The Green Galloping Lanes From Badminton 2011 | Wishing We Could Roll Back A Year |
I'm still lost in a sea of email and other messages as I deal with the my own little corner of the fall out of Badminton being cancelled the day I was due to turn up. My first wet weather cancellation experience of the event since first getting involved over a decade ago. As much as I hate the rain, I would have preferred a wet Badminton to no Badminton. The foot and mouth epidemic in 2001 was the last time it was cancelled.
Whilst I lament and wallow my own whoas of all the hard work that has gone into this year's event and the exciting new things we had planned, I'm reminded of the enormous knock on effects this has on so many others:
- The riders, some of whom, need the run for Olympic qualification, now having to re-route to other events that will be inundated with entries
- Contractors who now have to remove a small city of infrastructure that has not been used
- Tradestand holders who now have to recover the profits they would have made at the show
- All the launch plans for new products, books, and paraphernalia that gets planned for Badminton every year.
- The Badminton Post Office & Shop that must live or die from the extra trade the event brings
- and
- and
- and.....
The list is endless! Spare a thought for those with so much invested in "getting to Badminton"
I cry, I'll get over it, and I'll find my own plan B, here's hoping everyone else manages that too.
Within minutes of the news breaking on national radio, I was being pulled back into the day job and I now have an appointment at 9:30 tomorrow with British Airways!
Within minutes of the news breaking on national radio, I was being pulled back into the day job and I now have an appointment at 9:30 tomorrow with British Airways!
Until then I'm happy to relive my memories of Badminton 2011:
I’ve been ‘doing Badminton’ for more years than I care to
remember, and each year I’m constantly amazed at the familiarity, sense of
pride, and excitement of everyone involved. In many ways it’s like an annual
re-run of a large family wedding, and whilst technical delegates and the ground
jury might change year on year, you can bet a penny to a pound that the ‘usher’
standing at the blue gates in the village entrance to the park, the lady
serving behind the bar in the media centre or any of the other 100’s of jobs, is
done by the same person year in, year out.
In fact I think if you were interested in volunteering for
any of the regular positions, you’re probably best off reading the obituaries
as ‘doing Badminton’ is something of a life long annual pilgrimage to the
spiritual home of eventing, and people travel across the world to play a small
part in the great event.
For many it’s a year round task working on the build up to
the one week in April or May that sees unprecedented crowds descend on the
otherwise sleepy Cotswold village that lends it’s name to the event. Hugh
Thomas, Badminton’s course designer, is out there almost immediately after the
event has finished thinking through ideas for next year’s challenge, whist for
the rest of us there’s generally a lull until November/December when the event
picks up momentum with the ticket office opening, a flurry of tradestand
applications and media interest.
My own involvement, which essentially revolves around
anything IT related that touches the internet, whether that be website, social
media or last year’s new gadget, the Badminton Mobile Apps. So for me Badminton
is something I dip in and out off all year, and focus on from late March
through to the event. As Badminton week approaches I often have mixed emotions
“why am I doing this this?” versus “Badminton is going to be so great this
year?”, but come Monday of event week when I arrive on site for a recce, and
the place is buzzing with activity, and you suddenly remember how big &
exciting this event really is that you get caught up in the general euphoria,
and the long 16 hour days ahead become something you look forward to.
Before last year’s event I interviewed Andrew Nicholson for
the blog (he’s competed at Badminton more than any other), and he described
that moment of arriving at Badminton as “having an ‘airy’ feel….a feeling, a
good feeling, like no other event, it’s the Wimbledon of Eventing”. I’d have to
agree with that, I’ve worked at a number of other events, from championships to
one day events, and I couldn’t put my finger on what it is that makes you rise
up singing when you enter Badminton, and walk around the hallowed turf of the
deer park, but it does have a completely different feel about it.
During Badminton week it can be hard to imagine that this is
actually a deer park, when six weeks previously the place was just a very large
expanse of parkland without a white tent in sight. Within a week of the event several
acres is under white canvas, with immaculately mown shopping lanes and
walkways. The change in dates last year to avoid a clash with Rolex Kentucky 3
day event, afforded me the opportunity to visit Lexington for Rolex, which is
altogether a whole different ball game as a venue with permanent structures,
and infrastructure. They benefit from having a beautiful and imposing permanent
grandstand with a large expanse of artificial surface for dressage and showjumping.
The Main Arena Under Construction |
This in itself, along with being in the middle of large
(often muddy) field presents it’s own challenges. I remember about 5 years ago,
having all our temporary telephone lines knocked out by a lightning strike. For
a while, whilst the engineers worked on restoring the frazzled lines, the event
was running in complete isolation, cut off from the rest of the world! Diesel
generators arrive by the lorry load to power over 500 tradestands, sponsors’
facilities and the most enormous media centre of any outdoor event. The
sheer number of spectators that come to the event create such a demand for cell
phone usage that 3 of the main network providers put up temporary masts to add addition
bandwidth. My first year at Badminton it proved almost impossible to send a
text message let alone make a phone call because of network congestion, now you
can surf the internet happily on your smart phone.
