Monthly Archives: March 2018

My Child Is Student Of The Month

I’m sure you’ve all seen that sticker on someones car.  I think every child has gotten one of them for their self-esteem if not for their performance.

Why don’t we have them for our horses?   We’ve all had that special horse who has accomplished something extraordinary in their lives.  They may not be on the Olympic Team, but they’ve gone above and beyond anything we could have ever imagined.

As instructors there have been students who have amazed us.  I have two.  One is a young lady and one is a horse.  So I want to put my sticker on my post to recognize the wondrous things they have done.

My girl Hannah F.  (see my Pictures) –  She came to me younger than my other students, but with the enthusiasm that I love.  It did not come easy to her, but she had a good sense of humor and tried.  Needed to believe in herself more.  Progressed slowly, but she enjoyed every minute of it, and wasn’t looking to break any world records, just ride and play with the horses.  She’s the one that used to slide down Dawns neck.  The family moved to Tallahassee four years ago so I tried to get her in with a good instructor up there.  She is now winning Championships all over North Florida and Georgia.  They bought a young, green, warmblood, who she fell in love with.  The instructor didn’t think it would work, but they became a team that won’t quit.  She has gotten her confidence and rides beyond anything I could have imagined for her.  I am truly proud of her and her accomplishments.  She goes off to college next year and I would love to see her continue her winning streak.

The Horse that I am proud of is Tigger (the TB that just left).  He has not reached his goal yet, but non-the-less is on the road to be a horse, that came from my barn and instruction, that I am extremely proud of.  If you remember he was a rescue horse.  His owner had physical limitations and that’s why she decided to sell him.  During the six months he was here, I had her work on ground training, suppleness, and moving off her leg.  It was all slow but necessary for whatever he was to do in his life.  It gave her something quiet to work on and good for his brain.  He always had a good brain.  He would stand by the pond and watch my neighbor set off beautiful fireworks.  He was curious but not afraid.  It did not matter that the hounds were playing under his belly or that the Jack Russell would help him eat his breakfast.  Well the good new is, that because of his brain and schooling, he is going to be “Officer Tigger” over in the Palm Beach area, where he will finish his training.

My other girls are going on to be successful in their chosen profession. Diana, Hannah C., and Lexy are already in college for several years now, with Hannah F. and Emily C. entering this fall.  Beautiful, intellagent young horsewomen, who I couldn’t be more proud of if they were my own.

What they learned here, with regards to caring for Gods creation in love, will make them citizens to be admired.  I think I would have so many bumper stickers on my car you wouldn’t find my license plate.

Wouldn’t you like a bumper sticker too for one of yours?

Boots – Yay or Neigh?

I keep getting the same question over and over again.  Should I put boots on my horse.  My simple answer is “It depends.”  Then the next question is do you use boots?  My simple answer again is “It depends.” That’s when you get the really squirrelly faces from people.  You know what I mean, the one that says “This person is crazy, why did I ask.”

So once again it depends on

  • What you are about to do with your horse?
  • Your horses conditioning
  • Your horses soundness
  • What are you trying to accomplish by using them?
  • Are you going to get into more trouble with them or without them
  • Ground conditions
  • Can it be accomplished another way?

Skid boots if you are doing a sliding stop are a necessity.  If you don’t use them and the horse burns his heels or fetlocks, he won’t slide anymore.

Bell boots.  Is there a different way of trimming or shoeing that will keep him from over reaching.  Hunting in deep mud a horse will get his feet stuck and over reach and pull the boots off, then the shoe.  It gets very expensive buying bell boots weekly, and forget about finding them in the deep mud.  Buy the same type and color all the time because you are going to have a lot of just one of the pair.

Tendon boots.  I have had more trouble with boots than without them.  Hunting or trail riding you stand the chance of getting sticks, mud, sand, and leaves up under the boots and it can rub them raw.  If you condition you horse well you won’t really need them.

If you are using them to protect his legs when he hits a rail think about that fact that if it hurts he’ll pick his legs up higher next time.  If you pad them, he may not.

Some people feel that if they put all this fancy stuff on a horse that other people will think they are professional and be impressed.  Most times people who really know what they are doing will assess your performance and decide whether you are a good knowledgeable horse person trying to protect your horse or just someone who is out to impress, or have beautifully matching color coordinating equipment.

I’m a firm believer in a proper trim, shoeing, and conditioning of my horses to the point of not worrying about them.  I have boots in the barn, but that’s where they will stay unless I have a problem horse.  They do get injured sometimes, but if you do everything right, they should not.

Most people neglect the conditioning of their horses.  They go for the preventative measures.  I tried that and in the long run it doesn’t pay.

This is the last time I’m writing about boots.

 

Believe

I was looking through a magazine and there was a Tee Shirt that said “She Believed She Could, So She Did.”

Believe has been my word for the last year.  A year ago when Fri tore her tendon, the vet said she was done.  I told her no she wasn’t, that I believed she would be okay.  I will never jump her again, but I’m okay with that.  That leg is fine now, but she hurt her good leg protecting her bad one, so now I’m waiting on that leg.  Certainly not as serious a problem.

We believe a lot of things, some that are not true.  We have to be careful as to who and what we will believe.

The first horse I fell in love with, was a prime example.  The first year when I was taking lessons there was this big black mare named Black Diamond.  It was love at first sight.  I spoke to my instructor about riding her and I was told she was not a beginners horse.  So I patiently took my lessons dreaming that someday I would ride this mare.  Six months later my dream had come through.  Looking back I don’t remember her being that hard to ride.  She was a doll.  I rode that horse every chance I got.  Riding her in a show and getting first place sealed the deal, I was in love.  But then it came time for me to start jumping and I was told she didn’t jump, that I had to ride other horses.  So I did, but still every chance I got, I rode Diamond.  I had ridden her up to the stone wall many times dreaming that I would be going over that wall with Diamond.  I believed she would do it for me.  Back then I didn’t ask why she couldn’t jump, I just listened to what the owner said.

I don’t know if I read it in a book, or my instructor told me, but I never forgot “Throw your heart over first, and you can jump anything.”  So one day when we were all running around having a great time, everyone was heading toward the wall.  I was caught up in the moment and when they all jumped the wall, so did Diamond and I.  I was in heaven.  Of course upon landing, I thought about what I had just done.  Someone turned around and asked if I had jumped it and of course I said yes.  When I told my instructor about it she was a little upset.  She couldn’t believe it, but she said we both could have gotten hurt.  But we didn’t, I Believed, I threw my heart over first.

Many times through the years I have done things because I believed we could.  Ravines played into a lot of the things that I did.  I look back now and think that somethings that I believed in bordered on insanity.  Walking across a ravine on two planks that was about a foot wide total, several times, that wasn’t too bright, but I had to get to the other side to stop hounds and that was the fastest way to get there.  Riding through a ditch, that the sides and the tree that was down over it, was up to my horse’s neck, but we jumped it, several times to lead another horse (who had more smarts) over it.

It’s like the movie Spirit.  Spirit believed he could fly and that he could jump the canyon, and he did.  The Indian boy was not so sure, but either way they were going to die so he took the chance.  Of course that was just a movie, not real life.

When you believe you lose the fear.  Is that a good thing?  I’m not sure, but it sure felt awesome.

Everyday when I go out to the barn I tell Zoey we are going to ride tomorrow.  We haven’t yet, but I “Believe” we will.  I also believe I will get caught-up on all the other things that I need to do, so I can ride.  It’s getting to the point that I’m just going to ride, the other stuff has to wait.  I’m no good to anyone when I don’t ride.

I believe others have had similar experiences, in which they believed they could do something that no one else believed they could do.  The love, trust connection between horse and rider can help us do amazing things.  If it’s not there you have nothing.

Do you believe?  Does your horse trust you that much?  Don’t try it if the magic isn’t there.  Oops translates into a ride to the hospital.

The Art Of Evaluation

If there is an art, I haven’t found it yet.

A dear friend has been having “episodes,” as the doctors refer to it.  He seems to become unconscious. His blood pressure drops too low, and has a few other symptoms which I won’t go into.  When he comes out of it, everything is normal.  The funny thing is it always happens around lunch time.  They thought of low blood sugar, but no it wasn’t anything to do with that.  They considered the time since he took his morning meds.  No, that wasn’t it.  He has been going through months of tests, at many different hospitals, but as to finding out what is causing this, they have no idea.

What happened to the old days where doctors knew their patients.  They knew their families, their lives, their individual problems, what they ate, where they worked, and what they did for fun.  Now the doctors depend on machines to tell them what is going on in a person’s body.  They don’t even ask the patient or the families questions to try to figure out what is the cause.  If the various tests don’t show anything, they don’t have a clue.

We, with horses, know that watching them is our best indication.  They can’t tell us, so we become “Super Sleuth”.  A friend from church, not a horse person, asked how we know what is wrong?  I told him, they tell us if we listen.  Body language, the typical – temperature, gum color, heart rate, respiration, swelling, pain, are our techniques.  Of course we do resort to x-rays, and ultrasounds too, but initially it’s our eyes, ears, nose (thrush, infection), and observation.

We’ve become so technological that we have lost common sense.  Could it be the 80 pills this man is on.  One pill counter-acting another pill that is correcting something caused by another pill?  At least we don’t do that to our horses.

Evaluating takes time and patience.  That is something our medical associates don’t have anymore.  You more or less become a number, not person.  You have to fit within the list of symptoms, or the doctors are lost.  You have only this much time allotted for them to figure it out, or they throw you out of the hospital and move on to the next case.

We are so blessed that we do not treat our horses like that.  Although sometimes I am not sure.

We evaluate what the horse needs in the way of nourishment, in the way his feet are shod or trimmed, in the fitting of his tack, and what tack is necessary and what tack is overkill.

When purchasing a horse we evaluate if this is the right horse for a person or the right person for the horse, his conformation, his attitude, and his athletic ability for the particular job we have in mind.

As teachers and trainers we evaluate what techniques will work best for our current problem or need.  This should not be a rushed decision, a lot hangs on your approach and conclusion.  With a quick thought you may make or break a horse.  You may cause success or injury to a rider.  It is so important to take all things into consideration before making a move.  It doesn’t always come down to an oops let’s try again.  Sometimes in life there are no “do overs.”

When evaluating anything important, take your time, look at all the facts and consequences of your upcoming actions.  Gain all the wisdom on the subject that you can, and go from there.

Let’s keep the art of evaluation alive, at least where we can.