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Aspen Spring Showdown

Monday, June 13th, 2011

Remember back a few years when Jon and Suzy could not seem to get a break from the weather during their events? Remember the first one where it rained 10″ in two days and they dropped an entire quarry of gravel on the XC course?  This weekend was total payback. Weather was a perfect 60-65 degrees, some sun, and most importantly the first drops of rain did not come til 3 pm on Sunday when we were packing up! Pretty perfect, especially since I am hearing from my friends back east how that even the water is sweating in Virginia.

Polestar was well represented at the Aspen event, and it was a pipe opener for most of my students. Mary, Lori, Shauna, Annika and Hank were all entered and had lots to work on throughout the entire event. Annika and Lori were riding their first events on their new horses and there is a steep learning curve anytime you ride a new horse at a competititon. The horse you thought you had at home, did not get off the trailer with you on Thursday. He was replaced with his ironic twin who enjoys throwing curve balls when you least expect it. Mary was riding in her first USEA recognized event on her longtime partner, Lancer. After two years of wanting to do it, she was finally, actually, participating. Hank and Jake had not competed since last year and he was probably feeling rusty as he looked around for the medical armband and the lost lucky stock tie. Shauna was riding her mare who only in the last 4 days seemed to find her brain from some dark musty pothole in her skull. She lost the brain sometime during her 4 month winter break, fell into said pothole with all the rain dripping down the mare’s ears. Me? I was riding greenie, Cochlear, who was at his first event ever. He also has had a very steep learning curve in the last 4 weeks where he not only learned how to jump, but also was starting to pick up his canter leads with relaxed regularity. My expectations were low (clearly), but still excited nonetheless.

So, you can see that this was not a group of folks who felt that they were Inittowinit! But we knew that the weekend was going to be educational however the cookies crumbled. While driving home today I was thinking that the most difficult thing for me was to manage my guilt that some students maybe did not get my full attention when they most needed it. Or, said another way, often when I am riding and coaching at an event, I have to hope that I have prepared my students well enough that they can cope without me on the ground guiding them through all the pitfalls of the day. Yes, I feel guilty! And I know that I shouldnt feel that way but, instead it is important for everyone to learn at some point that they are the ones with the partnership with their horse. They are the trainers of that horse becase it is their hands, legs and judgement that guide dear horse, not me from the ground. It is clear that when the horse changes his personality at an event, that the rider only has a split second to adjust to the new beast and ride accordingly. That is a tough task when you are at your first event and are just hoping that you know the rules and dont get eliminated for wearing the wrong color socks!

But enough of my waxing, you want to know how everyone did. The final results do not reflect the total weekend package, but here they are: 2nd place for Shauna, 4th place for Mary, 9th for Lori, 13th for Hank all in BN. Annika was 14th on Ringo in Training, Susan’s Dalesman was 7th in Novice horse with me in the irons, and Lear was 7th in the Zeit Capital Challenge Open BN!  Thats a bunch of ribbons, but ribbonsschmibbons. Most important were the little lessons learned:  that Lori pulled out her inner cowgirl and gave Max a piece of her determination (that she didnt know she had) in warmup when he decided to alter personalities. Mary brought out her A-game motivational speaker skills to help Lori find her inner warrior. Mary also discovered that she can meet some of the goals that she thought might be impossible for her to reach. Hank discovered that he loves to hang out with a stack of women more than he likes competing! Annika learned that she is extremely helpful to me and that I love her. Shauna got a big ole kick out of almost every day. Susan watched her lovely horse cause the least amount of stress/angst throughout the entire weekend, and I learned that I own one of the nicest young thoroughbreds that I have sat on since Goldfinch and Blueprint! All those (and more) are so much better than a ribbon!

Watch out for The Boogieman

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

Now, I know for sure that Boogie fits his name to a sharp, pointy T.  He has found ways to make me and him peek around every corner, worried about what might lurk there.

As you may remember, last summer my lovely husband posted a photo on Facebook of me laying in a hospital gown with my eye stitched up like Frankenstein. Boogie was my facial artist that day. I sat on him for the first time that morning, after taking weeks to introduce him to all the various implements of my trade. The bridle, the boots, the longe line, the saddle and girth.  All that, was introduced to Boogie, and he accepted every “friend request” with confidence and calmness. Never, did I dream that he has a tricky side to him that would continue to perplex me for months.

Over the winter, Wes, Jordan’s boyfriend, helped break him and Boogie became a lovely prospect. He went to a schooling show with Wes, and then I was working on leg yielding, trot poles and was nearly ready to start jumping and then I departed for California on the 3 week spring trip. I thought that Boogie needed a break and would benefit from some time in the field getting fat. But, my imagination was not reality! I returned home from the California trip and walked him for one day in the XC field. Next day, I was walking in the arena for 15 minutes when all of a sudden out of nowhere – he bolted and bronked harder than Ive ever felt a horse bronk. He was not even close to slowing down when I decided that I should probably check out from this bad hotel.