Grassroots | Horses Of All Types Enetered |
I still think of the main CCI**** event running Wednesday to
Sunday, but of course, it now runs Thursday to Monday, because of TV
scheduling, and last year the shopping village opened for first time on
Thursday, first horse inspection day, when a decent crowd gathers in front of
Badminton House for a bit of trotting (the horses), and a lot of fashion (the
riders). It seems as much care is taken in the grooming of the human athletes
as the horses. So whilst plenty of work goes on behind the scenes taking the
final wraps off the event, dressing the cross country fences, and general
finishing touches, riders are, as Andrew Nicholson put it, “getting a little
more quiet, a little more serious, and a little more nervous” as the
formalities of the competition get underway.
Probably my most stressful time is Friday morning and the
start of dressage, when results, radio streams, news & photos are in high
demand. The internet audience for Badminton has grown at least 10 fold in as
many years, a sign of how ubiquitous internet access is now, and it’s now
probably the largest channel audience the event has outside of any TV broadcast
media. Like all internet content these days, the rate at which it is
consumed and the demand for instant updates and gratification is astounding,
plus the demand starts well before the competition starts. The previous year I
arrived onsite on Tuesday, and before I had even opened my car door to step out
I had a phone call from our hosting providers “We need to move your servers to
a bigger data centre, your site is saturating our bandwidth”. Now that’s not a move you really want to
undertake at the start of your busiest week of the year! It turned out our
video content was proving so popular we were hogging all the bandwidth from the
data centre. So with a little creative IT, we managed to avert any downtime,
but not before a little panic from the driver’s seat of my car!
The Staircase Press Preview Day 2012 |
Come second day of dressage everyone working at the event is
more relaxed, ‘today is just a repeat of yesterday, we’ve ironed out the wrinkles
and got into a groove’. Few if any dramas unfold on the second day of dressage,
it’s usually the competition itself that produces the drama on this day as the
leader board changes constantly as most top riders opt to have their best horse
as their second ride, which means a Saturday afternoon dressage test.
My Personal Gym During Badminton |
Traffic on cross country day can be horrendous, and the
police even shut some approach roads to create a one way system. In previous
years I’ve travelled home each night, which has meant getting up at 4:30/5AM on
cross country day to miss the traffic. This year I decided to stay with friends
nearby, cutting an hour of travel time each way. Entering Badminton on cross
country day is special in itself. You can physically feel the buzz and hum
around the place, this is what everyone has come to see, there is no more
anticipation, the moment is now. I usually take a trip down to the stables
first thing in the morning to get caught up in the excitement of the riders,
grooms, team coaches, and band of supporters, it’s quite infectious! Everyone strides about with purpose, and
you’ll see few people standing around chatting. Pretty hopeless trying to get
an interview with anyone let alone chat, but thoroughly engaging to watch.
Back in the main showground, and in the organiser’s office
queues of people are already streaming into the front desk with all manner of
questions, queries and requests. The walkie-talkies are constant with
conversation about all manner of preparations from “can you get that car moved”
to “We’ve found a little boy, he’s wearing a blue coat, his name’s Tom and he’s
lost his mummy”. Half an hour before the first horse goes out and a relaxed
hush falls over the media centre, and everyone is watching the screens intently
by the time the first horse goes out.
Cross Country Day -All System Go | Time For A Break |
300 or so journalists and photographers are accredited each
year, and come lunchtime on cross country day they’re nearly all in the media
centre filing copy and uploading photos, grinding the 40+MB of broadband we
provide to a near halt! It’s the busiest
time for the media centre and the queue for food in there can seem endless. If
Zara Phillips is competing journalist numbers are swelled by paparazzi and
royal correspondents. Some of the die-hard web journalists can still be found
tapping away at their keyboards long after 8PM, along with myself when the
night security guard arrives - the same man that’s been doing the job for years.
By contrast, Monday morning is a much quieter affair
altogether in the media centre. A much smaller crowd gathers round the TV
screens to watch the bottom 20 or so complete Badminton with their showjumping
rounds, and probably as most of journalists are out getting stories after the
second horse inspection. Meanwhile the box office queues grow as punters look
for any late returned showjumping seats, and come lunchtime the buzz around the
whole showground has returned, the grandstands are full, crowds are gathered on
the grass in front of the big screens, and last minute bargins are being
snapped up in the shopping village.
Last year only one show jump rail separated the top 12, and
the legendary Mark Todd was in the lead and last to go! For so many reasons
2011 was the best Badminton I’ve ever attended.
I can't wait to relive it all again in 2013.
Oh Monty, reading that has made me feel even sadder! Just wish they could reschedule it. So much hard work by so many. And I had just decided to go after all! After Rolex, my dear hubby said why don't you go? My beam was the answer.The tangible buzz when you see your first horse box will only be recreated when I drive to Greenwich. Oh boy cannot wait! Wendyfreckles
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