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Topaz Dreams

endurance with a Haflinger

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Onwards and upwards

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 24, 2016 by FigureJune 24, 2016  

We followed our “everything is terrible can’t cross the river without major drama” ride by working really hard going for a leisurely trail ride in which we mostly walked with our pony friends. I had just found out about the ride’s cancellation and my motivation was pretty well trashed.

Later in the week, however, our solo trail ride reinstated my faith that we might actually be able to do this thing.

First up: bending exercises.  She will supple to the rein.  She will yield her hindquarters.  That didn’t go particularly well, so over to the round pen we went, where I unclipped one side of the reins.  She promptly bolted out before I could get the other.  Ideally, our bending/de-escalation techniques will let her work out this energy without me getting off, but I knew how hard we hadn’t worked two days prior and decided to choose my battles – which yes, did involve asking for a proper halt so I could retrieve the reins actually off before she went flying around in circles for a few minutes.  Oh, pony.

Next: bending exercises, round two. This went better. Brain engaged, feet largely with me.  We socialized at the barn a bit and got our weekly dose of Funder and toddler O, which always leaves me feeling brighter afterwards!

Could we head out on the trail without drama?  Yes, yes now in fact we could.  Forwards always, insistent, persistent. She deigned to do a respectable 7mph trot on the trail (as all you other endurance folks laugh) and I pushed her to stay there. Forwards. If we cantered, it was only briefly and to get her thinking in front of my leg. The trails were quiet, no hikers to stop for, and we easily knocked two minutes off our usual time to the midpoint of the steps.  That’s not yet two full miles in to the ride, so to carve off that much time on the flat was pretty incredible.

Onwards, upwards. First I’d planned on just a gallop set or two, but what’s another twenty minutes? We headed down, down, down to the river crossing, working on a balanced forwards downhill walk or even a balanced downhill trot.  I know you’re not supposed to train at speed on downhills, but I’ve got to convince her to sit back and move properly, and I need her to do it at the trot too.  So: we trot when she’ll do it right, and walk when she flails on her forehand.

Looking back over Fetti's tail at the problematic singletrack. We're facing uphill from the river crossing.

Looking back over Fetti’s tail at the problematic singletrack. We’re facing uphill from the river crossing.

I kicked, swatted, and spun her in a circle when we got near the river crossing.  We were going forwards and through there. She fussed the tiniest bit and I swatted again, hard.  This was my line in the sand. There is no sense coddling her forwards through attitude.  She quit and we walked down all the steps, no stopping.  She hesitated at the river, I kicked and swatted, and within a minute or two we were in.  Progress.  We didn’t go far after getting across, but I’d made my point.

We zipped our way back home, still insisting on a forwards trot and respectable walk. I did not drop my phone this time!  Overall, we did not make it quite to full competition speed, but it’s the closest we’ve come on that section of trail.

Onwards and upwards. We’ll keep on working at it and do something similar this week.

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Bandos Trail Saddle review

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 21, 2016 by FigureJune 21, 2016 3

I traded my full-leather endurance saddle for a Bandos treeless saddle. I’ve never tried a treeless saddle on Confetti before.  We’re currently in the midst of saddle fitting woes and it seemed like a reasonable experiment.  There is an appalling lack of information available out there about these specific saddles, so this is an extra-long review post with a lot of details.

imageMy very first impression was that it has very long billet straps.  I’m not just saying this because Confetti is small.  I started off with the 26″ girth that I’m not currently using for anything else.  Pretty dramatically too big.  I might have been able to manage it, but it would have been on the top hole on both sides.  The 18″ girth is more than halfway up the holes.  If you get one of these saddles, I strongly advise a small girth to go with it!

AE Saddle Works

AE Saddle Works; 18″ girth

My understanding is that the Bandos was made by Freeform.  It is no longer in production and there is an amazing lack of reviews about it. It was sold by Action Rider Tack.  It’s also labeled AE Saddleworks, which I don’t know anything about offhand.