I have now spent the last 3 weeks scratching my head about this problem. I was back to square one – Boogie was incredibly suspicious, worried and fearful and I suspected it was because I came off of him. Ive vowed to never make that decision again (I did have time to come up with the idea to jump off while it was happening). Next time I will ride it out and make it better (I expect a flurry of comments on that…)

Every day for the last week, after the barn chores are all finished and it is quiet and peaceful here, that is when Ive been working on Boogie. I turn off my phone, I have a plan and I stick to it for consistency.  I have managed to get on, walk and trot many times, but sometimes turning left or right produces a held breath and a butt tuck scoot for him. Mostly, even when he and I are communicating well, he is staring back at me in the saddle with worried eyes. Yesterday, in a fit of creativity, I put a set of halter fuzzies on the bridle so he could not look at me. And Wallah!!! He was a lot better! For the first time in weeks, his ears were flopping, his breath was regular and his back was soft. I was incredibly relived and thrilled. Sometimes you need to think outside the box in order to understand horses. Its good to remember that our human reasoning is not horse reasoning.

 

Trial by dousing

Monday, May 16th, 2011

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WHP Hunter Pace

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Today finally feels like spring, but as I said this, my wonderful mom reminded me that it is supposed to rain 1/2″ tomorrow. I am over complaining about the flooding, and now I am going to start complaining about the mowing! All this rain and pleasant temperatures mean that I am mowing the entire 80 acre cross country field once per week! Im running out of podcasts to keep me entertained during this 6 hour task. When Blue is very very old (I thought he was old at 21 now, but he still is very spicy) he can wander the farm freely and help us eat up the grass. I do see an end in sight to the winter turnout situation, and we are starting to transition the horses over to the grass. They are LOVING it.

This coming weekend is a large outing for us, we are taking 9 horses to the Washington Horse Park (hereafter called WHP) for the spring Hunter Pace. Equestrian’s Institute is putting it on, along with clinics with Jen Verharen and Todd Trewin. We are taking advantage of all the events, and are planning to have a great time. I currently hold in my hands 20 CDs for the karaoke machine and party on Saturday night. Please bring your skinny jeans, beach cowboy hat and hoot with us. Should be fun.

Ive also added a new horse for sale to our sales page, Coruscant. Ive known her for a few years now, and I am excited to market such a lovely horse. Check her out.

Oh, and while I am at it…. let me introduce Annika McGivern! She is riding Crescent in this photo and is our new working student from Nelson, B.C. She is here with her lovely dog, Shadow, and two very lovely horses, Tanna and Ringo. Welcome!!!!!!

Who to cheer for at Rolex

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

Hi, I wanted to share with everyone that I am very biased towards who wins at Rolex this year. Yes, I think that Mark Todd has a good shot and it would be exciting to have him win his second **** in a row, thus rekindling the Triple Crown win. And, we should always watch Phillip Dutton and Mary King with awe.  But neither of them are going to cause me to switch teams and cheer for them. I am completely and totally a Griffindor/Kristin Bachman devotee.

Kristin has a long history of good rides with Griff, he is her long time partner…. ever since she bought him from ME! So you can excuse my bias! I used to gallop Grif for Homestretch Farms, Auburn WA, where he was bred and trained. When I decided galloping racehorses was a good way to shorten my life abruptly, I bought Griff and took him home to become an event horse. Kristin came over a few weeks later and pointed to him and said: “I want that one. Is he for sale?”

I was cowed, who was I to argue against true love?! Besides, it is a dream come true to watch a partnership that I helped form, come to be one of the great love stories in our sport.

So, THREE CHEERS to them and I wish them the best. Just dodge those tornadoes, Grif!

Late post on Twin Rivers

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

Hi All, I just got a text from Mark asking me why I stopped blogging. Sorry! Yesterday, I was waiting to download photos to put up on the blog. Still have not done it, but I will explain the weekend anyway, sans photos.

Dino came up with a slight swelling in his hind tendon area, and I asked a vet to come out and check it out. He was ultrasounded and there is swelling in the tendon sheath but no tendon damage. I decided to not take any unnecessary risks and scratched from the show. Now, I know most of you are saying “Why??? He is not lame! Why not run?” I will tell you why: Ive learned through the years that it is not worth it to aim for the short term goals. The much wiser thing to do is to take him home, do some shockwave therapy, walk for a few weeks and resume work when he is 100%. Which is what I am going to do. Yes, it is disappointing to not compete here, and lordy do I wish that I was an ignoramus and could just blast through the competitions and not give a regard to my horse’s welfare. But I am not that sort of person. I want Dino to be my next Advanced horse, and the road is LONG to get there. Just imagine if he did injure the tendon, could I come home and say that it was worth the damage to have a clear and fast run at Novice level? Nope.

