2 days ago
October 8, 2014
October 4, 2014
Just Another Day With Dr. Bob
Yep, Encore decided a whole month was far too long to be separated from Dr. Bob. Despite the terror-inducing zombie cows that live at the vet clinic (so Encore says).
While Encore was getting stronger, his feet are healing, & he did fairly well in our lesson, I still felt I might be missing something. It's that little feeling you can't quite put your finger on. And since you are a horse owner, the obvious solution is to throw money at it!
Looking at him from the ground, I could see the tightness in his hind end. I also checked the fit of his dressage saddle after our lesson & noticed that I needed to narrow it a bit until his topline redeveloped. Which explained the knots behind his withers I'd been massaging, as the panels were pressing down in the front. He was also getting quite crabby about picking up his right lead.
I always expect some muscle soreness bringing a horse back into work & rebuilding muscle. However, there was just enough weight on the "I just want peace of mind" side of the fence to push me over & make me hook up the trailer.
I Don't Call Him Batman For Nothing
It was worth the trip. And while paying vet bills is never any fun, there is no such thing as a Dr. Bob visit where you don't learn ten things & get lots of good stories!
My hypothesis was, for once, pretty accurate. Dr. Bob confirmed that the saddle was indeed collapsing a bit up front behind his shoulders. Encore got his withers & shoulders adjusted back into place with much relief.
He also had a very sore muscle bruise on the lower half of his left hindquarter, a likely result of an incident BFF reported when I was traveling for work: Encore had an idiot moment galloping across his paddock, once again forgot he had back feet, slipped, & fell hard on his left side.
She said he hopped back up, she checked him over thoroughly & walked him out, and I checked him out when I got home. We found no evidence of injury & he was moving evenly. He's not exactly in heavy work these days either!
It's Going To Be Ok...Today
Dr. Bob showed me how to feel out the spot in the muscle where he said there was probably just some fiber separation that was healing. I'm just to massage in the Majykal Butacore Creme Of Awesome & keep him moving as he finishes out recovery.
Overall, good news, some minor tweaks, and the plan & peace of mind I was looking for! His feet & shoes got the thumbs up, so we can keep moving creeping forward. Which I was thrilled to hear just as the gorgeous fall weather has begun!
All I Need Is Time
Who needs a bank balance anyway?? For now, Encore will just have to think up something new, since this one didn't get him out of work. In the meantime, he gets to enjoy medicated ass massages while I schedule the saddle fitter for some wool adjustment & dig through the couch cushions for $1200 to stock our winter hay! 0.0
Today, though, the grass is still green & the air is crisp & perfect, making it worth every bit as I can hear the satisfied nomming of two happy horses floating through the open windows. I think I might have earned a nap after dragging pastures & detailing horses this morning...
While Encore was getting stronger, his feet are healing, & he did fairly well in our lesson, I still felt I might be missing something. It's that little feeling you can't quite put your finger on. And since you are a horse owner, the obvious solution is to throw money at it!
Encore's Kent & Masters - love! |
I always expect some muscle soreness bringing a horse back into work & rebuilding muscle. However, there was just enough weight on the "I just want peace of mind" side of the fence to push me over & make me hook up the trailer.
I Don't Call Him Batman For Nothing
It was worth the trip. And while paying vet bills is never any fun, there is no such thing as a Dr. Bob visit where you don't learn ten things & get lots of good stories!
What do you mean I have FOUR legs??! |
He also had a very sore muscle bruise on the lower half of his left hindquarter, a likely result of an incident BFF reported when I was traveling for work: Encore had an idiot moment galloping across his paddock, once again forgot he had back feet, slipped, & fell hard on his left side.
She said he hopped back up, she checked him over thoroughly & walked him out, and I checked him out when I got home. We found no evidence of injury & he was moving evenly. He's not exactly in heavy work these days either!
It's Going To Be Ok...Today
Dr. Bob showed me how to feel out the spot in the muscle where he said there was probably just some fiber separation that was healing. I'm just to massage in the Majykal Butacore Creme Of Awesome & keep him moving as he finishes out recovery.
Our farm pond is zen |
All I Need Is Time
Who needs a bank balance anyway?? For now, Encore will just have to think up something new, since this one didn't get him out of work. In the meantime, he gets to enjoy medicated ass massages while I schedule the saddle fitter for some wool adjustment & dig through the couch cushions for $1200 to stock our winter hay! 0.0
Today, though, the grass is still green & the air is crisp & perfect, making it worth every bit as I can hear the satisfied nomming of two happy horses floating through the open windows. I think I might have earned a nap after dragging pastures & detailing horses this morning...
The best kind of sunset has horses in it |
September 28, 2014
Drive-By David Lesson Report!