The seat is not especially grippy.  I’d want to add a sheepskin, swap out the seat (I seem to remember seeing something about this being a possibility) or ride in full-seat breeches.  It’s also possible that shortening my stirrups will resolve some of this.  I had a really hard time staying secure on the hills.  I did shorten my stirrups on a later ride and found that helped with stability, but did not ride enough hills to know if it would have mattered there.

image

This better shows how much billet strap is left even with an 18″ girth. Photo with a barrel-shaped pad & shortened stirrups.

The Bandos has a lot of saddle under the leg.  It’s not uncomfortable, but it is there.  I have short legs and I ride a pony: this means that with a barrel-shaped pad that does not go all the way down, it’s OK. With a full-sized endurance wool pad, I can make contact with my heels when I make an effort to do so.  I suspect that a “split bottom” Skito or similar is in my future if I keep this saddle to minimize how much bulk is underneath my leg while still allowing some pad below the saddle.  After stalking a few treeless groups, I think the biggest problem here is Fetti’s shape: she’s too round for this much saddle plus that much pad.  A less-round horse with a short rider would probably be just fine.

The entire bottom of the saddle is fleece-covered.

The entire bottom of the saddle is fleece-covered.

To be totally fair, short leg / pony syndrome has been a problem with my dressage saddle too, and that’s part of why I don’t ride in a full-size Woolback with my dressage saddle all the time, or pretty much ever these days!  It’s nowhere near this bad, but it is definitely harder to make contact when not very much of my leg reaches below the saddlepad.

imageIt’s a very comfortable saddle.  It reminds me a lot of riding bareback, as I can really feel her moving underneath me, and I am quite pleased with that.  It is wide, but not unreasonably so.  My thighs were sore after four hours of riding – but I am inclined to blame that on the 45 minutes of incessant kicking and the fact that my stirrups were too long, not on the saddle itself.  There was at least one full-body spook, one half-spin, and a whole lot of irritable fuss that I sat without feeling insecure.

The pommel insert up front is solid (fiberglass) and allows for sufficient clearance on Fetti, who is moderately round. Both pommel and cantle inserts (also solid fiberglass) can be replaced with soft inserts if so desired, and maybe even with narrower (or wider) inserts, although that’s entirely hypothetical on my part.

There are a lot of D-rings and it would not be difficult to attach both pommel and cantle bags along with breastcollar, crupper, and sponge.  We rode down some substantial hills with crupper attached and nothing broke, nor was I worried that it would.  I’m the queen of breaking crupper rings.  That’s a pretty key test for me!

Bandos stirrup bar velcros on, adjustable location

Bandos stirrup bar velcros on, adjustable location

The stirrup placement is adjustable. The entire thing can be un-velcroed from underneath the seat, lifted up, and put back into whatever place you desire.  There are closed loops for the leathers to go through.  My saddle came with homemade leather covers. There is nowhere for the excess leather to go, so I believe that’s a necessity with this sort of setup, otherwise there’s just a lot of leather potentially rubbing your leg.  Pictured are 1″ English leathers.

I see at least one online review saying that it fell apart after 6-8 months of use.  I can’t speak to the 6-8 months of use, but I don’t think they’ve been sold since 2012, and the saddle does look like it’s been used before.  It’s at least a 3-4 year old saddle and it is still in excellent shape as far as saddles go. I can’t say it won’t happen, but that does not appear to be an immediate problem.

good rider position, seat size questionable

good rider position, seat size questionable

The seat on mine has a wrinkle. I didn’t notice it while riding. I believe the seats are replaceable.  If it bothered me, I would have considered adding a sheepskin cover – except that I kept running my thighs into the pommel.  I’m pretty sure the seat is too small for me.  There were a few mentions online about the seat running a bit small, but also a few about how it seemed OK.  It feels like a 17″ English / 15″ Western, and I normally ride in an 18″ English / 16″ Western seat.

imageWhich, after measuring, appears to be the case. It’s 16″ to the back of the saddle, but only 15″ to the seat. I’m 5’6″, 140lb, and it is definitely too small for me.  There were two seat sizes made, and I have no idea which this is.