Shauna had a surprising bruise in Romeo’s foot! He came out of the stall quite sore on his hind leg on Friday and thankfully the vets and farriers have worked hard to get him ready to compete…. but a day too late. He looks great today! But unfortunately, not in time for dressage yesterday. So, she is being a good sport and jump judged all day today. Again… it is a teaching moment: better to know that your horse will be fine in the long term. Sadly, a bit of a let down after such a great experience at Ram Tap. But the season is long and Shauna will have her chance in the sun (or rain if in Washington) for another good event.

Jordan was the hero this time. She had a great dressage, 190% better than her dressage at Ram Tap. Brogan was relaxed, swingy and obedient. He could have been better in a few transitions and more uphill for a top score, but we were all very happy to have such an improvement from last weekend. Today he show jumped and was a wee bit wild. While Novice and Training levels are show jumping, the upper levels are running XC a mere 100 feet from their warm up arena. Brogan noticed! He and Jordan were also mixed up in a crowded warmup situation, which did not relax him any. He had a good round that can be improved upon with more experience. She will go XC tomorrow morning, the course looks quite inviting and fun. Im excited for her. Its always nice to sit on a horse that makes the jumps feel small!

Im coming home with a tan, a show savvy Dino and ready to tackle the upcoming season. Desipite the few setbacks, it was still a great experience for the horses to go to back-to-back shows. Dust the rust off, apply grease and kick on. See you at home!

Ram Tap XC

Monday, April 18th, 2011

If you have already checked the scores for Ram Tap, then you might be wondering what in the heck happened. Well, you know we didn’t start off on a great foot with the dressage, so I was already the slow hound behind the pack. The fox had left the county and I was still sniffing around for the dropped sandwich on the ground.

The good news is that Dino learned a LOT on XC today.  (more…)

Dressage and SJ day

Sunday, April 17th, 2011

Hi! Some of you have already seen the photos I have posted on FB, and they of course, include the fabulous scenery at Ram Tap. You are jealous, admit it. I think that it is important to include the power lines because it is the most memorable item to look at here. Ram Tap just would not be the same without it.  My current pink/tan and Dino’s poor dressage performance are not due to the electro magnetic radiation that is bombarding me, despite all the jokes.

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Made it to Sunshine…almost

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Hi all,

I included the “almost” because as soon as we arrived to Twin Palms barn in Loomis, it started to rain and hail. So the “almost” applies to the sunshine, not the arrival. I am beginning to believe that the grey clouds are following us – but I am still applying my SPF 40 just in case the clouds turn out to be dust and pollution. Always be ready for anything, is my motto.

Our trip was quite uneventful. My passenger and car comrade, Shauna Morrissey, was excellent company and I now have her addicted to my favorite driving book on CD – The Hunger Games. Im sure on the way home she will get me addicted to her vampire books. I make no excuses for our un-scholarly selection when driving! We need pure entertainment. Murder, magic, vapire and mystery are not just acceptable, but most preferred!

The horses travelled very well and they were thrilled to get to Jordan’s family farm in Loomis. As mentioned in previous trips, it is great to stop there not only because of the fabulous company and hospitality but the 14 x 16 stalls that the horses enjoy. Its a wonderful, quiet location to recover from the dizziness of the road.

Jordan is still at home in Loomis, but Shauna and I hit the road again this morning to get to RamTap HT, located in beautiful Fresno. Thank goodness we got here early, as both Dino and Romeo were perfect boneheads today when we rode them. Ok, I know that is not polite to call them that, but they were most upset about the silliest of things. Dino was a leaping, plunging fish – and I think he did it just because it was fun. Romeo is herdbound, and was quite difficult for Shauna to ride. Neither one of us praticed anything of any worth – but it was an excellent reminder that it is very EARLY season and we should be most surprised if they were perfect gentleman and quiet, docile animals. I am hoping that tomorrow I can move past the feeling that Dino is green-broke and discuss the merits of a half-halt with him.

Bye Bye Lil’ Nabber!

Monday, April 11th, 2011

It has been a week of parties, tears, and laughing and we are all going to miss Jordan very much. She has made me laugh more than most people when there is NO reason to laugh. And I appreciate that so much.

As we speak, she is attempting to pack up her life in her truck, trying not to panic about what the future will hold. But, she can know that she will always have a place to call home here at Polestar.