Owning it in July |
Skipping through some cat-herding to the exciting result: we collected some of her clients & a few of my fellow David-disciples and I was able to have my lesson…IN MY OWN BACKYARD! In some odd fantasy world with no trailer-packing, no driving, I could just saddle my horse & ride up the fenceline to enjoy my Circle of Death. The word gratitude doesn’t even describe it, given how much I need good things in my life right now!
The
Despite my plans of improving on our jump performance in July, Encore had only been back in work for two weeks & still lacked hind strength, so I opted to put on the dressage saddle. I wanted David’s eyes to evaluate my horse once again.
Not Hackney trot anymore! |
Hello, payoff. Imagine that: break it down to simple, clear things, teach your horse to respond to individual aids, and *gasp* I didn’t have to work so hard to get a response to my aids! Erm, some of us are slower learner than others… *raises hand*
My lessons are so rare, they are incredibly valuable to me. While forward energy is crucial, David reminds me each time we meet how important it is for this horse to unlock his body & open his topline FIRST. Encore must be correct & balanced before he is asked to move out, otherwise you end up back at downhill rushing.
Ok, I Couldn't Help Jumping A Little...
I knew his butt would tire soon, but we decided to do some simple jump work at the end, for the sake of my rusty self. I confess, hearing “keep his poll up & wait with your body” STILL after five years makes me beat my head on the table a little. Perhaps you can even hear me mumble, “I should get a tattoo of that” in the video, ha. I have to wonder if David gets tired of saying it…
While Encore was compensating a bit at the end, it was good for both of us to feel some balance & pace again. Watching the videos, I realize that I lapse into riding him like he is still a green horse! Although our three years have been rather a roller coaster, I need to remember that I have actually trained him along the way and he now has a skillset of his own. Fortunately, I have no control issues whatsoever, ahem, none at all… *shifty eyes*
The Big Takeaway
I do consider Encore a Training horse now, but this reinforced for me yet again how vital it is to stay focused on the core principles – effective aids, consistent rhythm, balance for you & your horse, enforcing & rewarding correctness in your horse – no matter what your level or discipline. Riding can seem overwhelmingly complicated sometimes, in a world full of books & articles & forums & clinics, which makes me appreciate David’s focus on methodical simplicity even more. It’s the perfect antidote for my crazy hamster brain. My horses have no idea how much gratitude they owe that man for that!!
Chill, mom, I got skillz |
September 21, 2014
Riding Solo Makes Me Happy...And A Tiny Bit Frustrated
Partners |
How Does One Come To This Odd Conclusion?
I actually got to ride Solo yesterday, on the most glorious of Carolina fall mornings. Even as I fed him breakfast, I could feel the palpable restlessness flowing between us. It was a quiet, echoing chorus of, "let's ride, let's shine, let's be US."
Part of the beauty of eight years of partnership is knowing exactly which of your horse's joints need longer to loosen & the precise schooling exercises required to stretch the tightest muscles. Every ligament, every sinew in his body is yours because you have spent more than 3,000 days as a team of two become one.
Trademark Solo "forward walk sux" face |
After an obligatory Orange Horse protest on the principle of "forward because I say so," leg-yields were followed by shoulders-in followed by haunches-in suppling aging bodies (ahem, we won't say whose) at the walk. These are vital for Solo's hocks & back before asking him to step forward in trot.
Moving down to our dressage 'arena,' we coaxed his inside hind leg to truly step into my outside hand & kept that QH butt active. Creating that kinetic energy gives you something to work with, allowing you to create bend & corners & balance. We are nothing without forward.
As the days cool, it is harder on arthritic joints (let's not name names here either...), so I kept our canter warm-up brief, but correct because I really wanted to take him over a few very small jumps. It's a fine line, walked by feel, between pushing to strengthen & asking too much; I am always listening carefully to my horse.
Jumpy Jumpy!
We both wandered to catch our breath as I made a brief jump plan. Perhaps 8 or 10 efforts, with an emphasis on balance & softness for us both. I included extra care with my lines: he wears his trusty Cavallo Sport boots on his wussy front feet & there were still traces of dew on the grass.
Not so much like this (8 yrs ago!) |
Well, for most of them anyway. Did I mention learning? Yeah, it's still a process, a long, stumbling process, but a snail's progress is still progress!
When I got it right, we were...THERE. If Solo believes you won't fight him (I'm not sure why he wouldn't after our long history of, errrr, pulling matches, heh), he will jump & land & canter away like a lovely beast. He might take 3 or 4 quick steps, but that is where the trust comes in: I punch my instinct in the face, stay off his back, shove my fists into his neck on landing, & sit up. My trust is rewarded by his & we just...flow.
Um, So Which Part Of This Was Sucky Exactly??