Thus concludes our treeless experiment.  I need something I can confidently mount from the ground. I need something that does not slide (much) on hills.  Treeless saddles are largely not going to fit that description for Fetti.  Even if they were, this particular saddle is too bulky (fleece all the way down the panels) for Confetti and too small in the seat for me. I’ll be listing the Bandos for sale this week.

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Ride prep aborted

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 17, 2016 by FigureJune 17, 2016 2

The good: I have more time to work out our saddle fitting issues. My to-do list on pony-training and fitness can now span the next bunch of months, somewhat indefinitely at this point, until the next opportunity presents itself.

The bad: We’re not going to the NATRC ride. It’s not my fault, it’s not Fetti’s fault, it has nothing to do with my trailer-driver or her horse. The ride was cancelled due to lack of entries.

A very first-world-problems whine: I had, very briefly, contemplated doing three NATRC rides this year if I could swing the scheduling and the finances and get rides (all somewhat questionable prospects) which would make us eligible for year-end awards. In a year where our AERC season doesn’t have a lot of prospects, it seemed like a halfway reasonable goal. There will only be three rides left in the season. I could maybe do it if I gave up my (possibly) only shot at an AERC 50 this year, but I’m not willing to do that.
I need a truck and trailer to make competitions viable. Major life changes are needed before those become possible. It’s in the future, but I have no idea how soon, and it really sucks.

Whining over. Where do I go from here?

  1. Saddle fitting remains an issue.  I need to schedule a time to have my trainer out to evaluate.
    I need to do enough rides in the Bandos to figure out what is or is not working for me, such that it’s not set-up issues being the problem (breastcollar adjusted wrong, stirrups too long, etc).
  2. Sell at least one Woolback, probably two. I don’t need three Woolbacks and a Coolback.
  3. Local schooling show next weekend.
  4. Forward, immediately!
  5. Increase hill work. If I’m unhappy with her fitness level, now is the time to fix it.
  6. Heart monitor more often: is she quitting because of heart rate or just because?
  7. Boot regularly for our hill work so footing is no excuse. Consider shoes next cycle.

 

Good news: farrier came out last week and complimented Fetti’s hooves.  For someone that almost never compliments, I’m pretty thrilled with that.  Hooves don’t look perfect, but they look pretty dang good.  Now I need to maintain that!

I don’t boot regularly for a few reasons: have to adjust cables, then cross fingers they stay on, then often find somewhere to get back on when one comes off, then pull off wet boots at the end of the ride and wash them off in the dark. I’m not good at motivating myself to do all that. I’ll give myself the next eight weeks or so to stay on top of trimming hooves and boot regularly for serious conditioning rides.  If that doesn’t happen, I think I will have the farrier put shoes on for our late summer/early fall shoeing cycle.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Replies

How NOT to ride prep: the weekend prior

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 14, 2016 by FigureJune 14, 2016 3

.. which it turns out is irrelevant because the NATRC ride we were supposed to go to was cancelled. We’re not off to a great start this year. 

Ride #1:

If we’re going to go with our Specialized, I should actually ride in it sometime before the ride, right?  I tacked up in full endurance gear (minus boots and cantle bag) and aimed for a brisk ride.
The good: Confetti was not explosively enthusiastic.
The bad: She was so pathetically behind my leg and lazy that I am now questioning her actual fitness level, which is ridiculous because I know she’s not that out of shape.  This is almost exactly how I want her to be before the ride, not running off with me.  I would, however, have preferred a bit more responsiveness to my leg and a little bit of forwards when I asked for it.  We did make it seven miles or so, but it was SLOW.
In fairness, I was having a pretty rough day personally, and I was not on my game either.  The park was busy. Fetti was bored out of her mind and not particularly responsive to my leg cues. I wasn’t being insistent enough, and I wasn’t mentally together enough to make a point of.. well, anything.  This is not the headspace I normally ride in and she was really quite kind not to take further advantage of it.

