Monday, May 18, 2026
Playing With Ponies
Monday, May 11, 2026
A Deeper Connection
It has been over two weeks since my last post.
Two weeks ago, Sunday, Tumbleweed came in from pasture with a gas colic. That set off three days of fear as I waited and prayed his system would return to normal. Hourly checks. Watered down food and mashes with as much as salt as he would tolerate (per doctor’s orders). And time.
He recovered quickly, but the vet told me it takes about three days for their systems to return to normal, and that proved to be true.
We got back to work slowly and have had several wonderful trail rides. Not surprisingly, the time together bonded us more deeply. He has done his best rides since his colic.
I took him off chasteberry during that waiting period, and I probably won’t put him back on. He’s doing too well to need it.
More time in saddle, and out in the big world meeting people (and donkeys) has made Tweed a budding lead trail horse.
Epona is starting on the trails, and he enjoys leading her. He seems to be taking care of her, in his own way, by being more mature.
Friday, April 24, 2026
Backing Off on Buddy Work
We did more of that buddy sour work today and tried out some new ideas. It didn’t make much of a difference. The fact remains: Tweed doesn’t like his girls leaving him.
He can leave them, work fine in the arena away from them, and work fine away from them when they’re either tied, working, or confined in the round pen. Also, when they’re out of sight long enough, he seems to forget them.
It’s just that walking away business.
Katie asked me, afterward, how much I want to work on that, and I said I think I’m done.
And by that, I mean done obsessing about it and devoting whole lessons.
I’ll continue to work on it myself, as part of a bigger picture. For example, walking away from each other on trail rides, then back together. Or, here at home. But I think I’d rather have Katie continue trail work and exposure.
I think he just needs to mature and get used to horses having “jobs.” Maybe when he sees his mares working, too, he will see that it’s the human’s responsibility to direct their movement, not his.
I am still curious about the chasteberry. We have a couple weeks to go to see if that makes any difference.
In the meantime, it is really fun to ride Tweed while Katie rides Epona. I rode him away from her a lot, and he did great. At one point, I let her ride Epona away from him, and when he even thought about getting emotional, I put him around trees and did circles and figure 8’s through them. It was enough to keep his mind on me. So, I’m thinking LOTS more of that.
Epona is like watching a baby do “first” things. She’s so scared, but then does it and is so proud of herself. She really trusts Tumbleweed and likes to follow him through things. If she sees him do something, she will 8/10 do it, too. That’s already coming in handy for her training.
Tumbleweed has always liked to lead on the trail, and it makes sense, considering how he doesn’t like being left. So, he is really enjoying being the head horse with Epona. They did so well together that we will probably introduce her to a little trail ride next time.
Here’s when I let them get ahead of us and even on the other side of the trailer where he couldn’t see her.
The video stops when I needed both hands to circle him away in trees, but he did well and only got to a 5 on a 1-10 emotional scale.
Teresa was sharing about the different levels of emotional stress in horses and how it is wise to avoid working them in that highly charged state. I think both Katie and I were on the same page that it’s probably best for Tweed to do this work in smaller steps.
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
My Non-Horsey Post
It’s raining today, so I thought it would be a good time to do a non-horsey photo dump post. Except for the photo above where Leah is acting as “bait” for Tweed’s training as I rode her bareback around the park.
We’ve had a schedule change around here and after next week, when Pilot’s dad will be gone all week for work, I will have most Mondays-Saturdays free to ride Tweed during the day. At least until Pilot gets out of school for summer break. But even then, it will be much better than my old schedule of no days off.
My husband is scheduled to have knee replacement surgery May 1st. It will certainly slow him down for awhile, and probably me, too, but hopefully not for too long.
I purchased two different types of chasteberry, one for humans and one specifically pelleted for equines. (Photos above) I don’t think there’s any difference, except in price. Tumbleweed has tolerated eating both, but I started him slowly to make sure he didn’t have an adverse reaction.


















































