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endurance with a Haflinger

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Cat therapy

Topaz Dreams Posted on December 5, 2016 by FigureDecember 2, 2016 2

Pony therapy is best therapy, but cats are pretty good too.

I mentioned that I haven’t been riding much.  I’ve managed a grand total of three rides in the last month.  For someone that usually rides 3-4 times a week, that really, really sucks.  I’m out of shape.  She’s out of shape.  My winter depression is kicking in and my anxiety is periodically skyrocketing.

There are no lights at the barn.  In years past, my best riding partner and I have moseyed around in the dark together.  This year, her riding-pony is not currently at the barn.  I have been largely unmotivated to get on and mosey in aimless circles by myself two hours past sunset.

On one particular evening I was cranky about how late I was getting to the barn.  No ride for me in the dark.  Pat the pony on the nose, clean her stall, refill hay nets.

“Meow!”

Oh.  Okay.  Were you feeling neglected?  Be careful coming into the stall, I’ll be right back into the hay room in a moment.  Right this way, little one.  Except – goshdarnit there’s another hole in the hay net.

I tossed it up on a bale to find string and fix it.  The cat followed, up on the bale, on the hay net. “Meow!!!”  Hello, human.  Why are you not petting me? Let me rub on you.  I am here. I am the center of the universe give me more attention please.  Yes I would like both of your arms.  No you may not try to relocate the hay net.  Why are you worrying about such things?  I am Cat.

And so it was that I spent probably a good twenty minutes hanging out with one of our “feral” barn cats in my hay room, and failed spectacularly at good photos since she insisted on being right on top of me all the time.  I did eventually get the hay net patched by holding it in the air while letting her rub against me.  What an excellent cat.

Black cats don't photograph very well in the dark.

Black cats don’t photograph very well in the dark.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Replies

Winter is here

Topaz Dreams Posted on December 2, 2016 by FigureDecember 2, 2016 3

Good news! Pony’s bloodwork is all normal per the vet.

Bad news: I thought she had fungus on her back and was out in the rain washing it off. Instead, it looks like it’s almost certainly a saddle fit/rider balance fail result. Poor pony, I am SO sorry.

Shampoo in the rain. What fun!

Good news: She’s been ridden twice since Quicksilver, so her back is getting time to heal. I’ll run the Woolback and/or bareback for a while until the hair grows in.  In hindsight, I might have been better served by doing the 50 in the Woolback like I did all last season.. but I had it fitted with a thin pad and I’ve been conditioning with both, so I cannot fault myself too hard. Riding balanced would almost certainly have made it a non-issue, but busted ankle plus thin pad makes for unhappy pony back.

Bad news: SO MUCH MUD. I have not been riding much lately.

Good news: Her breathing appeared to be somewhat better the last time I worked her in the round pen for twenty minutes. Maybe even back to normal?

Bad news: She’s still NQR, leg undetermined. It’s looking like another vet callout in the next week or two, and I figure we’ll continue with light workouts (ground permitting) until then. If they’re going to be out, might as well ask about her breathing too! Especially if I can replicate it. Chiropractic after her lameness is either resolved or noted as ‘more arthritis, add more work’.

Good news: Look, a pretty stall sign that was stealthily gifted to me this week!! I will have to hang our TWO signs this weekend!

img_3137

Thanks for all your support. Other things are still in flux, but they’re out of my hands and I can’t do anything but wait and cross my fingers right now.

EVEN BETTER NEWS: I took long enough to post this that I think she’s not-really-lame now! I hope! And I got to ride yesterday in the dark!  Life feels fabulous right now.  Exclamation points entirely justified.  I hope this gets me to start riding – and posting – more often!

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Anxious. Waiting, still.

Topaz Dreams Posted on November 17, 2016 by FigureNovember 17, 2016 4

Thursday, 20? minutes in the roundpen, mostly trot/canter. Still puffing.
Saturday, 6 miles with a friend, fairly slowly. Confetti is still puffing worse than our less-conditioned riding partner.

Sunday, mostly-walking pony ride to a beginner rider.

Tuesday, 20 minutes riding in the round pen. There is no reason my well-trained horse can’t do this nicely. 10 minutes solid trot in each direction.

