap, and my bags… who are we kidding, they’re not packed yet!  Packed or not, we’re off tomorrow for France and I’m incredibly excited.  Although I’m afraid that we’re going to be a little out of our league, it’s an opportunity to play on the world stage with a young horse, something we don’t get to do until they’ve reached 3* level usually.   With thousands of spectators and the best of the best, I’m looking forward to a great experience.  With luck I’ll find internet access and be able to keep everyone updated.  Au revoir …

England
August 19, 2012
 

To everyone who has been a part of my Olympic journey, whether last week, last year, or from the very beginning, we did it!  To go to the Olympics has been a goal of mine since I started eventing, but it was always so far away, and with so many things that could go wrong, I’m not sure I believed it was actually going to happen. On every step of the way, I have had the most amazing people become a part of my life.  This includes coaches, vets, farriers, and sponsors who have believed in me and my horse more than I did, and people who opened up their households and looked after me like their own, some who did not even know me.  The group of people who have gathered around me, teaching, helping, humbling, and supporting me is truly remarkable.  The saying goes “it takes a village,” well my village spans many states and many countries.
 
Throughout the team selection process I was considered a long shot, and I viewed the lead up to the games as a good learning experience for the next Olympic cycle such that I would be more prepared to try for 2016.  When I was named to the team, I was overjoyed, relieved, and proud of the accomplishment, but then we went straight into training camp for the next 5 weeks which was an incredibly tense and high pressure situation.  To say it was enjoyable would be wrong, but it was a huge learning experience and a lesson in mental toughness.  Once we got to the venue, a part of me wanted to take a big look around and say ‘wow, we’ve really made it to the Olympics’, but I tried instead to treat it like every other competition, to take the pressure off, and make it like just another day at work. Unfortunately, from start to finish, things did not go the way I had scripted them.  In all three phases we did not give the performance that we could have and should have given.  To reach such a huge stage and under-perform was enormously disappointing.  Most of all, I felt responsibility toward my team for how my result affected them, and responsibility toward all the people who have supported us to make the team.  With the wisdom of hindsight, I would do so many things differently.  There were so many hiccups that seem obvious now but were not clear before, and so many mistakes that could have been prevented with a little “heads up” or a different preparation.  And while it’s traditional to spend the next year finding people and reasons for why team USA didn’t win every medal, I will take the responsibility for my performance squarely on my shoulders.  I am responsible for how I trained, or didn’t train Finn. I am responsible for what I did, or didn’t do leading up to, and during the event.  There are so many things that I can take away from this experience.  If I can’t take a medal home, the next best thing I can do is learn everything I possibly can from it, and move forward.  If I am lucky enough to make another team in the future, I know without a shadow of a doubt, that I will be a wiser, better competitor for having been to this Olympics. Making this team is an experience that can’t be allowed to go to waste.

When competition finished for us, I half-heartedly went to the Olympic Village for two days, to have my “wow, I’ve made it to the Olympics” time, although I was feeling rather down about it all by then.  Seeing all the other athletes, and going to some of the other sports, and studying top class athletics of all types was time well spent.  I’m truly glad I did that because it was fascinating, inspiring, and really gave me a chance to just appreciate the accomplishment that is getting to the Olympics.  Every day, in every sport, someone is having a good day, someone is having a bad day, dreams come true, and dreams are crushed, but everyone there is an Olympian.  I am thankful I took those two days in the Village because they are a huge part of what I will remember as my “Olympic experience.”  I have come home incredibly motivated and with a clear plan of how to use the next four years.  With just Finian to my name, I am terribly lacking in horsepower.  The time to be bringing on horses for the future is now.  And while Finn has earned a bit of a rest, I’m itching to get back to work and start improving things.  I am busying myself studying competition video and riding youngsters without stirrups to keep me from pulling Finn in from the field and tacking him up!  Fortunately he has come home from the games in great shape and looks ready to crack on.  I look forward to getting him back into work, and with a bit of luck, having a few others as well to be aiming at the next team. 

Getting to the Olympics was the big goal that was far off in the distance.  We did it.  Next time I want a medal, and preferably the most valuable kind!

Tiana Coudray and Ringwood Magister

Tiana Coudray and Ringwood Magister Learn from Olympic Experience

Amber Heintzberger  Gloucestershire, England British-based US three-day event rider Tiana Coudray, 23, and her horse Ringwood Magister have completed their first Olympic Games as members of the 7th-placed team and in 40th place individually. Overall 74 individuals representing 13 countries …

Read more
August 8, 2012
News

Great party Tiana… sorry you missed it!
July 21, 2012

7-21-12-copy

West coast riders & friends of Tiana enjoyed an Olympic kick-off on Saturday.

7-21-12-2-copy

DeeAnne Howe hosted a lovely brunch, complete with flags, banners and tons of best wishes for Finn and Tiana.

Photo credits – Alex Battaglia
Thank you Alex

TEAM USA 2012 EVENTING

First photo of the 2012 Olympic Eventing Team

Read more
July 20, 2012
News
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • …
  • 16
  • Next
© 2014 Tiana Coudray. All rights reserved.