To ride dressage is to dance with your horse, equal partners in the delicate and sometimes difficult work of creating harmony and beauty.

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Hitting the reset button

I have been plugging along with Stella, feeling my way, making adjustments, evaluating her responses, building our relationship. She is also building new relationships. Recently Brian was out of town for work so Rick cleaned stalls, spending more time with her in the process. Since Brian is leaving soon for college (less than a month!), I've told Rick that I will be needing his help as a ground person; it would help if he's not a stranger. Our new neighbors on the lot to our north have also been building a relationship; Rebecca comes over to the fence and gives Stella carrots and attention.






 This is a good thing should we have a repeat what happened last month. Do you see what is wrong with this picture?
That's Stella on the wrong side of the fence. The neighbors called me at work one morning; Stella was on their property. What?!? Before leaving for work I had turned her out in the upper pasture for the first time and put the boys in the lower pasture. Lance had taken to standing at one of the apple trees all day eating green fruit and leaves, risking founder and colic, so I was trying a new arrangement. Knowing she wasn't likely to let the neighbors anywhere near her (this was pre-carrot times), I hurriedly finished what I was doing and dashed home. Would she be cut up? Would the fence be torn up? Nope; the fence was intact and I couldn't find a mark on my mare so apparently she jumped it. So she's back in the lower pasture and the boys have been staying in. 🙄

In spite of all the ground work, lunging, and schmoozing,







our progress still seems infinitesimal. Yes, I'm talking about YOU, you reactive creature, you!



Our future as dancing partners seems nearly as distant as ever. Maybe if I was still young and fearless, or had a round pen, I'd just get ON her and deal with whatever comes, but I'm not and I don't. And even if I was and I did, my accumulated knowledge says overfacing her like that would not end well; horses can't learn when they are in a state of panic. (That is probably true of all creatures....)

So I continue to ride Lance to keep my riding muscles in shape and ponder what to do with my silly, stunning black swan.

a vineyard we used to ride around has been fenced off 😞
One evening Rick actually rode WITH me!



post-shower; my patent leather pony
Yesterday I decided to ACT on a recurring idea; I messaged Lisa Sink for help. She and her husband were trainers in the BLM's TIP (Trainer Incentive Program; currently inactive); they own Lance's sire, a Kiger mustang they adopted intact (allowed for Kigers) at age four, and have/had many other mustangs. In other words, Lisa knows feral horses. If anyone could help me move forward with this mare, I thought it might be her.

Lisa messaged me right back: Call me. I did, and gave her a quick summary. She said, "I know exactly what you need to do next." I didn't even ask what that was; I just asked "When?" This morning worked for both of us!

Lisa brought her own 'tools' – a rope halter with integrated lead rope and a flag on a stick. She said follows Buck Brannaman's groundwork methods, and proceeded to slowly and patiently work with Stella. She encouraged me to video what she was doing so I could refer back to it, because I am to repeat the work daily until she comes again next Wednesday (yay!), and I am to go to her place to work with her trained horse so I know what I'm working toward.

I won't go into great detail on what Lisa did for an hour, but will include a few photos and screenshots from videos, plus bullet-point things below as a reminder to myself (and will try to upload the videos soon). But basically we went back to almost square one, working with her as Lisa would a wild mustang, gaining Stella's trust, getting her 'unstuck' so she can easily and calmly move her feet and body around, giving her a chance to think and respond. Having never worked with a horse as 'untouched' as Stella was, I started training her as I would have a handled youngster, leaving behind a big gap that I don't think we would ever have been able to safely hurdle. Yep, I should have made that call to Lisa MONTHS ago, but I'm so glad that I finally did it now, so we can fill in that gap and move forward together.

• Backing (also standing, walking forward)
• Bending at the poll
• Moving the back end
• Head down
• Half-circles
• Accepting the flag
• Moving the front end
• Back a circle
• Rope around the butt and turn
• Handling her tail










Now if only we could hit the reset button on 2020!

7 comments:

Retired Knitter said...

Beautiful Black Swan!! Perfect description for Stella. And my forward progress with Aja, my Orange Diva, also slow but I know it is because I just don't have the time to work with her.

I am not into BIG animals like horses, but I do love a challenge ... the challenge of trust and friendship with an animal. Wish I lived closer. I would LOVE to feed her carrots. And I would never never get on her - at 73 that ship has passed - but I don't shy away from communicating with animals - even big ones.

Alanna M said...

Yay! What a great idea to get some outside input from someone you trust and has so much experience with un-handled horses! I hope this is the ticket to lots of progressive with your beautiful Stella! She looks so much better than when you first got her!

A :-) said...

I'm so excited for you and this new training for Stella!!! Such great news!!

marlane said...

I am so glad that you now have a way forward and what a great teaching from Buck Branaman. He and many others have been of so much help after the traditional ways have been explored. I have used Pat Parelli's 7 games and Moty Roberts round pen work... all with great results It's best to stay with one thing at a time LOL

Michelle said...

Isn't it amazing that animals are willing to be our friends, Elaine?

Thanks, Alanna and Adrienne!

Marlane, I'm not a 'disciple' of any trainer, but I think you can glean good things from lots of people. I'm looking forward to seeing how this training helps Stella!

Jeanne said...

I thoroughly enjoyed this whole post! Thank you for sharing it!! N
The photo of your black patent leather mare is SO beautiful!!!

Michelle said...

You're welcome, Jeannie; more to come soon!