My knees hurt, but only somewhat as opposed to completely miserable, and her back looked and felt good.  Our long trot did not exist one bit and our downhill was absolutely awful but otherwise, it wasn’t too bad.

Ride #2:

New saddle syndrome: I should keep fussing with it to see if it’s workable!  Treeless saddle, different crupper, regular breastplate (same adjustment as for the Specialized), barrel-sized Woolback pad with the new inserts.  Why not, right?

The ride got off to a great start when we argued about going out on the trail.  Oh, pony.  That was a sign of things to come.  She continued to be behind my leg, but with the shorter pad I could at least get some leg on and insist that she sort of respond.  I wasn’t persistent enough, but it was a slight improvement. We did our pathetic lazy trot a little ways into the park, then came to a very polite halt as a deer came towards us on the trail – paused – and came FURTHER towards us:

img_1389

hi, Bambi!

to leap into the brush mere feet in front of Fetti’s nose.  My very polite and very lazy pony stood there, shaking her head a bit at the flies, totally unbothered.  The fawn, however, thought the headshaking was terrifying. It refused to follow its mother’s lead and darted off in the opposite direction. We waited a minute, then carried on down the trail. They’d figure it out eventually.

Back into a lazy trot, my stirrups definitely too long, and dodging various hikers and tourists, we made our way eventually towards the river crossing.  We’ve had trouble here before.  I’m starting to think we need to make this ride a weekly thing.  45 minutes to go down 8 steps and get into the water.  I kicked persistently, I swore, I escalated gently, I let off as soon as we found any forwards.

Here’s the lesson to learn: I haven’t been insisting that forwards means GO NOW. I’ve been saying ‘forwards of some sort please?’ and that needs to end if I want us successful this weekend.  Game plan:
1. reinstate flexion drills before/after rides (bend + move off leg)
2. at next two rides, reinforce leg cues with immediate whip if there is not prompt yes-ma’am forwards. Work w/t only – either we’ll have the canter or we won’t, but that’s a separate issue and I don’t want to confuse it.

On the way home, I reinforced the immediate forwards idea with great success, though it probably helped that we were heading home. Only problems? The hills and the treeless setup were not agreeing with eachother. I was not happy with how far back the saddle was sliding (breastcollar not tight enough.. and I wasn’t willing to change it for just one ride) and our worst uphill really did a number on the positioning.  Shortly after, I dropped my phone. There are no good mounting blocks on this section of trail. It would have to be a ground-mount or close to it. I’m not great at those to start with, and really not comfortable doing those in a saddle whose stability I don’t 100% trust. There are also a lot of uphill sections before getting to the next viable mounting log.

The logical answer, then, was to teach Fetti tailing, effective immediately! This is 100% worthless for NATRC, we have absolutely not tried this before, and I’m not sure how to actually train it.  So: snap rein to halter, run rein through stirrup, one hand on rein, one on tail, use whip as ‘driving’ whip to cue occasionally, praise pony for not spinning in circles and trying to follow me.  Tailing experiment: success.  In a ride where a lot of things were not going well, it was really nice to have something go right.

learning to tail

learning to tail

I don’t actually think she 100% knows how to do this, and when insufficiently motivated (i.e. going away from home) I don’t think she’d bother going forward, I think she’d stop to eat instead. But! This is enough that I can feel semi-accomplished and know that I could do it in this particular set of circumstances again.

If you’re trying to teach your horse to tail, please look up a proper how-to rather than following these instructions. There are several good guides out there – here’s one, and here’s another.