Thursday, two bareback laps around the barn until she said she desperately needed a run. Turned her out for an explosively zoomy moonlight running session with her baby herd-sister.


Friday, vet visit for fall shots. Her assessment is that Fetti is just fat and fluffy. She drew blood for a few tests anyway. I am not convinced that’s it, although I agree she is fat and fluffy, and I’ll take more hair off because it can’t hurt.

Saturday, pony is lame. RH?

Sunday, still lame. It’s still pretty subtle, and I’m still thinking RH.

Tuesday, still NQR. Still subtle. Pentosan injection today, fairly overdue, so hopefully that will help. Who knows?  20 minutes of work in the evening has her moderately sweaty, so in any case, we have our baseline to work from this winter and start from near-scratch on conditioning next year.

Thursday, still waiting on Fetti’s bloodwork results. Today she’ll get worked 20-30min again if she’s no worse; forecast calls for rain this weekend. It’s too cold to bathe and clip today. That will have to wait til next week.

I just can’t quite shake the gut feeling that we’re done with endurance. I’m not giving up, don’t worry, but I am worried and anxious. Rationally, I know that there are other members of the herd contributing to that worry; that is not my story to tell yet and I hope those worries are all for naught, but our ponies could use some good thoughts right now.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Pony clip, post-ride update

Topaz Dreams Posted on November 3, 2016 by FigureNovember 2, 2016 2

Originally this was supposed to be part of the blog hop, but then I waited too long to get it posted.  Oops.  The thought was there!

img_3044My clips have gotten progressively bigger and more aggressive over the past few years.  One year I did just half her neck and her chest.  Last year I did all of her neck, chest, and her shoulder.  This year I also clipped some at her belly.

img_3052Hindsight says: I should have taken off more.  I probably won’t – odds are we won’t be doing long enough rides in the evening to need it – but I hope this reminds me to do so next year!

My clip lines are questionably straight, I definitely missed a few patches here or there, and I’m still using clippers better designed for small areas and not full-body clipping.  But.. for once a year.. and for the amount of mane she has to hide all my errors.. it works well enough.  My balancing act here is that I rarely-if-ever blanket.  Clipping too much leads to others at the barn giving looks of shame in our general direction; heaven forbid my fluffy winter-coated pony be cold!  It occasionally drops below freezing overnight.  I do not think she will be cold.

img_3050Tuesday after Quicksilver 50, Confetti looked stiff and uneven.  Her energy level was still fairly low.
Thursday, she was turned out with her sister just before the major rainstorm came through.  I left word that she could run as much as she wanted, just let me know if she looked sound.  Word came back that she looked good and was chasing her sister all over the arena.  Good pony!  That’s what I like to hear.Saturday she enthusiastically trotted circles for me and looked acceptable.  At least 95% recovered, if not 100%, and feeling good.

Normally that would be the point where I hop on and we go for a brisk trail ride.  The weather did not cooperate, and the rain and mud are not what I want to do my first post-50 ride in.  I know I’ll be flying a super-powerful kite.  Better not to do it while sliding down muddy hills!  If all goes well, first ride back is this Thursday.

I have not given up on LDs or even 50s with ‘Fetti, fear not!  I have concerns about her lungs that need resolved before we go back into conditioning.  Game plan to be figured out after discussion with one or two vets.  I’m worried about her hocks, too, but at least there I’m pretty clear on what my options are and how I want to assess how she’s doing.

img_3040Getting both those issues resolved and conditioning her for a mid-summer ride next year may be overly ambitious.  Not out of the question, though!  We’ll see where things shake out this winter.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Replies

Quicksilver 50

Topaz Dreams Posted on October 27, 2016 by FigureOctober 27, 2016 3

My original plan for the year involved skipping Quicksilver. It’s full sun and a lot of visibility, neither of which cater to our strengths. The best laid plans, however.. and so it was that after a year of really half-assed conditioning, one concussion (rider), hock arthritis and starting Pentosan, several weeks of coughing in spring and then again in fall (pony), and selling my Eurolight, I found myself packing for Quicksilver and planning on the 50. No sense doing the LD again; we’ve done that five years now and come through strong every year. Better to try the 50 and pull if things don’t go well.

