Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Slushy Yuckyness Outside! Eww.

So, from the title of this post, you can probably guess I am not a huge fan of the melted snow cone version of my campus...
I'm thinking warm thoughts... Like this picture taken last summer by a fabulous friend of mine while I rode my trainer's superstar horse. All around good times there!
Since I'm sitting around inside, back at school, trying to avoid Microbiology and Chemistry, I figure I might as well research some new exercises for riding... to Google!
I started by looking up exercises for riding... Specifically- helping with the connection.
This is not an extremely easy search. I think some of these sites want me to breath with my horse and pet him. Different meaning of connection...
And I decided to pass on Wikipedia and WikiHow... at least for now.
Okay, so I need to work on my google skills. Maybe I'll try side reins when I'm lunging in warm-up to see if it makes any difference, or just to see what I can see.
Clicking around though, I found a lot of suggestions for transitions. So, next ride, transition work it is! If I ever make it on Bold- I'm guessing he's gone from bright chestnut to a lovely clumpy brown by now.
Keep warm and safe in the snow!

Dressage Pyramid

So, Bold, real Dressage, and I seem to have some disagreements on what the proper dressage pyramid is.
This is Bold's pyramid...
(Borrowed from http://nanrawlins.com/)




This is my pyramid....
(Borrowed from http://www4.ncsu.edu/~masupple/hillbilly/dressage.html, a super funny site)



The real Dressage pyramid. Or rather, the more widely used one.

Obviously, I am not excelling in any of these pyramids. Oops...

Monday, February 27, 2012

Last day of My little break!

So, I obviously have been riding a LOT more than usual lately- seeing how I don't normally have a car at school! But with the parents coming back tomorrow from Hawaii, and having labs and tests tomorrow, today might be my last day to ride during the week! Which might be a good thing......

I went out to ride today with Amanda and her mare (and adorable new puppy!!) which was super fun, butttt wasn't actually a super ride. Bold was just a little too "pull-y" in the contact- just a bit more ahead of the vertical than I would have liked... Amanda and I talked about it and she said he looked like he wasn't quite submitting entirely to the contact. Which I totally agreed with. We were talking a bit more, and she said one of the things Jenny has had her do is really push on the longsides, then collect as much as possible on the short side. We tried that for a while, and he never got quite where I wanted him... Super bummer, but it happens! He was doing his leg-yields better- I told Jenny he had forgot them in my lesson the other day, so she got on and did a few and basically told me "They're still there" aka it's all me right now! he was still a bit twisty through the top of his neck, but hopefully a few days off will get both of us ready to work harder!
The theme for the day seemed to be aaaaaaaaaaaaaalmost... but not quite. At least we're getting closer! I have to remind myself that we haven't been working on this stuff for all that long and it's going to take time for both of us to build some muscles back up.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Lessons, Dressage Clinic, and a whole lot of work

Last Thursday I had a lesson where we worked on keeping my aids ready to leap into action when needed. The best way for me to explain this is to use the example of Bold "spooking" to the inside in corners(not a leaping spook, more like a general "pop the ribcage in and stick his nose in the air"). So when Bold starts causing an issue in a corner, when I approach that corner, my spur is sitting there, just barely touching his side- enough so we both know it's there, but not enough to make him move away. but if he does try to come in, my leg doesn't go with him, so he pushes into the spur, which makes him move back out. So I'm working on doing that, but with every aid. We're still working on relaxed forearms/elbows following his mouth, so I'm imagining a cone my hands are going into. The first little bit has almost no resistance, but as he pulls more, it gets tougher to pull, until the point where my hands stop completely. It's a LOT of thinking- and I tend to over do it.
So then Friday I was in classes from 8:30 until 1:10- way too much learning! Although Thursday I did work on nutrition, which is interesting to me. When I finished class, I drove out to the barn and loaded up horses with Maura (none for me though!) and headed to the dressage clinic. We got there and got the horses settled in, and spent the night just hanging out with all the riders and the clinician. It was a really fun group of people, and this is the second time I've watched this clinician, and I can't wait to ride with him. He's very good at explaining what he wants the rider and horse to be doing, and how to get there. I was asking my trainer about him since she works with him quite often, and his next clinic in the area was full last fall! No chance I'm getting into that, and very little chance my college-student-rider budget has room for clinics right now! Maybe in a few months........
So what did he work on? Well, when I watched, he talked a lot about balance, forwardness, and using your aids. He would ask the rider "how much forward do you need?" or "How much do you need to half-halt?" or "What is a half-halt?" to get them really thinking. The answer to the first two was "until its enough (basically until the horse was finding his own balance) and I can't quite remember his exact answer to the last one, but I was discussing this with an instructor a couple weeks back, and she said "a half-halt is a rebalance. If you are on a giant Belgian that's running down the long side, what would you do? Circle. In that instance, that circle is a half-halt, because it's making your horse rebalance." And, to my mind, the clinician was saying the same idea. He seemed to be saying a lot of things my trainer has been saying, which I felt was a good sign!
Alright, I'll try to wrap this up quick- I went out to ride Bold today, after starting work at 7am and getting done at 730pm, with only a couple hours off in between lunch and dinner. He was very good- we did get into it a bit about one of the corners, but I brought him back to the walk and just went through it a few times. He started to get anxious and upset in the corner when he thought he would get in trouble, so I had to get him to calm down to be productive. I did some jockey stirrups- flip my stirrups over the saddle and trot around in them... shaky legs now! Then, at the end, I tried riding on the bit with my eyes closed. So much easier- I could feel where he was wiggling or pulling so much easier, but I probably should have taken the jumps down first.... oops! But I'm going to try the no eyes riding again soon :)
Bold tried to come in the tack room to help me find treats!

