Monday, March 23, 2026

Year of the, Weekend of the, Road to the, Horse


My Weekend of the Horse, in the Year of the Horse, consisted of watching Road to the Horse, a vet appointment, and two days at the park with the loves of my life, Tweed, Leah, and my husband. 


Hard to explain how happy it makes me to see my husband with Leah. Our vet assessed her arthritis to be in her hocks, stifle, and hips. He agreed that movement is good for her, and suggested daily Equioxx, Cosequin ASU, and possibly the subcutaneous injection of Renovo. (We’re researching it now, but it looks promising for exactly her issues.)


My husband has knee surgery in May, but he should be able to get Leah back to light work all through April. I can then ride along with Katie on her, too, when Katie rides Tweed. 


An interesting thing happened last night on our ride, Tweed attracted another mare. It is the third time this has happened. The first one reared up on her owner and snatched the rope away, then ran across the park as fast as she could to Tumbleweed. The second was a mare on a trail ride who refused to leave Tumbleweed as they were passing going the opposite direction. The one last night was a little Arab who broke free of her owner and came running to him. I dismounted, grabbed her rope, and waited for her very apologetic owner. 

For the record, Tumbleweed never does anything to encourage it, nor does he look surprised when they lock onto him. 


It is wildflower season again. 


I enjoyed watching Road to the Horse, which I got into because Ryan Rose (one of my favorite horsemen) was a contestant. 

The two lady contestants were new to me, wildcard champion, Tiffany McLaury, and eventer, Elisa Wallace. I noticed they talked to, and touched, their horses more often, and their horses responded well to it.  Tiffany was more traditional western and Elisa was English / bareback / freestyle / jumper / at liberty/ emotional connection, which defies category. Both did awesome. 

Elisa’s methods were unusual and surprising, but when it came down to it, exactly what I have been writing about the last few months put into practice. She brings a joyful spirit of fun to her work and she strives for real, emotional connection. She was like a heat seeking missile toward connection, and she went from dead last to World Reserve Champion (2nd place) because when it came to the obstacles (the true test), her horse trusted her to do every single one of them and still had 8 minutes leftover. 

On her rail work she got spun or bucked off due to the premature clapping of the audience, but she got right back up and finished stronger than anyone imagined possible. She never stopped believing in her horse or what they’d formed together. 

She was very emotional after it all, and ended up buying her horse, Wendy/Windy, and taking her home with her. It will be fun to follow their journey. I wish every contestant also took the horse home so we could see what it looks like to build that relationship in a normal setting. 

You can still watch Road to the Horse, at the links I shared in the previous post, and see Elisa’s methods from Day one (start) to Day three (competition). 

All four competitors had very different methods, and I’m sure, given more time and less stress, they’d get the same good results. But when it came down to it, I really felt that connection and trust trumped everything else. The extent to which they got that, early on, determined everything else. Nick Dowers got it, too, and he ended up winning it for the 3rd time. He used his saddle horse to help get her trust early on. That was a bit messy the first day, but paid off on day 2 and 3. The first time he loped his mare, Precious Teapot, was in the competition.  He was more interested in getting the “feel” right between them.

The takeaways. Go out and have fun with your horses. Play with them. Get to know them. It should always be about working with, and rewarding, their natural curious spirits. Honor them for the gift they are and their supernatural ability to bond with their humans. Above all else, embrace that childlike joy. 


Permission to be silly!







12 comments:

  1. Elisa is one of my very favorite horsewomen. She's a huge Mustang advocate, and has had a Breyer horse made after her Mustang Hwin, due to their success transitioning from Mustang Magic to world class eventers. Watching Elisa with her horses is amazing. I just love her timing and feel with them. I have a local trainer, Jessica, who trains in a very similar manner, and who has competed in several Mustang Makeovers (and who has put the basic training on all three of our horses).

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    1. How interesting! So you know more about her than I do. She brought her mustang to her clinic at Road to the Horse. You can see that, too, at the link. All the contestants also did clinics. I’m following Elisa now and excited to see her journey with Windy. You know, they get to choose their horses, and Windy chose Elisa as much as she chose Windy. You could tell those two were playing for keeps. Very cool about your trainer! Your horses must love having fun!

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  2. Too funny about Tweed being a chick magnet! Channeling his inner Beamer!
    I watched the Wild Card round on You Tube and am going to watch the main part this week. Was busy with company all weekebd

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    1. It’s so fun to watch. Even my husband got into it. We had to watch it at the end of the day and pray no one posted the results before we could see it unfold.

      Yeah, I pointed out that Tweed was attracting mates last year, then first thing this year, here comes a mare running to us dragging her lead rope. I told my husband, bet it’s a mare. It was.

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    2. Mares, not mates. 😆 although, they do want to mate.

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  3. Your horses expressions on the ball bouncing video, haa ha "what is our human doing?!" Cute!

    Hoping to check out the Mustang video's. Different level, but I really enjoyed following our local MWHF Mustang Challenge back in the day. One of the competitors I was following closely through the training process, is the reason I started Blogging.

    Koda and Padame have both tried Renovo shots. It didn't do much for Koda, but I think it has worked okay for Padame so far. The referred vet shared the shot works like a miracle on some horses and others not so much. Like everything. Truly hope it wonders for Leah!

    Wow. Those trail horses had some strong reactions/feelings towards Tumbleweed. Not much you can do about other people's horses.

    Beautiful Wildflower! Brad just noticed today that my early Crocus are blooming. I am heading outside to take a peak at the welcome color!

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    1. We haven’t decided whether we’re going to try the Renovo. Our vet told us the same thing, works for some, not all. We’re going to give the equioxx some time first. She is already moving better. Thank you for sharing your experience with it.

      Yes, Tweed is a mare magnet. I’ve never had a gelding draw them in like this. So crazy. I just need to get better at catching them while staying mounted. You never know what a loose horse will do or how it will affect your own.

      Very cool about the Mustang challenge. Who was the competitor that inspired you?

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    2. A gal from Northern WI, Deb (Soderbeck, last name has since changed). She had recently lost her father, named and trained her first mustang MJ's Legacy in his honor.

      My daughter and I used to take riding lessons from another competitor. The challenge was held way back in 2009. First one was popular. Trainers were mostly from WI, and a few surrounding States.

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  4. I love that you got to spend time with your favorite person and horses. :) What joy!
    And I'm also an Elisa Wallace fan. Her ability to connect with and bring the best out of horses is inspiring.

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    1. She has such a positive attitude. First day, I didn’t know what to think of it, but I told my husband the evidence would be the obstacle course, and it was there that they shined. The trust and try was beautiful to see. ❤️

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  5. That is neat about the road to the horse. I used to feel that they were overwhelming for the horse. I like the new direction. I’m also a big fan of Ryan Rose. Tweed is just very attractive and clearly a magnet.

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    1. That’s the first time I had seen it, and, quite honestly, I did think it’s too much, too fast. I was trying to make sense of it all and what it proves (or doesn’t). Ultimately, I found it inspiring to see the connection and trust that can be achieved, even in such a small amount of time.

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