The Loma Fire started the week before the ride. It got rescheduled. I aborted my time off work and rescheduled the pony’s trailer-ride and re-informed work the days I’d be gone.  I rolled my ankle pretty badly while walking in a flat parking lot, started riding in an ankle brace, flared up the tendonitis in my wrist, went back to riding in a wrist brace, and then really did pack for the ride.

What went well:

  • My farrier came and trimmed the Tuesday before the ride.  Closer than I’d normally do it, but.. the boots stayed on all ride.  Which is good: I’d actually planned to have the ride-farrier glue boots, but then the ride-farrier ended up not showing up at all.
  • I gave her Ulcergard (since it’s now AERC-legal in preventive doses) for a few days before the ride, and for the first time in several years I had a pony that did not stress and that ate and drank appropriately at ridecamp.
  • My ever-tolerant boyfriend helped me mount up and walked a minute or two with me and Fetti both the day before and the morning of the ride.  She did not feel explosive and I was able to let that worry go.
  • I rode with Olivia’s husband all day.  That took a lot of the stress off me of ‘will she worry about other horses leaving’ – no, Fetti was exceptionally polite.  We found a bubble early on and kept it pretty well.
  • When I pointed her at the side of a trail over a tree with one hand loosely on the reins and one hand holding the phone up to report the downed tree, I had a perfect trail pony who hopped up and down the bank with zero direction from me.  I had total trust that we’d be fine.  What a good pony.
  • She peed TWICE on the trail.  Not a lot, but TWICE.

 

What did not go so well:

  • Our lack of conditioning caught up to us here.  I knew that we were treading a fine line and we would probably pull it off based on past rides, but honestly, I did badly with how few long rides we did this year at home.  Or at least – I think that was part of the problem?  It sure would have helped.
  • Right now, she’s fat and fluffy.  Again, I knew both of these things.  I clipped more than in previous years (I’ll post on that later) but didn’t cut back on her hay and/or increase her workload early enough to drop her weight.  This didn’t help.
  • I did not eat or drink well.  Bad rider.  I did some, but not enough.
  • I am not only in worse riding shape than usual, I was riding crooked thanks to my ankle.  Pony did fine with this, but I have a not-quite-bruise from the stirrup leather on that leg, and not-quite-bruises from posting into the knee rolls on every downhill we trotted.
  • Hock(s) & respiration, as detailed below.
Sunrise after ride start.

Sunrise after ride start.

Confetti is an honest horse.  By at least mile ten, she was breathing pretty hard (“panting”) and I assumed it was the brisk pace and the hills.  We slowed it down a bit and watched her recoveries.  It was not a case of pushing her: whenever she asked for a break, she got a break.  The horses moved out well and happily on the flatter sections, and aside from the pony sounding like a freight train, everything seemed fine.  I walked her into the check per usual, she took a few minutes to pulse per usual, and the primary concern was her respiration.  She’s hot, was the theory, and I could believe that.  This is not my hot-weather pony.  But she looked better by our out-time, so we were good to go.

Loose rein, politely following.

Loose rein, politely following.

The second bit was much the same.  Trot where we can, walk when terrain dictates or when Fetti needs a break.  Hit up the water troughs and cool off the ponies.  Walk her into the check from the last trough, pull tack, take a few minutes and she’s down.  Still panting, but.. she’s hot.. and by now it really was getting sort of warm, so I grabbed my crew from his volunteer station and we sponged her down with ice water.  Already I’m a little baffled and concerned.  We’ve done this ride before in hotter temperatures, and this is the first time I’ve ever had to be this aggressive with cooling.  She’s out of shape, though, and we were moving a little faster, so maybe that’s it?  We did vet through, again with an eye on her breathing, but everything else looked good.

Back on out.  She thinks I’ve lost my mind.  Why are we leaving again?  This is dumb.  But OK – we have a friend still, I guess we can do this.  Trot where we can, walk when she needs a break.. which is more often than it feels like she should, but we’re in this now, and we’ve got the time.  Somewhere in this section it clicks that she’s quitting on the uphills and perhaps not engaging her hind end very well.  Hocks.  Damn.  Well, OK, assess: how bad?  She’s fine on flats, just unhappy on steeper uphills.  That’s workable.  We’ve got time.  Fetti’s still breathing hard, but there’s ice waiting for us at the check.  I walk her in, pull tack, sponge her off.. sponge her off.. come to terms with the fact we might be pulling.. hose her off.  Bless the vet check folks who had that offer for us.  It cooled her down and got her through the check.  She’s hot, yes.  She’s puffing still.  But we have three and a half hours to go fourteen miles.  I tell my boyfriend we’ll need ice at the trailer at the finish, and we head back on out.