Thanks to Priscilla & David & my clinicians & in no small part, to Encore, I am finally GETTING how to really use my leg, thigh, core, & upper body. I am GETTING how to ride the horse into the outside rein without sacrificing the forward energy. I am GETTING how to feel, process, & respond with the correct aids when my horse needs an adjustment.
Creepers gonna creep... |
We hear these things suggested, yelled, repeated, written to us & at us over & over & over throughout our riding lives, but it really isn't until the 10,000th time we feel the links connect & our brain & our muscles finally digest that feeling, that it becomes truly knowing.
I wouldn't call it a lightbulb. It's more like...a train. Sparks fly from wheels spinning on the tracks at first, while the locomotive strains to begin moving. But slowly, the momentum builds as the effort is put in, until, with enough time, you are rolling down the line.
So now I ride Solo & while I revel in how very little rein I need & how responsive he is to my lateral aids & how much FUN he is...I want to go back & do it all over again! I want the rider I am now to bring along the horse he was when we began, to do it better, to do it smarter.
As if I'd say maybe to Tennant! |
While it's a frustrating tickle in my head, at the same time, he made me & I made him. We learned from each other (even if it was "ok, never do that again") & I am still proud that we got here in spite of my fumbling about. What's that saying about a blind hog & acorns?
Besides, I lack a time machine unless The Doctor shows up. And even though it may have been a bumpy ride, Solo is still the one who carried me here. It is his wisdom, his quirks, his baggage, his personality, & his heart that continue to teach me, call me out, & remind me that every step counts. Both the mental & physical ones.
September 19, 2014
REAL Real People With Real Lives...And Real Riding*
Adjust the focus |
All of these people that I've met work very hard in the process. But for the multitudes of us who have not stumbled upon the luck & opportunity to devote that kind of time to our passion, it can be easy to get discouraged.
Don't be. The trees are merely blocking your overlook of the forest.
Still amazing with a gorgeous partner! |
I am going to cheat & share the message I sent to Susan Mcsherry-Jones (no relation, LOL), an old friend & the subject of this gorgeous article (my fingers are tired...). When I met her, she worked full time at a marketing firm & needed a hand keeping up with her small personal barn. Not long after, she decided to start her own company & it appears to have blossomed! I am thrilled that we have been able to reconnect (I guess Facebook isn't ALL ridiculous).
But Susan is a full-time business owner, full-time mom (omg, I can't believe the baby I looked after is 17!!), & a self-made woman who has faced & overcome the challenges we are all familiar with...and continues to every day. Even more, she is hope for each of us who might feel that even our modest goals are too much to expect. Never forget that your journey is YOURS; the course may be unpredictable, but no less valid than any other just because it doesn't involve gold medals.
I Command Thee To Watch And...Just...Wow
Maybe I'm biased, but this is possibly the most beautifully shot & edited interview I've ever seen & now I am in tears. I am SO proud of Susan, who hired me to help her with her farm when I was in high school & home from college, almost 20 yrs ago.
I remember when that indoor was just a fantasy, when one day it became flags in the grass & the first time she had furniture in that little (but always gorgeous) office, as she showed me the layout that would allow her to watch her daughter, my then-babysitting charge, Jacquelyn, while she schooled her dressage horses.
Thank You
Susan, you look amazing & even though I remember your stress then, I always admired you & I knew you would be wildly successful. Thank you for being one of the strong women who were role models in my life, & for all that you so generously shared with me, that scruffy, horseless girl desperate to be near hooves any way she could.
Even dragging a sled full of manure uphill over ice out the back of the barn was well worth the rich return you gave, whose names were Nick, Flame, Weanie, & Finaud. You made your farm feel a little like my home, too; I guess that's why those familiar fields put a lump in my throat. It really doesn't seem all that long ago when I rushed to the best part of my day, my time with your beautiful boys.
This is the view I remember... |
*sorry I couldn't think of a genius title, so I just used the same word 27 times, go with it...
September 14, 2014
Ordering Could Save You Money…And Your Life!
Click to enter & get a 15% off discount for new customers! |
I continue to enjoy our appallingly stylish (if you’ve read for a while, you know my trendiness aversion!) bell boots & gloves (week two: still no holes!). But the goodies don’t end there: check out two more!
#1: Tired Of Losing Money In Trampled, Peed-On, Rolled-In Hay?
Another equine product that makes you want to throw things & scream: the Hay Net. The holes are too big. The holes are too small. That drawstring at the top has demonic intent to prevent the loading of any actual hay. If it doesn’t have a drawstring, the holes are too big...again. If the holes are just right & it lacks an evil drawstring, well, you must have entered a parallel universe of impossible fantasies.
