Antietam Battlefield Ride

I had the horse trailer hooked up and loaded by the time Mark got home from work. We grabbed the horses and a chilled bottle of Monavie and headed down the road to meet Scott and Noel at the Antietam battlefield for an afternoon trail ride.

I brought Lucy. We believe so firmly in building a solid foundation in our horses through a variety of cross-training. Even though this phenomenal Thoroughbred mare has the mind, talent and movement for the show hunter arena, she needs to be a horse first and foremost. I looked forward to seeing how she would handle the traffic, pedestrians, and ever-present monuments, placards and cannons around the battlefield.

What an amazing trail ride! The reality of the bloodiest battle of the civil war entwined with the sun-soaked afternoon and the joy of riding wonderful horses with great friends. The horses were champs. Lucy soaked in all the new sights like a sponge. She has such an incredible mind!

We explored a corner of Antietam we’d never seen. The wide, well-kept verges welcomed long, fitness-building trots. Dolly the Belgian even gave Mark his first triumphant steps of canter! Our loop covered paved roads, grassy verges and mown paths. The battlefield monuments provided plenty of fodder for creative training challenges.

The four humans joined in a refreshing Monavie toast as the sun set and horses happily munched hay. That Lucy just impresses me more and more all the time!

Thanks, Scott, for this great shot of Mark, Dolly, Lucy and I!

Trail Ride at Antietam Battlefield

Posted in Dolly, Horse Training Philosophy, Lucy, Monavie, Natural Horsemanship, Natural Trainer On The Road!, trail riding | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Journey to Revel Grove Joust

The usual suspects traveled eastward to Revel Grove for the MD Renaissance Festival.   The spirit of merriment and adventure conquered the blistering heat.  We ran into old friends, swooned over exotic goods, and sampled delicious food and drink.  The highlight, as ever, were the jousts.

The opening ceremonies for the noon joust:

 

Enjoy the full Galleries of the noon joust here and the evening joust here

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Useful Equine Sites

Check back often as we add to our own directory of useful links

Equine Now

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Horse Training Tale of Threes

Today’s horse training success story came in a trilogy.  No small wonder, God kinda favors threes 🙂

Got the kind of call midday every trainer dreams of: “you probably don’t remember me but…”  “Of COURSE I remember you, you’re Cassidy’s dad!”  Cassidy was our first student when we incorporated KinderRide into our lesson program:  offering horseback riding instruction to the 2-4 year olds as a preamble to our “big kid’s” program.  Cassidy progressed on through the Big Kid program until we sold the farm and went our disparate ways.  Cassidy’s dad tracked us down via Google.  Turned out Cassidy had just won the National Junior Morgan Dressage Championship.  And it turns out that my mom, who was Cassidy’s first leadline instructor, was visitiing and out on the tractor at that very moment.  Congratulations Cassidy!  All the best of luck at World’s this fall!

Part two:  a typo in the Valley Trader had us calling on a 4 month old colt.  Turns out he is the son of a mare I fell in love with while training many years ago on a Friesian farm in VA. I’m still under the spell of that electric shock.  More to follow….

Last and most….  They say to find the answer you need to ask a question three times.  Long after Mom and I should have gone to sleep I was pestering her with questions.  We were talking about the Thoroughbred Rescue Foundation, a charity near and dear to both of our hearts. We’ve both volunteered time and skills.  Mom was multi day a week regular for several years.

It came out that several years ago she had fallen in love with Lake, whom everyone claimed was incorrigable, yet he pressed his face deep against her belly for comfort in the face of vets and chiropracters and Things That Go Bump In The Night. Shortly after that, he had been returned to the prison sytem, because no-one wanted to adopt him.  “Mom,”  I told her, “if you love him, find him! We’ll bring him home”

She went to sleep, I hopped in the shower.  A while later she showed up with the look of a kid at Christmas.  “Did you mean it? I’m gonna look for him, I’m gonna find him!”

And when you do, he’s gonna have a happily ever after home in Almost Heaven….

Posted in Balanced Seat Riding, Dressage... Naturally!, Horses and Life | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Southern States’ Amazing Response

Incredibly, after Saturday’s devastating fire, the Ranson/ Charles Town Southern States has mobilized to open on Monday without skipping a beat.  From what I understand, they will be selling feed out of tractor trailers.  Farm delivery will continue as normal.

Thank you Southern States!  Your commitment to all of us who depend on you is extraordinary!

