Wednesday, August 27, 2025
On the Road Again
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
August: The “Thick Paw of My Life”
August
When the blackberries hang
swollen in the woods, in the brambles
nobody owns, I spend
all day among the high
branches, reaching
my ripped arms, thinking
of nothing, cramming
the black honey of summer
into my mouth; all day my body
accepts what it is. In the dark
creeks that run by there is
this thick paw of my life darting among
the black bells, the leaves; there is
this happy tongue. (Mary Oliver)
Saturday, August 23, 2025
Fly Away Little Birdies
I don’t have babysitting duty Monday, although there is a heat warning in effect of 100 degrees. My hope is to get up early and do a solo ride before the heat sets in.
Once this heat wave passes, we should be out of the woods and ready for lots of beautiful fall rides.
Friday, August 8, 2025
Re-Creating the Conditions
If you’re following along with my latest posts about first trail rides, on our last ride Tweed lost his attention at the equestrian camp ground and hill past it. From now on, my lessons with Regina will be covering what bubbles up on those rides, so we met at that same campground and re-created the scenarios.
As I parked across from the campground and saddled up, Tweed was agitated and wanted to eat grass (distraction), but after Regina arrived, we warmed up in the meadow doing those basic attention exercises—as soon as he lost focus on the circle I turned him in towards me—at walk and trot. The ground was uneven, so he had to pay attention to his balance.
We then moved to a hill and did the same thing. Tweed was agitated at the trot because it required that he give it 💯 of his attention, which he wanted to divide between me and a big group of horses heading out. He didn’t do anything big, but I’m glad I wasn’t riding it.
When we had him relaxed at the trot in a circle on the hill, I bridled him and we went back to the hill to do the same work in saddle.
Key points:
Going downhill I was to hold my hands very low, working length reins, and give him freedom to move, mostly using my legs to guide him.
Going uphill, I posted the trot because he wanted to either walk or lope, and my hands were still working length, low, but I was to give him his head and only check his speed with my body and the demands of the hill.
When we had that going well, we went a bit further out to another hill and worked on descending in vertical lines. For that, I did need to ask for direction with the rein aid, but the goal was to use inside leg and push his hind quarters over with a steady working length rein.
Something in the meadow had him on high alert, and then that big group of riders came by at a distance. Regina just had me stick to it—trust the process—and he mellowed out.
We rode back to the trailer over the same hills, which he did very well, then ended it on a positive note.
I was really happy that all the same things that happened on the trail also happened in today’s lesson and Regina gave me tools to work through them. We’re going to do the same work the next time we meet until he is rock solid.
I am so lucky to have a trainer willing to meet us—literally—where we’re at!
Thursday, August 7, 2025
Fear of Riding the Trails
I have a ride coming up next week with a woman who takes lessons from my same trainer and is a seasoned and accomplished horsewoman. Her horse, from everything I’ve seen, is a pretty solid guy.
The issue is that in her later life she has developed a bit of a phobia of riding the trails. It’s partially due to silly things other people have done on rides and / or the difficulty in finding someone to ride with that is willing to do whatever it takes to make it successful. It is also, like in my case, a new trail horse for her, thus a new adventure.
Whether or not it materializes is yet to be seen, but I assured her I would help it be successful. It can be short and sweet or whatever she wants it to be. I even told her I have no issue getting off and walking them, if she feels the need. In fact, I often dismount in unpredictable places so that Tumbleweed never associates the trailer with the end of a ride.
We’re going to meet with our trainer beforehand and do some work together in a more contained environment, then head out.
I share her concerns, so fully get where she is coming from. I’ve been on rides with people who did dangerous things and it’s not fun.
I am the boring stickler: don’t run them up hills or back to the trailer and, honestly, don’t do anything that the whole group isn’t comfortable with first. I don’t like to see people “let big things go,” as it is often a precursor to their horse getting naughtier. At the same time, I don’t like to tell people how to handle their own horses. It’s a conundrum that comes with riding out in groups.
What are your own experiences and thoughts about this topic?