A Home for Frank

I have a new man in my life. Frank is stable, supportive, looks good, and smells amazing.

I’m talking, of course, about the Frank Baines Reflex dressage saddle I brought home with me after Wickenburg.

;))))))

I have “joint custody” of Frank to love, coddle, and breathe in the smell of new fine leather…and ride, of course.

The hours in the saddle at Wickenburg showed that Frank is obviously a good fit for Liberty…and the fact I could ride 25 miles (and 6 hours in the saddle) and still be walking that afternoon and the next day showed it worked well for me, too. I hated the idea of it sitting around gathering dust, so I offered to bring it home and keep it in my house where it would be climate controlled…and maybe I could try it on Mimi and use it if it worked?

Guess what? It works.

As Mimi has gotten older, her back has gotten more rock in it, and I’m starting to suspect the Duett might be a little bit too flat for her anymore. So I toted Frank down to the barn a couple weekends ago and plopped it on her back.

I love the point billets on this saddle — they actually align with her girt groove, so the saddle doesn’t slide forward.

She moves really well in it, and I really like how this saddle makes me ride. I can’t “ride lazy” in it — but I don’t have to work to engage my core/inner thigh contact.

IMG_5871

And Saturday was the second ride…and I got a solid 45 minutes of really good work out of her. She’s still doing a little bit of hind end tripping, usually coinciding with a deep spot of sand, which means she’s dragging her feet.

But she keeps willingly offering a canter, which is huge, so I think it’s probably mostly mechanical at this point, and it just means I have to ride her with a little more contact and support. Fortunately, this saddle makes that really easy.

IMG_5921

the face of long-suffering when subjected to my “exploded box of Crayolas” color schemes

The shaggy yak is frantically dumping her coat, and she got the First Shampoo Bath of the Year (always an occasion) this weekend.

IMG_5864

two weekends ago; previous photo in the crossties shows this past weekend’s offerings

And Frank has a new home in my bedroom…which makes me feel like I’m living in a tack room, as I now have two saddles hanging on my bedroom walls. At least all the biothane tack lives out in the garage.

IMG_5925

that’s okay, I don’t actually need space in my bedroom or anything…

Training Nosebands

photo 2 (10)

As in “the noseband is the thing getting trained.”

I love my beta/biothane hackamore nosebands. They’re becoming more and more available as replacements to the rope hackamores that come standard on a lot of s-hackamores, and some of the nicer s-hackamores (like Taylored Tack or Hought) are made with the them as par for the course.

However, there is one thing about them (and it has a lot to do with the number of layers and type of padding) that I find a little bit annoying: they tend to start out more rigid, without much shape to them, and thus will stick out from the side of the horse’s nose at first. Especially the more padding there is.

I have a basic, unpadded Hought biothane noseband on Mimi’s s-hack that is over 10 years old now. It has the top strip of biothane, with a single layer of thin, heavy-duty beta underneath. And it has a very nice curve shape to it.

photo 5 (3)

Of course, that was aided by the fact that Mimi tends to believe in “excessive rein contact”. (aka “she pulls like a crazy freight train”)

photo (69)

way to foster the “all go” endurance horse reputation, pony…

That hackamore noseband shaped very nicely, and in a very short time period. (We’ll discuss my horse’s training and lack of “softness” on trail sometime next never.)

One a horse that is much lighter in the face, the noseband never really gets a chance to shape very much. It’s a small thing, but one of Life’s Minor Annoyances.

10-30-10 010

Noseband exhibit A on Beamer, who was very light in the face and never required hard contact.

Liberty is another one who is light in the face (a relief for my shoulders, that’s for sure) and it would be really nice if she stays that way…but my Type A OCD-ness demands that I do something with my nosebands if the horse insists on being polite and only needing light contact.

photo 1 (11)

The noseband on the left is actually triple-layered (layer of beta that the buckles thread through, layer of thin beta under that, which is the same as Mimi’s purple one and the orange one to the right, but then with another layer of PVC waffle padding under that). Nice and cushy, especially for the sensitive horse, but really tough to get to hold a shape.

But hair elastics and keychains seem to be doing the trick, so they’ll stay this way until the next time I need to use them.

Review: Straight Shot Metal Smashing

I had seen reviews crop up on several friends’ blogs about Straight Shot Metal Smashing, by Beka at The Owls Approve blog. Pretty bridle charms, lightweight aluminum cuff bracelets stamped with a name/phrase/saying and with different colors available to highlight the stamping.

I’m a sucker for pretty, blingy things, and decided to exorcise my post-ride pull-demons with a bit of retail therapy.

