Last year I started Tumbleweed back to work on March 26, 2025. This year we are way ahead of that schedule thanks to the early start we got. And, there is no doubt that Katie’s work is moving us along faster.
We started off in the arena, which was good for work on separation anxiety from Leah, and a surprising amount of deer who were fleeing from a very loud work crew clearing trees. (We only found that out because we encountered their trucks and chainsaws out on the trail.)
The deer in the video above walked through the obstacle course, which was our next stop, but it gave us the opportunity to let the horses chase them out.
Katie shared a video from her ride yesterday where they met a coyote and she let Tweed chase it through the woods. It was very cool, and inspired me to do more of the same today, both with the deer and then a man with his dog. We didn’t chase the man and the dog, but I did turn and let Tweed follow them, thinking he was pushing them away.
On the trail, Tweed went through every puddle, and there were lots of them.
Leah was about 50/50 on the puddles, but she is starting to remember her trail manners. It was day 6 of her Equioxx and you can tell a drastic difference.
There was one point, going up a hill, that she got right onto Tweed’s butt and he was able to flip a decent kick at her. After that, she kept a more respectful distance. We were turned towards “home” at that moment and she wanted to run up the hill, so I think she was trying to pressure him to break out of his walk. He put her in her place and did the job I was asking him to do.
We saw lots of deer around the trails, but it was excellent practice for Tumbleweed since the trails we ride are usually full of them and wild turkeys—an occasional moose.
The thing that scared him the most were the chainsaws we came across in the valley. The noise was very loud. You could see the red truck and work crews clearing trees not far off the trail. He did great despite that.
It was just like Katie told me yesterday, he still wanted to rush up and down some hills, but he could be checked, then walk properly. He still prefers to go around a puddle, but if you point him at one, he goes through. That’s all I want and all I require.
In a nutshell, it feels like a have a horse under me, if you know what I mean by that. The foundation is there. Now I just need to continue to build his exposure and confidence and help him to really enjoy the trails.
We are kind of there already because when we returned to the trailer we went past it and back out again and Tweed seemed happy. Leah was not, and that’s why we did it. We don’t want them to think getting back to the trailer is “the end.” I was surprised that Tweed was so willing.
The first trail ride is on the books, and it was a wonderful one.


Tumbleweed did great! Trail horses need to navigate puddles, many times there is no other option forward. Tweed's hard look (and snort) at the rock in the puddle reminded me of my Koda. Who is also unsure about rocks. I wonder what/how they see actually them as? Larger deep trail puddles always made me wonder what lies underneath. They were usually very rutted, and slippery. I probably transferred that thought to Koda, but he walked on anyways. Often after seeing it didn't swallow Nemo/Cierra lol.
ReplyDeleteYou conquered a lot on your first trail ride!!
You do wonder how much we transfer to them. I’m sure it’s a lot! Katie has such a different attitude about everything. She’s like, yippee, let’s go slay the dragons! Tumbleweed loves that attitude. I think, deep down in every horse, there is a desire to be a legitimate badass. 😆 I hope to also borrow some of Katie’s badassery for myself.
DeleteHe encountered that puddle with the rock after we passed the chain saw circus. He was on a bit of high alert. …or I was. 🤔
Those little black tipped ears though!!!
ReplyDeleteHe did great, all his foundation training is shining through.
I wonder how reflection on water plays out for them. It reminds me of the street artists who paint visual "holes" in the streets and people not paying attention to where their feet are going freak out when they see the optical illusion the artist portrayed .
I know! Those ears are too cute!
DeleteHe sure was looking at something in the puddles. Makes me wonder what he sees. At any rate, he went through the mural of shimmering sky and tree, and since he prefers to lead out (or ride out alone) he will need to be solid on all of it. Leah was a hard no on the puddles until she started following him through them. Same went for the uphill climb back home when she wanted to break loose and “git” as you say. Tweed was all business and made sure she was too. Good boy!
This is great. You are going to have a ton of fun with him this year.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I sure hope so.
DeleteA good first ride is like a dream come true, but also a testament to all of the work you've done with Tweed this year.
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DeleteThank you.
DeleteNo doubt about it, a lot has gone into it. He still needs trail miles to build up his confidence, but at least the foundation is there.