To ride dressage is to dance with your horse, equal partners in the delicate and sometimes difficult work of creating harmony and beauty.
Showing posts with label show results. Show all posts
Showing posts with label show results. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Back to the future

Last week a friend mentioned that a former student of mine who bought my Swedish Warmblood mare many years ago would be riding in a show at DevonWood last weekend. I looked up her ride times online, and decided to run up Friday to watch her ride her current warmblood mare.




It felt good to be at DevonWood again; it is such a beautiful facility. My header photo was taken there; I've danced with three horses in all four of their 'ballrooms' (competition arenas). The first horse I showed there was my Morgan gelding; I can hardly wait to compete there again someday with my little Morgan mare!



But back to my former student. It took me awhile to figure out which one was her in the busy warm-up arena; I knew I was looking for a mare being ridden by a petite female, but it has probably been a decade since I'd last seen B. As her ride time approached and she headed up the hill to the Sylvan Arena, I followed her train of family and friend to watch.





Their Third Level test was lovely. The mare is built uphill with expressive gaits, and B rode her very well. I walked over to where she came out of the ring to say hi and be the first to congratulate her; she seemed surprised and pleased that I'd come.

Before I left the grounds I looked up her score; wow – 72.5%!

Sunday morning B texted me the following photo – they won their USDF Region 6 Third Level Championship class Saturday. Woot!
B has come a long way from when I first met her, a teenager riding a half-Arab pony....

And that burgundy jacket (and, I suspect, the gray one in the photo she sent me)? It is MESH. How perfect is that for the summer show season??? I didn't know such things existed; obviously I've been out of the loop awhile riding compromised horses, training for others, and 'bringing up baby Black Beauty.' But someday, when Stella and I are dancing in the big leagues, I plan on getting one. And since the attire rules for dressage are loosening up significantly this December, maybe I'll be able to find one in Stella's color – "first place blue"!!!

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Finally, a show report – and more

Sorry for the long delay in posting. Life keeps marching on and you gotta keep up, which doesn't always leave enough time to recap what is now in the rearview mirror. After awhile, you can't even see what you wanted to recap in the rearview mirror, it's so far away – so before we get to that point, I need to post!

The Oregon Morgan Classic was, over all, an excellent outing for Stella. She experienced SO many new things, and handled all of them without losing her mind or trying to vacate the premises. She did veer away from lots of scary things in the warm-up and show arenas – small doorways from inside to the outdoors, horses in 'pajamas,' unfurling carpets, the hammering of stall drape installations, show carts parked with shafts to the sky, people on an elevated platform (the judge's stand), and a very alarming horse that moved in strange ways making strange sounds (a saddlebred being lunged in full tail-set harness with noise-makers on his feet) who exploded into bucking when asked to canter. And even though they weren't pretty, we made it through our two walk-trot tests – in an arena set up in the center of the stabling barn, surrounded by people, horses, dogs and equipment moving into stabling and prepping for the show! 😬

Stella, still not a fan of the bit, fought it through most of the two tests, and I'm sure I was riding with much  more contact than I use at home in an effort to keep her with me in the midst of all the 'new' and 'scary.' You can see the show photographer's proofs of Intro A here and Intro B here; after viewing those you'll probably be as surprised as I was that we broke 60% in both tests. We even 'won' a nifty neck medallion and an engraved glass since we were the only entry in Intro A!

We could not have done it without Kate!



As I stated going into this show, I knew we weren't ready to be showing even walk/trot, but I'm still glad we did. I was SO PROUD of how brave Stella was, and having that experience "in the bank" is worth the price of admission. I think she is ready to go to Perrydale Trails again, this time under saddle, with the right companions; same with the beach. In the meantime, we keep schooling at home so that someday we will be ready for a dressage show. It sure would help to have some expert instruction, but the only one I know and trust is dealing with serious health problems that have her homebound.

Enter technology. Before the show, Anna Blake did a post on "Homeschooling Your Horsemanship." Towards the end she mentioned a "Pivo." Curious, I looked it up. Then I read reviews and watched some videos. I was so impressed that I ordered one the very next day! My thought was that this little gadget would allow me to be my own "eyes on the ground," and maybe I could even send videos to my favorite trainer and pay her for her feedback. My Pivo Pod Silver arrived the day after our show, and I tried it out a few days later, riding Stella in her Duo bit so I could compare [show] apples to [schooling-at-home] apples. I ended up with a 25-minute video that was too long to upload to YouTube, but the Pivo worked slick. Here is a short snippet saved from the long one; it shows some trotting and an entertaining little spook. 😆

Then another blogger I follow mentioned using it in what sounded like a real-time lesson. I left a comment asking about that and Jen responded that with the app Pivo Meet, that is indeed possible. (Jen even said I could test out a live session with her before trying it with an instructor, which was so nice of her!) In the meantime, I took another test video, this time with the Pivo on a post at the side of the arena and Stella in her hackamore. Pivo lost me when I rode by it on the post, so using the bucket in the middle of the arena like I did the first time will be the way to go.

Now I need to download the app, set up a time, and test it with Jen. (But first I have to get through this week when I am working my usual part-time job and covering for Rick's vacationing secretary all my other days.)

Stella has been giving me some interesting behaviors lately; still trying to figure out what's behind them. I will try to do another post about those soon. In the meantime, our 'herd' is down to two, Lance and Stella.

Yesterday Rick finally put Oliver out of his misery. I haven't been turning the boys out recently because Ollie was hobbling so bad. Good-night, Smart Chocolate.

Friday, September 27, 2019

Happy anniversary of my last post ;-)

I've been riding, taking pictures, thinking thoughts, and chalking up new experiences . . . while my blog nags at me for my neglect. So for my own records, even if no one still follows me, I'm finally posting an update (which has taken even longer after a substantial portion disappeared in a Safari glitch 😒). There *might* be a lot of photos. 😉

When last I posted, Rick had ultrasounded Lance's neck and found arthritis. He followed up with x-rays (above); his machine was being cranky and he didn't get great images, but he did confirm the diagnosis. And . . . that's all that's been done about that. Giving Lance steroid injections in addition to the steroid he gets orally twice a day is risky, and Rick has said nothing else about IRAP (I need to remind him). Meanwhile, Lance started tripping as much or more in the back end, exactly as Terry demonstrated with her horse here. Terry's horse has documented S/I and stifle issues, so that could be be Lance's (additional!) problem, too. But while tripping with a back foot is concerning and disconcerting, tripping in the front end brings greater risk. At the end of August he tripped while we were walking around the neighboring lot and went down with me. All I got was 'road rash' on my bare shoulder and face from the hard ground (yes, I was wearing my helmet), but I am acutely aware that much worse could happen at any time.

That's why I almost adopted a horse. A friend in southern Oregon had sent me information in late April about a registered Morgan gelding taken in by a rescue in her area. At that time I thought he might be a good fit for Dinah's owner's husband, but he prevailed in getting my friend out of riding altogether after her New Year's Day accident. Then my southern Oregon friend contacted me about that Morgan again in late July; Irish was still available and she really thought I should take a look. After a flurry of messages with both my friend and the head of the rescue I shot off an application, which was accepted. There was only one problem: distance. Rick (who seemed surprisingly on-board with the idea) and I just couldn't work out the logistics of meeting Irish, doing a vet check, and hopefully bringing him home, and I had to step out of the way for the next applicant.

So Lance and I have continued our rides, although only rarely could they be called 'dancing.' We ride in the arena,

around the hill,


and down the road to catch sunsets.








We even made it to Perrydale Trails once to ride with a friend!

We've also played with different tack. The bareback pad makes my broad boy even broader, so I'll save it for narrower/bonier mounts.

I borrowed a Micklem bridle to see if Lance liked it better. Even though it fits well away from the bony lump on his left jaw, neither of us were impressed.


I even got a wild hair to try my rolled double bridle on him! (I had been looking at new bridles online and needed to remind myself of all the bridles I already own. 😏) Even though I'm quite sure Lance has never had that much metal in his mouth, or even experienced a curb bit before, he handled it like a gentleman.