Tired pony thinks hills are dumb. This is where we went up and around the tree earlier in the ride.

Tired pony thinks hills are dumb. This is where we went up and around the tree earlier in the ride.

Walk anything resembling an uphill.  Trot the flats, trot the downhills.  My knee is bruised from running into the kneeroll so much as I post going down the hills.  Still making excellent time on the flats.  Fetti sounds like a freight train, but her heart rate looks OK, and she sounds just as bad as she did twenty miles ago – not any worse.  She flat-out quit on an early hill – I am done, hills are dumb, why are we doing this – and I got off to see if it would help.  While I am puffing my way up hills, I debate sending our riding buddy on off without us, as I’m wondering if we can actually do this.  End result: one tired rider who is not in shape to hike hills, one pony who dutifully followed along but who was not breathing significantly better.  Well.  OK then.  I got back on.  Time to push her a little bit and insist on walking up all the hills, no quitting allowed.  It didn’t take much, and I didn’t feel terribly guilty for it.  I’ve had to ask harder at home.

More rolling hills and gradual climbing trail.

More rolling hills and gradual climbing trail.

Steep downhill, trot away – and she suddenly feels like she’s going to fall on her face.  Fluke?  Not when she does it again the next steep downhill we try trotting. Hock(s) it is, then.  I hear you, pony.  We’ll walk the steep stuff.  I’m watching the clock, and as long as we’ve got flat stuff we’re making excellent time.  Could almost walk the last few miles and still make time.  Trot the flats, walk the rest, walk once we’re within sight of the finish, and hope that we get through this OK.

Partners.

Partners.

She only needed to get to 64.  We headed back to the trailer, pulled tack, and my boyfriend and I sponged aggressively while letting her eat and relax in hopes she’d realize she was done and could settle.  Her breathing improved, but it still wasn’t great.  15-20 minutes later, it was off to vet.  I am ready to be pulled here at the finish.  I know she’s tired, I know her hocks aren’t 100%, her breathing is still a point of concern, and I have no idea if she’s actually pulsed down given the first three points.

Pulse: not quite down.  Vets assessed, discussed, watched her trot out and commented on how good she looks aside from the breathing issue, and then her pulse was just barely down.  They called it good enough and gave us the completion, but with concerns, and I shared them.  One very kindly said that this may not be her sport.  Looking just at this ride?  I see where she’s coming from, and if these issues cannot be resolved, Fetti’s done.

My gut feeling is that while she was hot, overheating was not the primary issue we were dealing with.  We’ve done hot rides here before.  I’ve never had to use ice on her before, and I’ve never had to hose her off.  She has flat-out never had consistent respiration problems like this at a competition before.  But – thinking about it – she has done it at home this year, and I wrote it off to it being warm.  I’m suspecting that her coughing earlier this year impacted her lungs in some way.

Confetti’s breathing was still not 100% after hauling home that evening, but looked fine the next morning.  As of Tuesday, she was still not 100% sound in the round pen.

This is where things get hard, and there’s a lot of self-reflection.  Should I have done things differently?  Did I miss something somewhere?  Honestly, I’m not sure.  I felt like I rode to her ability all day.  I pushed only the slightest bit towards the end and I’ve pushed more than that before.  If Fetti had been clear about ‘my hocks are uncomfortable’ prior to the last section, we would have pulled, no question.  If I had connected the dots and thought about her coughing this year at any point before the finish, we probably would have pulled and/or had a serious discussion with the vets, probably both.  It never clicked for me.

I’m not sure where that leaves us.  I do know that if I can’t get both issues resolved to my satisfaction, we’ll be done with competition, but I’m not quite ready to say we’re there yet.

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Daily Routine

Topaz Dreams Posted on September 15, 2016 by FigureSeptember 15, 2016 4

How do I make it all work?

After not riding earlier this week (due to tack fiddling) this is on my mind again.  Well timed!