Currently, I hang a small-hole drawstring net in the trailer. Yes, it makes me want to scream very bad words while filling it. But I love that I no longer lose huge quantities of
Mine!! |
Loves:
- I can walk up with 4 flakes balanced on one arm, pull the top wide open, & dump them in without loosing a bit
- Easily holds at least 1/2 a square bale
- Two simple mounting loops give you endless hanging options, including my carefully engineered “tie it to the rafters with hay string” technique
- Two sets of short “shoelaces” are sewn into the top binding so you can dissuade Dobbin from just shoving his entire head in
- Since the boys love to camp in their shed on rainy days, it lets Solo continue to “graze” under shelter & holds so much hay, I don’t have to worry about mid-day refills (not tested on Princess Encore-I-Like-To-Pee-In-My-Hay yet)
- After I add a double-ended snap to each hanging loop, I can hang or move it anywhere by simply unclipping & don’t have to mount anything permanent
Awesome MSPaint arrows indicate shoelaces |
- The enormous top-load is amazing; it could be even better if the “shoelaces” were not both sewn onto the same binding edge. I weave them to the other edge a couple times & tie a slip-knot for easy release, but it’s a bit awkward (hey, some people have weird, super-logical brains that struggle with lopsided things).
- Alternatively (& what I initially thought the “shoelaces” were), a simple drawstring inside the top binding with a cord lock, like this, would be awesome!
- Because the netting is softer than a traditional hay bag, it is easier for the horse to snag the hay, & hopefully will be less frustrating for Encore. However, after about 5 solid days of Solo-use, the net string on a bottom corner is unraveling & pulling out of the side binding. Mr. Shiny loves his hay & is serious about getting every scrap; it appears that the string is not strong enough for full-time shed residence.
Probably not the helmet I'd choose for deer season... |
While there are many things I love about the Carolinas, fall is not one of them. It’s perfect riding weather, the trees break out their technicolour dreamcoats, the demonic insects begin their retreat. What’s not to love?
Oh, it’s also rifle season for white-tailed deer.
A Little Perspective
As an employee of my state’s natural resource agency & a wildlife biologist, I get to see both sides of this…interesting time of year. Nearly all of my co-workers hunt deer, as well as ducks, doves, turkeys, & feral hogs with bows, muzzleloaders, shotguns, & rifles, as personal preference varies. And they do it right: each one is careful, responsible, ethical, educated, & experienced.
MN wins the prize for Best Safety Graphics |
We Can & Should Share The Woods, But Be Proactive
As a result, many of us simply stay out of the woods once rifle season begins (the bow hunters & muzzleloaders are so much better at paying attention). When we do head out on trails, we stick to state parks & private properties. Even then, I always wear my very sexy DOT safety vest from work (sigh, trespassers…), attach a bear bell to my saddle (I need to fix that), & wear bright-coloured clothing. I’ve got the vest on for tractor work too; the favoured.30-06 rifle can send a bullet 2-3 miles, so at least no one will be able to say I looked like a deer through the scope!
Glow-in-the-dark Solo! |
I have finally completed my seven-year quest for very affordable riding accessories that didn’t make my horse sweat & screamed “THIS DEER-COLOURED CREATURE IS NOT A DEER!” And the answer…is $4!!!!
A handy set of four hi-vis reflective sleeves with open ends, the Horze Bzeen String Covers, despite their odd name, incorporate the two best elements of product design: versatility & simplicity. I’m not sure if this is standard, but I received two that had velcro down one side & two slightly narrower sleeves that were sewn on both sides. I slid one of the latter onto a browband & velcro’ed both of the former on my martingale for a test run.
You can definitely see them! I’m very excited to have these additions to my safety arsenal & am already pondering how many I could fit on one horse! The nylon fabric feels thin, but sturdy & can get tossed in washing machine whenever needed.
My only “in a perfect world” very picky detail changes
- Either include velcro on every sleeve or give the buyer an option
- Offer them in blaze orange, the universally (or at least in the US) recognized hunting safety colour
Thank you so much again to the super-friendly folks at Horze for giving me the opportunity to
September 8, 2014
Repair Notes From Your Dedicated Webmaster
The worst three digits online... |
Blogger has this nifty site called Webmaster Tools. Included here are logs of links that don't work & retrieval errors that have occured on your website. With the well-organized "help" links & detailed activity breakdowns, it's fantastic!
If you remember to check it more than once every six months. Or, say, after a major redesign.
Mea culpa. Again.
After choking on my guilt at the long column of "action blocked" notices, particularly for smartphones (but hey, aren't they supposed to be smart??!), I buckled down in the repair shop.
Fixed:
- Sharing links at the bottom of each post
- Search function access for mobiles
- Several scripts that were dragging down load time
- Something else
Computers: less expensive than horses, but more rage-inducing.