I’ve been working with Leah, off and on, alongside Tweed this year with the hope of her being a light trail horse for my husband.
Friday, March 6, 2026
Up To Bat: Leah the Lover Girl
I’ve been working with Leah, off and on, alongside Tweed this year with the hope of her being a light trail horse for my husband.
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Walk and Whoa Leah
Today was another Katie Day, and we decided to stay home and see how he did on the gate backing from last week. Spoiler Alert: he backed right into the arena at first ask. We were like, well, that was uneventful.
He had other issues though. The wind was blowing and he was a bit wound up and herd bound. Katie got to work him through that, but it wasn’t as dramatic as last week. One of his things was stopping and putting his head up, rather than stopping with it down. That was a new one.
I took the opportunity to ride my old trail horse, Leah. I figure a little walking and whoaing, sprinkled with backing, is good exercise for her.
At first, she was excited thinking I was going to put her to work (or who knows what), but when she figured out all I wanted was the walk, she began to drop her head, calm down, and enjoy the ride.
As we were going around and over obstacles, I told her we’re less rock and roll now and more walk and whoa.
She seemed to understand what I meant.
Tweed was so good at the equestrian park Sunday that I figured it would be best to put off having Katie ride him there until he gets shoes on. I prefer that she be doing what I can’t do already. Plus, the work he does at home pushes all the right buttons and that makes him better away, too.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Pay Off
Today was the opening day for the equestrian area, and I wasted no time getting there.
He did all his transitions perfectly and was extremely relaxed and locked on.
I walked him through the obstacles, then saddled up and rode them all.
Again, he was calm and willing. He went over every obstacle I pointed him at
Last year, when Cowgirl passed, I rode through the park and tied bits of her tail hair to trees on our regular route.
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Video: Head Tossing
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Master Class On Head Tossing
Yesterday was Katie Day, so I got an obstacle course set up for her to play with Tweed. In fact, before she arrived Tweed helped me do the work, pushing the barrels with his nose as I pushed with my hands.
We had the barrels, bridges, cones, and flowers and a little further off, a half labyrinth, tires, and poles.
Tweed had some stuff to get out on the line, he did have five days off, after all. But Katie handled it well and soon had him saddled.
They rode the obstacles, backed through the labyrinth both directions, and worked with vertical flexion at walk, trot, and canter.
She had asked me what my goal for her was a few weeks ago, and I said it was to ride him out on our property. He gets bigger when he is out on the grass because it is usually his place to cut loose and relax, not work.
Off they went. First, to the pasture alongside the house, which he did well.
And second, to the back pasture, which resulted in aggressive head tossing, his trick that has unnerved me in the past.
But for Katie, it was all in a day’s work. She asked for vertical flexion, and he said “hell no, I prefer to run away.”


