Important context is that I live in the Bay Area.  The barn is five minutes from my house.  I figure work is an hour away, but depending on when I leave, that can easily be an hour and a half.  Occasionally it’s more.  If it’s raining? All bets are off.

On my guaranteed work-days (4 days a week), I’m up between 5:45-6am.  I generally have to leave the house by 6:15.  Breakfast is optional and pretty rarely happens.  My job isn’t super flexible, but if traffic is good I’ll run errands before I need to be at work.  Same thing over lunch: either I’ll get stuff done so I can be done faster at the end of the day, I’ll go out and do local errands, or maybe I’ll go for a walk/jog.  Three of those work days, I won’t head home until 6:30 or 7, so I probably won’t get home before 8.  Then my SO and I get to figure out dinner – he’ll have been gone all day, too.  I try to be asleep by 9:30 or 10.

One of those work-days is a shorter day.  I try to leave work close to 3.  If I do it right and beat the worst of the traffic, I can go straight to the barn and get there by 4, but more often 5 (and heaven forbid I have to stop home first).  Then I’m at the barn til dark.  This is a short-ride conditioning day.  Brush horse, sort any new gear adjustments quickly, tack up, head out for an hour and a half – four miles takes us an hour, plus 10 minutes on either end to get to and from the trail.  Pull tack. Quick brushing. Clean stall in the dark.  Refill hay if needed if I missed that earlier, refill water bucket while cleaning stall, give pellets & supplements, dump wheelbarrow, head home and figure out if I want dinner.

winter rides look like this

winter rides look like this

One day a week I only sometimes have to go in to work.  I try to get some housework done in the morning if I’m going in early-but-not-super-early, then aim to leave work by 1 or 2.  Repeat the shorter-day stuff, except that maybe I’m moving a little slower and aiming for a 6-8 mile ride instead of 4 (two to three hours allotted instead of one and half).

Weekends are when we try to do real conditioning rides.  Ha!  By which I mean.. if we’re doing 10-20 mile rides, those get pushed to weekends or non-working weekdays.  It really hasn’t happened this year, but that’s a pony-and-rider problem, not a scheduling problem.  I theoretically aim for 12+ mile rides twice a month.  It doesn’t always happen.  Weekends are also when I ride with friends (in the evenings) and try to hang out with my SO (usually in the mornings/early afternoons) and run local errands and do housework and maybe relax and.. prep for the next week, sometimes.

I regularly end up feeling like my life is a lot of juggling where I have to be constantly moving, but I still resent the winter months where I can’t ride much and am forced into lazing around at home.  Balancing act, indeed.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Moving forward

Topaz Dreams Posted on September 10, 2016 by FigureSeptember 12, 2016 3

We’ve had some good rides since my lesson.  I don’t know if I ever wrote a version two of my recap (I think I did, and then the app on my phone ate the entire thing and I’ve been super-busy ever since), but I really was pretty happy with what I got out of it.  I can see changes in my position.  I can see a difference in how ‘Fetti responds to me when I am riding correctly.  I’m not delighted that this year went from ‘do rides!’ to ‘do lessons!’ but I am thankful that I continue to learn and grow.

We’ve had a few really shitty rides this week.  For whatever reason, her trail-confidence appears to be lacking.  Spooks, jumpiness, unsettled rides, inconsistencies.  All I really wanted was a few confidence-building rides for me to reassure me that we’re actually capable of completing a ride.  So much for that.

blurry super-worried pony

Warmups are becoming more important.  I can still see stiffness when she comes out, but as she works out of it, I am not worrying too much (yet).  She doesn’t feel 100% even all the time – I’m picky, what can I say – but there’s no sense moving forward with $$$ injections and x-rays at this point in the year.  Maybe next year, maybe not.  The concept of warming up out of stiffness has always been foreign to me; this will be a good learning experience.  How will we do it at a ride? I have no idea!  We’ll figure it out when we get there!

img_2351

round pen warm-up

Her speed and stamina are still, generally, in place.  I’m not dissatisfied with what I have seen.  It would be nice if the heart monitor would work more than occasionally so I could get a better baseline.. but it is what it is, and that’s not part of the training plan right now apparently.  Some of what it would take to get her in better shape is within my control, some of it is not.  Learning, slowly learning.

classy bale bag fixes: four different paracord colors visible

A final note: apparently I jinxed the bale bag. Current status: seven holes, re-patching as she unties the paracord every few days.  I’m ordering a new one as soon as they’re back in stock.  Ponies!