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Ride Planning with Anxiety, one week out

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 13, 2016 by FigureJune 13, 2016 6

Things accomplished (but not yet noted) last week

  1. mellow, not-even-remotely-conditioning ride in new treeless saddle.  Good: knees were happy.  Bad: no conditioning or energy drain accomplished.  (Pony got to run in the arena afterwards instead.)
  2. sent one saddlepad off to be washed.  Thanks, barn friend L! Two more in that pile if the first one goes well, and that always makes me feel better before a ride.
  3. Drove an hour north to the consignment store to look around.  I found a Woolback pad with inserts at an excellent price and promptly bought it, despite that not really being on my shopping list or in the budget at all.
  4. mellow, not-even-remotely-conditioning ride #2 in new treeless saddle with new Woolback pad, complete with Thelwell pony imitation.  I could kick with my heels if I really tried, but otherwise my legs could not reach the horse.  Highly entertaining.
  5. Packed half my bag of clothes.
  6. Contemplated buying new rhinestone hearts for bridle. Did not buy yet – but found some!

 

If you’re reading all this and wondering where the preparation is.. me too. At least I’m only slightly stressed about it so far?

Weekend plan: Serious Ride in actual endurance saddle. Possibly two rides. Put hoof boot spares together.

Final week:
– follow up with farrier and/or re-cable and fit all hoof boots
– bathe & rebraid pony
– quick tack cleaning – leather cleaner on billet straps, dunk all biothane in a bucket
– pack my camping gear
– review NATRC cards from previous years
– pack pony camping gear / non-tack accessories

DIY Horse Ownership switched over to her own domain and is running a contest – take a look and update your feedreaders.

Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Replies

Ride Planning with Anxiety, two weeks out

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 9, 2016 by FigureJune 8, 2016 4

With great gratitude, have friend schedule regular trimmer to come out this week.  One less phone call for me, and one less appointment I need to be at.

While tacking up for conditioning ride, swing saddle up on horse per usual. Bang stirrup on elbow.  Wince.  Get home later that night to find that it actually did bruise.

Ride briskly out and briskly halfway back.  Hear train.  Bail.  Practice de-escalating pony anxiety on the ground.  Eventual SUCCESS!  Mount back up, trot sedately home.  Opt out of second ride: after successful de-escalation in ride #1, ride #2 cannot get any better.
*Unfortunate side effect – no long ride day over the weekend.  Oops.  High Energy Endurance Pony did get a round pen session plus a turnout (with galloping!) before and after the ride the day prior, though, which almost counts.

Order grass/alfalfa hay for better ridecamp eating.

Assess spare boot inventory.  Move entire pile into the car.  This is actually great progress, normally I don’t do this until the weekend prior at best, and a lot of these pieces have actually been sitting since last June at Wild West.
Order relevant pieces to complete spares, plus enough parts to replace cables/set screws on front boots prior to the next ride they’re used in.  It might not be this one, but I should have the parts on hand.

img_1372End goal will be one near-new front spare (Viper shell, Ren cap: already together, not pictured), one near-trashed front spare (Ren shell, Ren cap), one mediocre hind spare (Ren shell, Viper?? cap).

Try giving Fetti a bucket of water with a few handfuls of rice bran.  End result: 3/4 of water went in the pony. 1/4 of water was enthusiastically splashed around in an attempt to get to the Good Stuff.  I’m not actually sure if I can call this a success or not.

img_1369I called the other farrier and ended up texting briefly with him.  I’ve decided to glue Renegades.  Well, probably – last word on ‘can he come out Thursday to glue boots’ was that he’ll check his schedule to see where he’ll be that day.  So if he can’t, well, booted it is.  Decisions made!

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Managing the anxious rider

Topaz Dreams Posted on June 6, 2016 by FigureJune 6, 2016 3

It can be difficult for me to find a nice zen happy place.  Anxiety often gets the best of me.  Lately, that has been happening a lot.