Part of the urge to break out that double bridle may have come from digging out the rest of my upper level kit. You see, a funny thing happened on the way to the Oregon State Fair....

In mid-August, it was time for Brian to brush up on his driving skills, because Rick's draft horse client wanted him as a youth driver again (Brian has been doing this off and on since 2012). When Rick took him out to practice, the client asked Rick if I'd be interested in riding one of his Shires at the show. What?!? Apparently there were to be two riding classes in the Draft Horse Show. I looked them up: Bareback Equitation; and Riding, Walk/Trot. Well; why not? So the next time Brian went out to practice driving, I went along to try out Emma:
Miss Emma is one of the lead horses in Duane's hitches, so she's an energetic, forward gal. Let me tell you, sitting on a sleek, round KEG of forward can be a slightly intimidating experience!

I thought I'd get to work on our partnership again out at the farm, but apparently Duane thought we did just fine on our first date and didn't see the need. I had to show up at the State Fair and wait until the evening horse show was over to have another chance to ride her, this time in the arena where we would be competing. 

I knew I'd probably be conspicuously different by wearing a helmet, but did have a flowered purple shirt that would coordinate with it (purple is Duane's hitch color). What to do about footwear? I found the perfect pair of used Ariat boots on eBay that arrived the day before our class. 😁

Show day got a lot more intimidating when I learned there were TEN of us in the class. Gulp.






Double gulp!! I never suspected we might WIN!!! Afterwards, one of the other draft horse owners commented that he'd brought in a couple of 'ringers,' his wife and one of her friends who have both won national championships in some kind of riding, and was surprised I'd beat them.

The next class (which was several days later) didn't specify 'bareback' and I had seen a few people riding drafts around in Western saddles. So I asked Duane if it was supposed to be an under-saddle class, but he didn't know. I asked at the show office, and was told saddles were optional. Hmm; I was using my friend Debbie's draft-sized (and purple-lined) dressage bridle on Emma, so if my saddle fit and I had a girth long enough to encircle her, why not go all out? I had to search awhile, but finely found my long-idle shadbelly and we dressed to the nines (sans saddlepad, because there was not a smidgeon of extra room if the girth was going to buckle).

When 13(!) showed up for the class, seven were bareback and six of us had saddles so they split the class. Fine with me; 13 titans in the ring at the same time sounded crowded. Emma and I went in and did our thing, and came out with the blue ribbon again.

I was just glad we came out the way we went in – with her between me and the ground. 😳 When we had won the bareback class, Duane had called out from the rail, "Take a victory lap!" We only managed a teeny-tiny one, because I was taken by surprise and Emma was committed to leaving the gate with the rest of the competitors. So when we won again I was prepared – I thought. I directed  Emma away from the gate while everyone else left, then the gate was shut and we started around the ring at a trot. Emma got a little excited over being 'abandoned' like that, breaking to the canter and even humping up a bit. That felt like a whole lot of launching power, but we stayed together and she calmed right down when the gate opened so we could leave.

I must say Emma is a lot more forward and energetic than my compromised mustang, and really was a lot of fun to ride. Years (decades) ago when I first started showing dressage, there was a lady in the area who competed on one of Duane's Shires – One Mile Joey (One Mile Shires is Duane's farm name). I've told Duane before I'd consider one of his horses as a dancing partner; now I'm serious. But he'd have to run up a big enough vet bill that I could trade it out – if Rick would let me. 😉

Since then, like with bridles I've done some online horse shopping, but all doors have remained firmly closed. So for now I keep exercising my horse and my riding muscles; use 'em or lose 'em!

When I posted in May, Lance was shedding out his winter hair and itchy.







Of course, Lance is always rather itchy (as evidenced by his rubbed-out mane in various photos).







Now it's late September and he's shedding out his short summer coat, although he still looks fat and sleek.



Just like that, life marches on, with lots of complications and developments in family, farm, neighborhood, and nation. Who knows what our status will be when next I post!