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Mid-year update

Topaz Dreams Posted on August 28, 2016 by FigureAugust 28, 2016 4

All the little bits and pieces that haven’t made it into any of the posts, here you go!

I finally made an instagram account: @topaz.dreams
I don’t really know what I’m doing, but I’m flailing around and post pretty pictures sometimes.

image

we pose for pretty pictures sometimes too

My migraines were really awful in April for no apparent reason, but are back to my usual now. Yay!

I bought a few new brushes after 10+ years with several of my current ones.  I love my hard brush but it has seen better days.  When its near-twin showed up at the feed store, it did not take very much thought to buy another one.  Same color scheme, same brush actually.  Super pleased.

image

what years of abuse do to a brush

 

After a number of patch jobs on the NagBag bale-bag hay net, plus regularly grumbling when refilling due to the tight fit, I ordered a new bale bag from Hayburners Equine on a friend’s recommendation. I’ve been using it for five months now and I am still quite pleased.  There is one hole that I noted a week or so ago, and I’ll fix it.. sometime.  It’s super-easy to get on over the bale, and they come in 3/4″ mesh.  Current bale-status: approximately one bale every 4 days.  Fetti is holding her weight well.  I’m not thrilled going through that much hay that fast.. but if that’s what she needs, and that’s all she needs?  I’ll take it.

I love my pony and my forest trails.

I love my pony and my forest trails.

Fetti’s hooves finally look better.  Andrea recommended Dry Cow mastitis treatment. Combining that with aggressive (ha, not really) amateur frog slicing to get air to the affected area cleared things up. The trimmer complimented her hooves. That never happens.

Fetti’s hooves, part two: post-fall, I have picked up a rasp once and now she’s practically due for a farrier-trim again.  Sigh.  I think the flare is finally looking better, but I really have no clue right now.  Also, it’s hot, it’s summer, and I am super not-motivated.  I’m on draft three of this post now: maybe I will get to this over the weekend, now that the farrier-trim is done!

hill conditioning, pony goes ZOOM again!

hill conditioning, pony goes ZOOM again!

Our conditioning work hasn’t really happened.  Oops.  And we really, really haven’t been doing it in boots.  Double oops.  Again: maybe this week or this weekend?!  We’re getting back to it, though.  This was largely due to her cough in May-June, my fall in June, and worries about her hocks after that – so I can’t beat myself up too much for not doing it pre-vet visit.  Now it’s time to get back in the game.

Fetti’s hocks are doing much better and I feel like I have my pony back.  I am incredibly grateful that Pentosan made a difference for her.

Next ride plans are still up in the air.  I have hopes of making it to Quicksilver for 50, but that’s dependent on continued good performance.  I would love to find someone to ride a slow 50 with so I don’t break her brain on the wide-open trails, too.  We’ll see where things end up going.  This is the year of planning, re-planning, and planning some more, and mostly ending up in lessons fixing all the things!

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

August lesson recap

Topaz Dreams Posted on August 23, 2016 by FigureAugust 23, 2016 3

TLDR: I felt like I was making progress.  Then I looked at the pictures and OMG I LOOK TERRIBLE.

I took weekly lessons until 2008, and lessoned occasionally until 2012.  I’ve lessoned very, very rarely in the past four years.  I also have a lack of media on the blog due to a lack of regular photographers around when riding ‘Fetti.

My leg really wants to swing forward, and I tend to sit too far back.  I suspect that the Eurolight did not help this since that’s the position it put me in, however, the fault inherently lies with me for not correcting it.  I am in a really awful chair seat in most of the photos.  Yuck.  This is what happens when I don’t get anyone taking photos of me for months on end 🙁

imageLeg position should not change during transitions, up or down.

imageUm.. I have been riding a pony for too long where I have to lift my heel to make contact?!  I don’t even know, y’all.

imageMoments of sort-of-correctness.