Wow, that was a long post. I'll finish the Bold story later. I get busy!

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Bold

(Sorry for the bad picture!)
This is Bold- He's a Morgan gelding in his early teens. I've adored him for a few years, basically ever since we met, and just last summer/spring got the chance to start riding him. He had a tendon injury, and took a year off, and I was riding at a hunter barn for a year and a half or so after losing my confidence(and with that, a lot of my willingness to ride anything that wasn't 150% bombproof) during a really rough competition season. Bold showed up at the barn Sierra and Sterling are at, and I was thrilled. I rode him a bit over the summer- maybe once a week or every other. I wasn't at a point then where I was comfortable riding him- he felt unbalanced when I was on, and his personality seems spooky- you can sort of see that from the photo above. But when he moved to the barn Polo is at, I wasn't sure I'd be able to ride him anymore, and started to regret not taking advantage of it before.
Okay- time's up for me! Homework calls- I need to get my chem homework done and watch my Microbiology lectures tonight so I can be a clinic tagalong with Maura and Jessi and Jenny this weekend!

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Just Keep Going Forward

I know I haven't introduced all the horses yet, but I was riding Bold, my dressage horsey, today, and kept working on getting him forward. I definitely think it helps a lot- I just need to figure out the reins business. And the shoulders.... We've got work to do, but definitely progressing.
I got on Polo for the first time in about a month and he was super- lovely manners, and very relaxed. I tried to set up scary jumps, but we were over everything on the first try. He did get the wiggles a bit before our first skinny, but if that's the worst, I'm thrilled! He was leaping into his canter departs- very cute. and entirely unphased by the hammering and drilling in the corner. Absolute superstar.
Jessi happened to be out riding when I was on Polo, so I got on Kelso. He's super forward thinking, but tends to be heavy in the reins. Once I pushed him forward and just held with the contact, he became more balanced and round. He's a bit different from Bold in that he gets HEAVIER when I half halt and release a lot, whereas Bold will get lighter. It was a great opportunity to get a feel of a very different horse. And Kelso was a great teacher!

The Little Pony Who Could

About two and a half or three years ago, a family from my old Dressage Barn moved their pony to the barn I was at then (and back at now). They didn't think the barn was the right fit, and the trainer wasn't a good match with the pony. Prince Polo Pony is a very small (either 10hh or 12hh, I can't keep it straight) white, light boned pony. We don't know his exact breeding but Jessi and I decided today that he's mostly unicorn, with a little Connemara mixed in. Seriously, he's not just a cute little pony. Take a look!
Prince Polo and me by a jump I set up for him today.
Don't worry, more pictures later!

When Polo and I first met, he was a pretty big chicken... He had some bad experiences and had gone from being a sassy little jumper, to lacking all confidence. I tried to trot over ground poles the first day, and he made it quite clear that was not an option. He was very spooky, and hadn't cantered under saddle for quite some time. So, we took it slow and steady. Started at the basics and worked our way up. Made some mistakes, and learned a lot. We now jump barrels, skinnies, and canter around like nobody's business. One of my favorite horses just because he's taught me so much and I've seen him come so amazingly far.

(Photo Credit: Jessi Dery)



About The Horses- Part 1

Here are the first couple of horses I ride (by ride I obviously mean "chase around excessively large pastures with a halter"). These guys live at my friend's house- it's a little barn, and they just have three horses there right now, in addition to the chickens and Scraggles the cat.
(Scraggles isn't its real name. It's Bailey.)


Sterling
Age: ?? Good question- mid to late teens.
Breed: Another good question...
Enjoys: Long strolls in the snow - note the word stroll.
Naps
Treats
New riders that don't boss him at all!

I love that I can go out by myself and just hack around the pasture and down the road with Sterling! He's a solid citizen. He's no supermodel, but he'll trek around like a star!
He is obviously thrilled. You can tell because... he just is. Also, I do not normally ride in these sorts of saddles. More on that later.

Sierra
Age: 7 or so
Breed: Arab
Enjoys: Being sassy, and getting groomed.



Lady Jane
She just sits around and looks nice. She had some pretty bad lameness issues, so her owners just let her enjoy hanging out with everyone else.


So that's Barn #1! I don't make it out there all that often, there isn't an indoor, and I'm a total wimp!

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Hello? Is this thing on?

Just got the blog set up... I figure it will at least be an entertaining distraction, and maybe help me remember that I do ride horses during those long school weeks! I think this is working right- I couldn't figure out how to set up that Pinterest site, so this is my alternative.
I am a first year college student, but technically I'm a sophomore. So when I got to school this past fall and saw I could graduate in 3 years with a normal schedule, I decided I should. Gotta save the money for Vet school! Then I decided to tack on a communications minor, and I'm busier than ever. Today, I left my parents' house (I'm staying for a week or so) at 6:30am and finished class early- at 8:25pm... It had been a long day, and I decided to visit the horsey-more on that later- so, a bus and drive later, I decided to ride a bit. I'm a bit of a slow rider, so I decided my new goal is to get comfortable enough with "more engine" from the horse that someone actually needs to tell me to slow down. Funny enough, it helped. I know, shocking that my past 7 or so instructors were actually right. ;)
Time to study! 8:30AM exam tomorrow, then taking the rest of the day to ride. I'll try to post some photos of the various horses soon.