dancing horses

dancing horses

Friday, January 17, 2020

Glacial

Not much is going on here. As is the case with January. I have a few things to write about but my motivation also seems to be frozen. 

I did manage to squeeze in a ride with Julia earlier this week. The stars aligned with the combination of mild weather and no ice so we were able to hit the trails first. I hadn't ridden for a number of days and normally I would have concerns about how Carmen would behave. But this year I want to be different, so I decided to start with the assumption that she would be fine rather then have a plan to 'manage her'. 

Initially she was a bit tight but when I didn't answer with my own tension she relaxed and began to enjoy herself. The trail is short so we went around it three times. Irish was having a ball too. Carmen started to be interested in the trees and whether they were edible. After your third trip around, Carmen came to a stop. She wasn't balking nor was she grumpy. She just, well, stopped. I had to laugh because she reminded me of me. When I'm walking in the woods I often stop and just breathe in the air and absorb the woods. It felt like that was what she was doing. 

Irish was less patient about this, he wanted to go! 
After a few minutes I said 'ok, can we carry on now?' She gave a sigh and kept going.  We headed up to the ring. The footing wasn't great but it was fine for walking.  

I used to view walking as the gait that we started with until the real work could start. But now I find that there's a lot you can do at the walk. It's a great way to work on my goal of softness and bend. We did some leg yields and circles. At one point she came to a grinding halt- I followed her gaze and she was staring hard at a patch of snow. 
Carmen: What is that? It looks dangerous.
Me: Ah, it's a pile of snow
Carmen: But what if it's not? 
Me: Pretty sure that we don't have albino trolls here. 


After letting Carmen look at it for a brief minute and then walked forward by it. I was very proud of her for doing it and for me to let her have a long rein. 

We practiced a few half-passes at the walk and she was so good- really bending and lifting herself with her hind. It felt really good.  I played with having her follow the bit as I loosened the reins and she did well. Instead of grabbing or inverting she lengthened down and low. 

Honestly, she looks like a Thelwell here. I'm going with it's the angle 
that Julia took it from 

It was about 40 minutes all told but that seemed good to me. 

Two days later we had a snow storm and today the temperatures have plummeted to -12. Add in 60-70 km winds and you get pretty f-ing cold. I let the horses out to move around but they were not interested in leaving the hay. So I opened the gate to the back field. That created some excitement. 

Carmen: how's this for using my hind end? 
Irish looks great for a guy going to be 20 this year. 


Guinness ran up and down the fence with them. 
I hope that the temperatures rise a bit because the snow is a great texture to ride in but I'm not riding in these temps! 


14 comments:

  1. I LOL'd at your abominable snowman gif :)
    So cute how excited they get simply with a change of paddock scenery! I love how in the moment horses are.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sounds like a pretty good ride given the circumstance! Love the shots you got of them running out to the field too. Also I kinda lol’d about the trail ride bc Charlie will occasionally just sorta sputter to a relaxed lazy halt, and I always ask him if he “ran out of gas” lol....

    ReplyDelete
  3. Your albino troll comment made me snort. Agreed with you about walking! There's so much you can work on at the walk (or even the halt!) and I wish people spent more time on it. I have found that anything at the walk directly benefits the canter too!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Albino trolls are real, according to Carmen. 😁

      Delete
  4. I will admit that it is much easier (aka more fun) to walk and breathe on the trail, than in the arena. Even if you do the same trail 3 times. Happy trails!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I’m pretty good at breathing in the arena. But in the woods I breathe more deeply and Into my soul.

      Delete
  5. Good to hear you got out on the trails. There's nothing like a nice walk on a horse in nature, it is good for the soul.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is amazing what it does for our peace of mind. I don't know why more people don't do this!

      Delete
  6. Sounds like a really lovely ride! Especially after time off. You two are really starting to trust each other, and I bet it feels wonderful! Hope it warms up some for you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was a nice ride. I suspect that Carmen will always be Carmen but she's definitely mellowed.

      Delete
  7. The amount of times piles of snow have spooked my horses is too many to count, LOL. The one time I actually convinced Annie there was nothing to worry about, the pile slid, confirming Annie's worst fear - IT WAS ALIVEEEE!

    ReplyDelete
  8. I second not riding in such cold temps! With the added wind I just can't handle it this winter. Plenty of opportunity to ride when my face doesn't feel like it should fall off. And besides, the horses should keep all the calories I feed them instead of being worked off in this weather.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for leaving a comment. I love the feedback.