I should be leaning too far forward.  Then I’m straight.  Woo, failed body awareness!

imageCanter work genuinely has improved.  I’m not just imagining that.  This is a super big win; I’ve been battling that forever.  Keep my hands low and steady rather than lifting them into the canter; horse moves up to me.

imageI have no idea what was going on here, but I don’t think it was working.  I also don’t think it was a fluke.  Dang, photos are brutal.

imageI still end up with the stirrup at my heel in the trot to canter transitions, but most of the time I really do have the stirrup in the right place!

imageI am riding a giant horse in an arena.  Crazy.

:( This is not my cat.

🙁 This is not my cat.

As we walked out to my car after the lesson, my boyfriend pointed out a cat following us. It just so happened to be practically the spitting image of my cat who had to be euthanized at the beginning of this month. So much heartache. Such a lovely cat.

More lesson thoughts to come in the next week or two, I hope, as I poke around on the pony and try to put some of it into practice.

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Lesson Recap

Topaz Dreams Posted on August 15, 2016 by FigureAugust 15, 2016 4

I’m only what, two weeks late on this?  Three? Plenty of time to have forgotten half of what went on!

Kate managed to fit me in for a late afternoon weekend lesson at her barn.  I snuck in an early afternoon ride on my pony that ran long when she had a minor meltdown over a far-away deer, then looked at my phone’s GPS and panicked that I was going to be late.  Things I had failed to consider: late afternoon weekend lesson = Serious Beach Traffic.  Oops!  My phone re-routed me away from the highway (where I would certainly have been quite late) up true mountain roads that I’d never explored.  My poor little car and I hope never to have to go that route again.  I arrived in one piece, right on time, my stress level through the roof.  Yikes.

It was absolutely worth it, though.  It’s a gorgeous barn, not too terribly far away in the grand scheme of things, with smallish (not-scary) arenas and giant (mildly-scary) horses.  There is no photographic evidence, but Kate had me ride a full-size horse.  Her horse was generally a saint and I did not die.

I don’t have a particularly coherent lesson recap, but I do have bits and pieces that come back to me as I’m trotting down the trail on ‘Fetti.  That’s how we’re doing things these days, I guess.

  1. To avoid the shoulders bulging to the outside, hold steady and block with that outside rein.  This sounds really basic.  It is a concept that was 100% new to me and is super, super useful.  Confetti likes to blow through her shoulders to get away from doing whatever obnoxious thing is being asked of her.  This for the first time gives me a really solid way to address that.
  2. I need to work on lengthening my legs and stretching around the horse more, particularly my right side.  This is both a muscle memory and strength and flexibility problem.  Practice went pretty well the first week or so (everything hurt after my rides, so I was probably doing it right) and now I’m far enough out I’m not getting it again, I think.
  3. Posture, again: I need to sit further forward and get my leg underneath me for a stronger and more stable position.  This frequently means both physically sitting further forward and then physically relocating both legs back behind the blocks to be under my center of balance.  I know I can ride relaxed with them forwards.  I need to ride securely so when she teleports/spooks/bucks/etc, I’m not unseated.  This didn’t go particularly well the first week or so, and then something clicked during my last ride and it went really well for a few sections before I’d lose it again.  Progress!
  4. More posture: my seat needs work.  I have real issues with body awareness.  We touched briefly on seatbone alignment as Kate discusses here, so just go read that if you haven’t already.  I make no claim to progress on this point.
  5. Shoulders back and down (“You look like you’ve heard that before!”).  Enough said.
  6. Elbows relaxed.  I think part of what’s happening is that I’m still holding too much tension and rigidity in my upper body.  I experimented a little bit with relaxing through my upper body and that seemed to help with both shoulders, elbows, and not moving my hands everywhere.  That’s certainly not the entire problem, but it’s not helping anything.  20 minutes of relaxed pony trot work going home is really good for self-analysis.
  7. My canter work still sucks.  My core is insufficiently engaged most of the time.  Kate’s horse was a lesson saint who politely went into a canter when I kindasorta flailed my way at the ask, and then kept cantering as long as I didn’t screw anything up too badly.  Between slower strides and increased postural awareness and various analogies, I managed to find a somewhat respectable canter seat at least once in both directions.  Progress on this is small but noticeable: Fetti and I found at least several non-flailing strides of canter in yesterday’s ride.

 

Any tips on retaining key points from your lessons when you don’t have someone there taking notes for you?

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

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