Tuesday, June 24, 2025
First Trail Ride with Leah
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Two Years Later: Thank You
On the two year anniversary of “the day our life changed,” I choose to celebrate the wins. There are so many miracles and “wins” that I will only cover a few, but just know that despite the adversities, we have been blessed beyond what we deserve.
1. I’m alive! We’re all alive! That might seem an easy accomplishment, but it really isn’t. I’m so thankful we’re all alive! And, as an addendum, my body is healed up, too. Yay!
2. Though my time with Tumbleweed became rarer, and my mind was in survival mode, I didn’t give up. I reached out for help, and we kept growing together. Now we are ready to fly.
Sometimes in life we might be forced to take *seemingly small steps, just never stop taking steps. “The journey of a thousand miles…”
Monday, June 9, 2025
Another Fun Lesson
Today is expected to be in the 90’s, maybe even 100, so I met Regina early for a lesson at the park. We will both be busy for the next two weeks, and won’t be able to meet again until after that, but I will have several opportunities to work with Tweed while our grandkids visit and get their horse fixes.
Because of my broken toe and back issue, I have been happy to make up for lost time in saddle, especially rebuilding my core strength. I continue to take flute lessons and had my online recital yesterday, (Sunday.) It is amazing to me how important core strength is in producing clear tones and sustained breath. A strong core is essential to so many things in life.
Back to today’s lesson.
The equestrian area hosted an obstacle clinic last weekend and there were still some wet spots where they had water obstacles. The variations of shade versus light, and wet versus dry, made a great spot to work Tweed.
Here’s how things went down today, in order:
1. No groundwork. Tweed was relaxed right out of the trailer, so I tacked up and mounted.
2. I chose spots on the fence to ride towards, and after 3 strides, would ask for another direction and another and another. Eventually, I rode more strides, but if I lost his attention, I’d choose another spot and immediately turn him.
3. He did very well, but no surprise, he lost a little of his attention around Leah—so after awhile we rode circles around her. I used one rein, and brought it up for vertical flexion when he sped up, slowed down, or looked around to spot trouble. I was controlling his body through space and time. Taking the reins, and giving them back fast when he softened.
4. The dark, wet patch caught Tweed’s eye. The time in which it would take a horse to process that change in footing, however, was not consistent with maintaining our trot through space and time. Of course, he’d have liked to have stopped and looked at it, but that’s not always practical on the trail. They need to trust us and Regina wants that level of acceptance in our work.
5. Regina told me to maintain the trot & collection, point him toward the dark patch, and sit my butt way back in the saddle. If he moved around it, don’t make a big deal, just turn him back towards it and go the other way. When I turned him, she asked that I sit even further back, like going down a hill on a trail ride. Really free him up to turn. Back and forth. Up and down. Maintain speed. No slowing down. No speeding up. It didn’t take long at all before Tweed was treating that patch like any other part of the arena. (Regina commented that it would be good to do the same thing through certain water patches we will find on the trails.)
6. At that point, Regina had me stop and rest him in the wet spot. He almost cocked a leg and relaxed, but then he got that ornery look and started pawing. Regina said he was preparing to roll, so go back to trotting along the fence line, then try again. The second time he rested and cocked a leg.
7. At the end of our hour, we practiced work to rest transitions, because sometimes you have to stop and wait on the trail. We rested away from Leah who, by that point, he wanted nothing to do with. He figured out Leah means work, and he wanted to be far away from her. But if he reacted to the outside environment while he was supposed to be resting, we went back to work on transitions and eventually came back to rest.
It was another fun morning with my boy that ended on a positive note. He is getting it big time. No groundwork needed and very little correction, just consistency in directing his body and speed. Regina said though, that the beginning exercise, choosing a spot to ride to, vertical flexion and releases, for a few strides, was actually much like the groundwork exercise of having him move out a little and then face up. It was engaging his brain in the same way.
That will be our last lesson for awhile, but we will have some great training opportunities around here in the meantime.
Sunday, June 8, 2025
Trying to Save the Unsavable
There are two plants that I am trying to save, the orchid given to my mom in March 2022, when my dad died (she left it here at my house), and an azalea my daughter brought with her after her heartbreaking divorce, in December 2023, when we sold her home.
First, the orchid.
Full confession: I am a killer of orchids. Having received many as gifts from friends, I never found out how to keep them alive. They come in small plastic pots, perhaps, a little moss shoved into them, but that’s it.
When my dad’s orchid started to die, and it took a year for that to happen, I went to the internet to find out what I was doing wrong.
Turns out, the sitting water was rotting the roots of the orchid. I purchased an orchid pot, replanted it into mostly moss, watered it once a week, pouring off the excess water, and prayed it would survive. It has been over a year, and so far it is still alive, and I see NEW growth. Yay!
The azalea wintered in the garage, occasionally got watered, and flourished. It clearly had a will to live, despite the neglect.
In spring 2024, I planted it into my barn garden. It survived, but didn’t thrive. Winter came and almost killed it.
Almost.
As you can see, there is still a little green. And where there is green, there is a possibility of life.
It is at the barn garden, but now back in a pot, and if it survives summer, I’ll overwinter it inside. (Because I am determined to hand it to my daughter one day, ALIVE and thriving, when she is healed enough to move out, and on).
So, say a little prayer for saving the seemingly unsavable souls we are given.
Life has no shortage of such beautiful things.
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Peonies
This morning the green fists of the peonies are getting ready
to break my heart
as the sun rises,
as the sun strokes them with his old, buttery fingers
and they open–
pools of lace,
white and pink–
and all day the black ants climb over them,
into the curls,
craving the sweet sap,
taking it away
to their dark, underground cities–
and all day
under the shifty wind,
as in a dance to the great wedding,
the flowers bend their bright bodies,
and tip their fragrance to the air,
and rise,
their red stems holding
all that dampness and recklessness
gladly and lightly,
and there it is again–
beauty the brave, the exemplary,
Do you love this world?
Do you cherish your humble and silky life?
Do you adore the green grass, with its terror beneath?Do you also hurry, half-dressed and barefoot, into the garden,
and softly,
and exclaiming of their dearness,
fill your arms with the white and pink flowers,
their eagerness
to be wild and perfect for a moment, before they are
nothing, forever?
Mary Oliver