The June ride is a pretty major commitment.  It will be the first ride of the season, so there are all the first-ride jitters and the my-horse-is-broken anxieties and our-conditioning-sucks worries.

img_1342

shape: round?

eek, the pony is out of shape!  OK, maybe she is, maybe she’s not.  We’re starting this season essentially the same way we did last year: a two-day ride, roughly 50 miles total.  Our most recent “longer ride” was half brisk ride, half walk for a variety of valid non-fitness reasons.  She took slightly over six minutes to pulse down to 60 when we went from Serious Uphill Working Speed to dead stop – no pulling tack, no water, no dismounting – so while I’m not super thrilled with that, it doesn’t feel terrible.  (Please correct me if I’m wrong, y’all.)
Plan: start weekly hill sprints. Continue once-weekly longer rides. Make sure at least one of those solo rides actively excludes cantering so there is no canter-anticipation going on, possibly completely exclude cantering in the week prior to the ride.

the thrush battle continues. Aaaaargh. Right front was a problem, right front seemed to clear up with consistent treatment with NoThrush (good powdery stuff, highly recommend).  Left front was then deemed a Big Problem at her most recent trim and looked absolutely awful. Treated aggressively with NoThrush. Looked.. better?  Carved away a bit of overhanging frog, swore, treated with Tomorrow at Andrea’s suggestion.  We’ll see what the farrier thinks when he’s out in a week or two.
Plan: re-evaluate after farrier visit.

img_1332

Sigh.

hoof boots vs glue-ons vs shoes?? Two-day ride.  I’m still a little traumatized from all our boot fiascos last year, but we’ve done better this year in conditioning rides.  Initially my plan was to try glue-ons.  Then the thrush became a big enough problem I’m not sure I want to enclose the hoof for that long.  Glue-on shoes sound like a great idea – if her hooves are the right shape, which I suspect they’re not (too wide/round). I’m not sure I’m ready to commit to steel and nails yet: I like having ‘pads’ as-needed, I’m definitely not willing to do shoes with pads given the thrush right now, I’m not convinced that steel shoes will be helpful in recovering from the thrush.
Plan: tentatively, ruling out steel for June ride. Trim/nipper hooves fairly aggressively this week prior to farrier visit. Also, confirm when exactly we’re having farrier out! Try hoof boots on again immediately after farrier trim, plus re-evaluate thrush situation then, and consider calling out the trimmer I’d use for glue-ons.  Make decision by 6/8.  Order relevant parts as needed (hind glue-on shells, any replacement parts for boots/spare boots, etc)

eek, the pony is coughing!  Funder was kind enough to insert a voice of reason in my gremlin-induced panic.  85/10/5.  85% totally OK they’ll self-resolve, 10% maybe need to worry, 5% could be terrible definitely need to worry.  Yes, Fetti is coughing a bit.  Last weekend she was coughing a lot.  This last week she continued coughing a lot.  Monday’s ride was down to maybe 3 episodes of coughing over two hours?  That’s pretty good compared to what we were dealing with.  This might also be contributing to some of the decreased fitness I’ve been feeling the last few weeks, if she’s been actively fighting some bug.  Who knows.
Plan: obsessively sweep stall whenever I am out there to make sure dust from hay is not a contributing factor.  Otherwise, watch and wait. 

saddle fitting sucks.  Short version: both saddles, on rides with a substantial amount of downhill and walking, are causing back soreness at the very back of the saddle.  (Let’s be totally fair: this is new since last ride season, definitely.  My knee is not 100% and it is possible that I am doing something wrong to cause this, however, the saddle is sitting straight consistently now.)
Plan: brisk speed ride tonight, mostly trotting with decent hill, to see how the Eurolight does on her back.  If sore, email fitters to see their suggestions.  Possibly rasp edge of cushion?  Possibly ride Thorowgood with wool pad to see if that helps in that saddle?
I shortened my stirrups in the Eurolight and that seemed to help things a little bit, but still did not give the Super Amazing Canter that I get in the Thorowgood.  I really want to love the Eurolight.  I like it for walk/trot and I feel secure in it.  I like how comfortable it is.  But I’m coming to terms with the possibility that for as much as I’ve spent on it, it may not be The Saddle for me.Plan, multipart: my old full-leather endurance saddle wasn’t selling, so I traded it for a treeless saddle.  This might fail equally spectacularly.
Have trainer evaluate my position in Eurolight the next time she’s out. Proceed with Eurolight accordingly (I know the seat can be shimmed, I don’t know if that’s a route worth exploring.)

Moderately “long” (9mile) ride. Good test of knees and saddles. As always, excellent view.

My knee is still not 100%.  NATRC often requires a ground-mount and I need more flexibility.  Also, two hours in the saddle is making me want to drop my stirrup and then it feels sore.  This could be a problem.
Plan: STRETCH.  If it continues to object in the Eurolight, order new endurance stirrups for Thorowgood to make that more comfortable.  This may also come to play if the Eurolight’s long-term potential goes downhill, but currently I am hoping to do the June ride in the Eurolight, canter be damned.

NATRC rides highlight Fetti’s issues being left by other horses.  Which makes me anxious.
Plan, already executed: I messaged my trainer and we had a Trail Lesson on being left behind, wherein I got to watch Fetti lose her brain, learned the tools to manage it, and saw that all of her shenanigans were rideable.  Anxiety-inducing, but rideable.  I’ll continue to practice those tools, enforce the behaviors in the ways that feel confidence-building, and I will remember to LET GO when I feel anxious.
Plan going into the ride: Turnout the weekend prior and/or the week of the ride.  Be sure to Ride Seriously (distance and/or speed – maybe only 4-6 miles, but a good solid working 4-6 miles) both Tuesday and Thursday leading into the ride.  It’s not typical ride prep – but it’s what I need to feel confident that I won’t have too much horse on Saturday. 

Practicing our exercises away from home. Bend, what?

Practicing our exercises away from home. Bend, what?

 

What strategies, routines, or tricks do you use to manage your pony or ride-related anxieties?

Posted in recap/goals | 3 Replies

Self-preservation

Topaz Dreams Posted on May 27, 2016 by FigureMay 27, 2016 3

My riding buddy and I headed out for a mellow evening ride last week.  The ponies were sound.  We knew we were short on daylight.  I knew my saddle was shifting, so every thirty seconds or so I’d look back to see if the crupper was lined up center (answer: only 50% of the time).  But that’s usually a pretty good recipe for a short and sweet pony trail ride.

First problem: I could not get comfortable. My knee flared up late last week when I ground-mounted without enough flexibility (oops, rider problem, needs work).  This was my first time riding in the Eurolight since it had been re-fitted over the weekend.  Hindsight: not a great idea.  I finally gave up and dropped my stirrups right about the time we came to a screeching halt because there was a SIGN!

Second, third, tenth problems: Repeated signs in the park.  All over the place.  Every time we’d think about trotting, we’d come back down to a walk to contemplate the TERRIFYING SIGNS.  They were not that terrifying, but they are not normally there.  This also made for a super-slow ride because 1. I could not comfortably trot with feet in stirrups and 2. OMG SIGNS. PONIES MUST LOOK.

We turned for home, again looking at every single sign that were so kindly spaced that we could not get a good trot going in between.  The humans spooked at the cars that were practicing backing through cones, slalom-style, in the dark.  No full moon, but it was close.

On the last little section heading home, there was a group of people visibly on the trail.  “Hey guys, two horses coming towards you on the trail!”  I don’t normally call out, and even more rarely at night, but I figured this was the group of stoners we’d seen on our way out.

I was wrong.

One person stepped off the trail, crackling the brush a little, but happily chattered on about how much he loved horses and how friendly he was and even introduced himself: all this in maybe fifteen seconds.  OK.  Another person walked down the trail, same direction we were going, carrying a light and continuing to talk.  First I assumed he was talking to a second person that was with him.  Then the lack of other voices had me thinking he was talking to someone on the phone.  There was definitely something about “girls”, and heck, if I were out in the woods I’d be telling people what was going on around me too.

Not very long into all this I realized he was talking either to himself or to us or a combination of both.  “I’m all alone.  You want to follow me? Come follow me.”
Ever heard the stereotypical “You wanna fight? Come outside and we’ll fight”?  This was that tone of voice.  Except that it was in the dark, he had a light and was ahead of us on the trail, and he was definitely alone and at least a little bit crazy.

We paused the ponies in a relative clearing and watched his light ahead of us.  It kept moving, and then blinked off.  We could not tell if it was off due to going 100% out of sight a ways down the trail and just being a line of sight issue, or if it had been turned off.. and the section ahead of us was lit a little bit strangely.  It takes a lot to scare me, but this felt like walking into an ambush.

We turned around and detoured down the highway instead.  Bless our tolerant ponies, they did not object at all to turning around two minutes from home to go back out for a twenty-minute detour.

Posted in trail obstacles | 3 Replies

Saddle fitting, again

Topaz Dreams Posted on May 24, 2016 by FigureMay 24, 2016 2

Yes, saddle fitting is a recurring theme around here.  Yes, I’m really, really tired of it too.

Earlier in April, I had both my boyfriend and a beginner friend ride Fetti on separate occasions – in different saddles.  Both had the saddle they were in shift slightly left.  I’d felt that the saddles were listing slightly left for me as well, but having both saddles do it, and for different people, confirmed that for once it wasn’t just me being crooked.  I scheduled the fitters to come back out.

artistic napping pony

artistic napping pony

The week before they were scheduled, I ground-mounted from a not-very-high sand bank.  My flexibility has long been an issue and it really presented itself this time: I knew I was pushing my limits with this mount, but the circumstances I was in did not leave me with other options.  My knee paid the price and is currently the symptom for how incredibly tight my muscles are.  I know this doesn’t sound relevant, but I promise it is.

The dressage saddle had some flocking adjusted/added, the Eurolight had a bunch of things done to it.  In fairness, they had never actually seen this Eurolight, and I had merely followed their instructions on how it was likely to fit when it was shipped from the factory to me.  Added some things, subtracted some things, pondered, tried again.  At the very end, they also tweaked the blocks on the dressage saddle into a different place.

Am I straight?!

Am I straight?!

hm, better

hm, better

First ride: best canter seat I’ve had on Fetti in years or perhaps ever in the Thorowgood.  I am incredibly delighted.  Some sideways shifting of the saddle, which I found a little weird, but OK, I need to make sure to ride straighter and more centered.
Second ride: Eurolight makes my knee very unhappy, dropping stirrups fixes it somewhat, trotting with feet in stirrups is actively painful.  Saddle shifting slightly – but I’m riding super crooked because OW PAIN so I’m disregarding that finding.Third ride: bareback is the most comfortable my knee has been all week, on or off the horse.
Fourth ride: pony is an obnoxious brat, so we’re out for a bunch of miles.  Knee is only slightly sore in the Thorowgood; rideable, and the saddle is only as crooked as I am.  Fair enough.

Aftermath of fourth ride: dry patches post-ride behind her shoulder, matching on both sides. Good solid sweat everywhere else. Then I checked her back on a whim before throwing the bareback pad on that evening.  Reactive right where the very back of the saddle would be at, both sides.  I don’t make a habit of checking her back daily, but I am confident she was not out there two months ago when the chiropractor checked her (I have the paper!) and reasonably confident I’ve checked at least once in the last month or so prior to the fitting.  Ugh.

So.  I’ll try the Woolback again with the Thorowgood.  I’m contemplating buying a Supracor pad, even though it is 100% not in the budget right now.  Stretches are really, really high on my priority list day-to-day so I can give the Eurolight a fair shot and see how it does on longer rides and at the canter.

Had I mentioned that I signed up for a two-day NATRC ride in four weeks, and I was really looking forward to riding a competitive ride in my Eurolight this year?!

Posted in bareback, canter work, saddles, Specialized Eurolight, Thorowgood | 2 Replies

Running braid destruction

Topaz Dreams Posted on May 16, 2016 by FigureMay 16, 2016  
Immediately after braiding, right side

Immediately after braiding, right side

Left side

Left side

 

Aftermath of thirty unattended seconds.

Aftermath of thirty unattended seconds.

This is why we can’t have pretty braids anymore. Normal braids it is.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a reply

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