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Fire at Southern States Feed Co-Op

The leading edge of the storm raged violently enough to wake us around 3:30 am. The sky glowed like daybreak and thunder rumbled and crashed continuously. We marveled at the window as the storm grew more powerful. We had no idea that at that moment, our feed store burned. The Southern States Feed Co-Op had been struck by lightning.

We drove by today. The cinder-block exterior appeared deceptively untouched. Apparently, behind the now-boarded up windows, the store and warehouse had been gutted. All we knew was what the marquis told us: Closed Due to Fire.

Nothing more. No further details on the damage, nor reassurance that no-one was hurt. No hint as to a reopening date. No “we have arranged for your feed delivery to be covered.” And what of that feed delivery, which appears faithfully every Tuesday? What of our 29 horses, who line up just as faithfully along the fence at feeding time?

This may seem off topic on a horse training blog. However, horse people know that what happens in training sessions is inseparably entwined wiith the fabric of our daily lives.

Despite the influx of commuting Washingtonians, our area clings to its rural roots. Horse farms, cow farms, crop farms and the local racetrack rely on Southern States to nourish and care for our land, our animals, our businesses and our families. What does this fire mean for the community? The more we think about it, the more we realize the vital importance of that one store. The ripple effect reaches far.

We’ve no doubt that the community will pour its resources into rebuilding the co-op, just as we know the co-op will mobilize quickly to provide for the community. During this time our thoughts and prayers are with everyone affected by the fire, from the owners and employees to farmers finding feed for hungry horses.

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Equestrian Top 10 “Bucket List”

This morning, The Irish Independent ran an Equestrian Top 10 List of things to do before you die.  The columnist was inspired by the recent Hollywood blockbuster, The Bucket List, starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman as two terminally ill cancer patients working their way through their own “before-we-kick-the-bucket” lists.

  1. Go to Badminton Horse Trials
  2. Ride Side-saddle
  3. Play Polo
  4. Drive a horse-drawn carriage
  5. Attend a rodeo
  6. Go to Aintree
  7. Attend a horse fair
  8. Go on an equestrian safari
  9. Watch a puissance class
  10. Swim with your horse

Check out the complete article here.

What’s on YOUR bucket list?

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Horse Video Rental Discovery

I just found this great site that rents horse videos. They have a ton of stuff I would love to see, but buying them all would break the bank. A perfect solution? I think we’ve found it!

Great selection of natural horsemanship videos, too. You name the clinician, they got ’em: Clinton Anderson, Buck Brannaman, Craig Cameron, Chris Cox, Ed Dabney, Andrea Fappani, Tommy Garland, Gawani Pony Boy, Julie Goodnight, Cherry Hill, Ray Hunt, Linda Tellington Jones, John Lyons/Josh Lyons, Dr Robert Miller, Lynn Palm, Pat and Linda Parelli, Curt Pate, Mark Rashid, Kerry Ridgway, Karen Scholl, Sally Swift, Anna Twinney, Stacy Westfall and Charles Wilhelm.

Check it out! Your Horse Matters

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Natural Horsemanship Spoof

Now, we know that natural horsemanship is based on common sense. Clinicians out there who claim their own Mysterious Mustang Mojo or promote their expensive, instant fix wunderproducts give natural horse training methods a bad rap. We found this hilarious spoof on just such a “trainer.”

Enjoy!

 

 

Posted in Just For Fun, Natural Horsemanship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Gift From A Horse

Like any young horse in training, Wally the Warmblood has his good days. He has his not-so-good days and he has those frustrating, tear-out-your-hair days when he seems to forget how to put one foot in front of the other, much less do so with suppleness, impulsion and cheerful submission.

Today was like no other. It had been a knock-down drag-out day full of time-consuming roadblocks and way too many balls in the air. And that was just in the office! Wally was the last horse of the evening after working through a particularly tough trailer loading session with a two year-old.

Wally was matter-of-fact from the get-go. Quiet brilliance. Stood like a rock while I mounted. Warm-up. Focus. Turn on the forehand– rhythmic and accurate. Turn on the haunches–ditto. Up into a round, light trot, every step a lesson in newly-developed power controlled not by the rider’s seat or legs or bit but by the horse’s own understanding and desire. Canter balanced, regular, even on that troublesome lead. All the movements and principles we’ve been developing coming together in a moment almost outside time.

Nothing left but to ride out to join the sunset in the spring blooming woods with deep gratitude for the gifts our horses give us.

Posted in Balanced Seat Riding, Centered Riding tm, Dressage... Naturally!, Horses and Life, Inner Natural Horsemanship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment