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| Shane's first foray into the lupine |
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| Shane learning the ropes with his best pal Friday |
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| out on a beautiful ride |
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| he was so very handsome |
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| Shane and Friday watching some arena shenanigans |
Adventures with Horses
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| Shane's first foray into the lupine |
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| Shane learning the ropes with his best pal Friday |
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| out on a beautiful ride |
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| he was so very handsome |
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| Shane and Friday watching some arena shenanigans |
Miles has some pretty big shoes to fill. First order: the actual shoes! He was due for a shoeing and I wanted to see how he’d do barefoot. My trimmer did a great job and said his feet were pretty good but needed some help before he could manage barefoot entirely. So he tried on big brothers boots. A bit loose, the next size down is too tight, so for now they will work. Bittersweet, all of it.
| Miles likes the eating hikes best |
| all dressed up and ready to go |
| he likes to be a bit close |
| his expressions crack me up |
| wondering what's over there |
Then part hiking and riding. Been pretty steady so far, though he is not a fan of mud and water! We hike a bit, then I ride. No photos of the ride part yet. Not because he has been naughty, but because I don't quite trust myself or him with one hand on the reins!
| a good trail to learn on: single track, bridges and water |
Since Q was a temporary lease I kept my eye out, casually looking for the right fit. Too old, too young, too far away, too much money!
I tried a few. A chestnut was nice but moved a little funky to me. A gorgeous gray was too young. A paint-Arab cross was too much to handle with some baggage. What was I drawn to? Of course bay Arabs with fun personalities.
Then I saw a local trainer’s ad:
“extremely fun and playful horse”
“completely confident going down the trail by himself”
“going down the trail and doing some horse camping
“would love to be a trail or Endurance horse”
“has also camped at Point Reyes by himself.”
photos from his ad
Downside: “still young and can get excited in large groups on the trail.”
Figured he was worth a look. Went out one afternoon and took him for a spin in the arena. Well, the trainer rode first. He didn’t do anything bad (he’d had three days off), was just a little uptight in there. His background was a show barn, with that silly show barn Arab energy. When I rode him he didn't do anything stupid, didn't feel explosive or silly, just a little uncertain. But he was so cute!
So I decided I wanted to ride him on trail. I was nervous, as I always am with a new horse. But I met them at the staging area (where I ride all the time, which was great) and headed out hiking. No problems, so got on and proceeded to have a completely uneventful ride, the best kind! Over and under, big trails, small trails, leading, following, trotting, walking, what a good boy! A couple moments of wheee, let’s go, but shut him down and he was fine to continue.
As we rode back my brain was spinning. Hmmm. Good horses sell quickly. He’s a good one. Friendly, steady on trail, even my favorite color. I’d be sad to miss out.
So they settled that. I told the trainer right then that I’d take him. Too impulsive? Maybe. But just look at this face.
Meet Miles. An almost 6-year old bay Arabian, 15 hands. Good trail experience, even camping. Baby brain in groups needs work, but we can get there. We have lots of trails to explore. meet Miles (registered name: Bacchus DWA)
a walk to the staging area in crazy winds, no spooking! settling in to pasture
She taught me a lot, and will hopefully continue her trail career with her owner.
I was just getting her tail cleaner too! But she is certainly in better shape.
It's almost a perfect time to ride right now. The grass is bursting out and bright green, birds in the trees…and it is getting dusty. Seriously we've had no rain, in winter, for 40 days. After a wet December we're worrying about fire danger in February, yeah for California!
| ferns are not tasty but she had to try |
As much as it is not my favorite, every time I ride Q we do a little warm-up in the arena. Most days she needs a brain-reminder that yes, work is an actual thing you have to do. Once she remembers that she actually has a job, and can listen to the not-unreasonable requests from the puny human atop her, we hit the trail. I don't have between the ears pictures because she is not exactly the type to stop and relax (we're working on it).
| love this rock monolith |
This little mare sure likes to go! Walking is fine but trotting is even better. She has a great, smooth trot, and just goes along like a metronome, incredible consistent. Up hills, on the flat, though we slow for most downhills. We've traveled about 15 miles a week, split between 2-3 ride, usually an easier forest walk/trot and then a faster or harder (more elevation) ride.
| posing as we hike an extra steep downhill |
| tree tangle behind us, lots of trees fallen this year |
| after workout snack |
| pretty clean! |
We're enjoying our adventures, and there are fun updates ahead…
| broad and flat |
| She got her own sign, can't have a no-name horse in pasture! |
| saddle skeptic |
Onto saddle two: Freeform Elite dressage. It’s treeless, It has extra panels for taller withers (she certainly doesn’t need those!). I have a good pad with equipedic inserts. I tried this on about five rides. Good sweat patterns, and she doesn’t object, but I feel like a flopping beginner up there. After a trail ride she did the whole body shake and I almost fell off! I don't hate the saddle, but me learning the saddle and learning the horse is a tough combination. (I didn't even take any photos of it!).
| old standby: Wintec 2000 |
| one of my favorite trees didn't survive the storms |
| Duett Tango test, rear panels nice and wide |
| current setup, need to take better photos (and shorten the breast collar) |
| dumb thing is a miracle worker |
| back on the trail |
| old saddles, not for me (but cool tapaderos!) |
| My other adventures: taking Wesley for his daily walks! |
In November a friend texted me "Are you only interested in a gelding, no mares?" I said if it was the right one, but I wasn't interested in buying right now. Then she said the owners were probably interested in a lease, and I got more intrigued.
Off of a couple pictures and a short conversation I went and saw the mare. Short, dirty, fat, friendly, pretty easy to work with, seemed sensible. Well-bred for endurance, had been started at 5, then pretty much sat for 4 years, except for the 1-2 times a year they pulled her out to trail ride around the property.
| meeting, who are you? |
| living in red dirt is bad for a gray |
Hmmm, not ridden much, out of shape, moving to a new place, you know what, why not. I've made worse decisions lately (fatalism at it's best). Feed lease (except insurance) for six months (or when I want to stop it.) Picked her up the next week. A bit reluctant to go in the trailer, but did get in and rode home quietly.
Her name is Qamara, but I'm not a huge fan of that. I'm just calling her Q, it is short and cute (and happens to be an excellent Star Trek character besides). I was able to take her back to my old stable, which was a comfort. Luckily she really likes eating, so settled in pretty quickly, saying hi to the boys. She was so dirty the stable owner thought I'd bought a roan, not a gray!
| settling in…oh food, cool! |
| meeting the boys |
| forest hike |
| after her first bath |
| meeting her doppleganger down the street |
Time to saddle up…in the arena. Did some ground work for a few days, decided to go for it when she stood nicely at the mounting block. We worked on walking, turning, listening, bending, all the basics. She had a lot to remember, I could tell her brain was thinking about all the changes, but she was good about it. After a few rides just in the arena, I warmed her up in the arena and then I took her down the road after each ride, where we'd been walking the previous weeks. We had some discussions about certain areas where monsters must lurk, but consistently not letting her get away with it resulted in a forward walk past the spooky place, yeah!
| ready for the trails |
| after a few rides I felt I could take a chance at a photo |
| green, and very muddy in places |
| awkward after ride, but mmm, grass |
| there isn't much mud in her field, but she can find it all |
| every day is like this, sigh… |