Uh oh.
Unsurprisingly, that little battery failed to start the truck, so we hooked it up to my heavy duty diesel batteries. Dead as a doornail.
Sadly, I cannot haul the farm trailer because my truck does not (yet) have a gooseneck hitch, so we threw everything into my trailer and begged and pleaded with BO's finicky horse to please get on a new trailer nicely. I crossed my fingers, horses seem to really like my trailer, and lo and behold, he loaded right up and we were saved. We even got to the lesson a bit early. Whew.
Scary: About halfway through the lesson, one of the other women was simply cantering her horse around a turn in the field. I watched as his feet shot out from under him and he slammed to the ground on his side, sliding across the pine needles. He was wearing a standing martingale (please do not do this, my eventer friends!) which he snapped in two trying to get his head up to balance himself, but he could not do so in time. His unlucky rider stayed in the saddle all the way down and hit hard, ending with a solid blow to the head and helmet.
All my first aid alarms went off, but I stayed put and let David check on her. I had no doubt she had a concussion, a fact confirmed by the hospital later. She is very fortunate it rained all day yesterday -- the ground was soft, saving her from a certain smushed leg otherwise. Luckily, it looked like nothing else was seriously injured and her husband picked her up and took her horse home. WEAR YOUR HELMETS PEOPLE; SHIT HAPPENS.
Later in the lesson, ANOTHER horse pulled a dirty stop at a log, flipping another friend over his head. Happily, she landed softly and clambered right back on to finish the line. No harm, but definitely pony foul. Bad pony. Poor David.
We're finding some stretchy trot! |
(1) Do NOT get ahead of him, no matter how slow he gets at the base of the jump; weighting his forehand by moving your body forward only prevents him from rocking back on his hocks and jumping up. Wait wait WAIT. This is particularly true up a bank. Stay behind him, stay upright, and let him jump up the bank to you. If you lean forward as he goes up the bank, he'll jump flat and out and that will bite you in the butt.
(2) Encore is a methodical, careful horse -- when he starts analyzing a problem, his feet slow down and he wants to figure it out before he tackles it. I like careful, it will keep us out of trouble, but I need to use a lot of leg and keep his feet moving while he thinks. He must learn to go forward and analyze at the same time. I admit, this surprised me a bit, as he is quite forward-thinking and I never have to use a lot of leg, but as we tackled harder questions, I saw that David was definitely right!
(3) If he offers to canter, let him. It is him offering forward and that is a good thing; stay soft and go with it.
(4) Go jump stuff. Lots of stuff. It doesn't matter how he jumps it right now, just jump it. Give him jump miles so he can figure out what to do with his body. David: "People worry about too much technical BS too early when we just need to get them out there and JUMP. Technical comes later. This horse wants to do it, he's just not quite sure of the details yet."
Encore did VERY well on all the fly jumps, the baby sunken road, plenty of ditches, banks into and out of water, and he LOVED cantering across the water and jumping a fair-sized log out. We tried jumping the log back into the water, but he just did not get it, so we let it be and will come back to it later.
We're tucked in our respective blankets tonight, digesting dinner and nuggets of information. I've got to figure out the most efficient way to get said mileage -- David is two hours from us and no longer teaches at my friend's farm nearby, so I'm going to have to get creative (or find a money tree in the woods to pay for diesel). There are definitely more gymnastics in Encore's future as well, to show him where his feet are supposed to go. I am chomping at the bit....now, if this silly job would just stop getting in the way.
How fun!! And what a goooood boy!
ReplyDeleteOur cheating way of making cheap soild fences was to stack our firewood int he horses paddock and jump that, we cut 200L drums in half so that the fences looked solid, and did silly things like hanging an op shop blanket over a normal jump to make it look solid. It's really good on a day with a bit of wind as it moves and gets all spooky.
ReplyDeleteOther things to do is wrap tin foil over jump rails on a sunny day (shiney jumps). Just changing things around in your own paddock or area is a great way of giving them experience - and there are a lot of crazy things you can do for cheap.
That was quite a full day from crazy to scary. Glad the rider who fell with her horse is alright. Hope her horse is ok too. That had to be scary for both. Interesting about Encore's way of thinking and processing.
ReplyDeleteOnceUpon, yes the horse was ok, just a bit shaken, but happily uninjured.
ReplyDeleteDeered, good ideas! We do visit the dollar store for goofy jump decorations, thanks for motivation to do another run! We picked up some glittery xmas flowers to stuff in the boxes and in hay bales and I put the tarp on EVERYTHING. We made a tire jump which has been fun to use - I like the foil idea, thanks!
Very cool lesson. :-) Best of luck with the whole jumping more thing--I royally suck at that part.
ReplyDeleteSo glad that other rider wasn't badly hurt. Eek!
ReplyDeleteMe too, Dom, me too!!
ReplyDeleteThat sounds awesome!
ReplyDelete