The hardest part for me was deciding what exactly I wanted, but I narrowed it down to a couple of bridle charms and a cuff.

Within a day of placing the order, Beka messaged me about one of the charms (the skull) — I had color options on that, and which one would I like? Oooo, sparkly *and* colorful???

I ended up choosing the orange skull charm, and within another day, I received a shipping notification. Wow, talk about fast turnaround and excellent communication!

So I was stalking the postal service site (received a day early, even!) and booked it down to my mailbox as soon as I saw the “delivered to parcel locker” status appear on the tracking number.

photo 1 (10)

pretty packaging! with a bonus skull charm! (going to add a clip to that and turn it into another bridle charm, probably.)

Love the details on the packaging — pretty wrapping, with horse-print tape, and the little bonus skull charm.

And this is what was inside (ugh, blurry phone camera pics):

On the cuff, I had the phrase “horse sense” stamped on it. It has multiple purposes and meanings: 1) I’m pretty sure (most) horses I know have more sense than many people. 2) Our world often doesn’t make sense to horses, so when I’m working with them, it’s a reminder to me to make sure I’m trying to come at that work from a horse’s perspective. 3) Knowledge and theory and learning is valuable…but so is intuitive horse sense.

The orange skull will look great with my orange tack set (and Liberty’s black/white skull-n-crossbones fleece), and the feather…I just love feathers. They go along with my love of birds of prey.

Her prices are really reasonable, with excellent workmanship and attention to detail. (I’ve done some jewelry-making in the past myself, so really appreciate things like smooth jump rings and secure fastenings.) I’m currently wearing the cuff, and will be attaching the charms to my bridles right away…and am already “wish listing” ones I want to order in the future!

Disclaimer: I do reviews based on products and companies that I like. All opinions are my own and I have not received any compensation or benefits for my review. 

 

Play Days

It’s summer in Arizona, which means it’s hibernation season. Other parts of the country may hibernate in the winter due to snow/mud/impossibly frigid temperatures…we’re sort of the opposite in that we ride in the winter, and then lay low in the summer. For the most part. Unless you have active ride goals and plans, and then you spend the summer getting up at 3AM to try to get a couple of hours of riding in before it gets unbearably hot, or you ride at night (still hot), or you trailer up to higher elevations (which are still warm but not quite as brutal).

Right now, I have no active goals, plans, or activities…and the part of me that likes sleep is really enjoying not having to get up quite so early. I’ll do it if I need to, but it better be a very good reason.

So right now is just about relaxing, enjoying barn time as I can get it, and trying to find a balance between heat acclimation (it does make Tevis crewing easier) and hugging my air conditioner.

I got a little lax with hoof trimming for the past few weeks, and she paid me back for it with longer-than-ideal front toes. *sigh* I can always tell, because her boots then don’t fit the way they should (long, low toe leaves a gap at the top of the boot shell). Trimming in triple-digits is always fun,but I’ve taken to standing her in a small pan of water as I’m working on one hoof, and doing a rotation around of “nip wall, trim bars/anything dying to some out of the sole, rasp, mustang roll.” This pony’s hooves still kind of drive me crazy sometimes because there are just so many things about them that are “not ideal,” but that’s one of the trade-offs of not having the power to create an “ideal” living environment for her, so until I’m in a position to be able to do that, it means a lot of proactive hoof management. (That I sometimes get lazy/slack off on and then she rewards me with long toes and higher heels. Owner fail.)

11692595_10105206379465711_4257788906230285591_n

I really don’t get tired of just looking at this pony and spending time with her.

Today was a “good day” in Pony-ville. She actually really likes the warm weather (less-crunchy joints) so she was quite cheerful to have me doing stuff with her today. I also had to miss last weekend’s barn trip due to extra-busyness at home, so I think she may have actually been missing me.

And it was a “let’s mess around with headgear” day…I have a vosal that I’ve had for a number of years that I’ve played around with off and on, but never used on her for competition, mostly because I was never happy with the headstall it was on and that I could never get it adjusted short enough. After eyeballing my tack, I discovered the headstall for her s-hack is sized smaller than the vosal headstall, and that I had more adjustment with it. One swap later, and I was able to seat the noseband higher up on her nose.

Little peahead. My constant refrain when it comes to tack-buying has been “it doesn’t adjust small enough.”

We didn’t ride a ton today (really hot by the time I was done with hooves) but I really like how she worked in it. Super light in the face, which is a Big Deal in Pony-ville. Granted, it was the arena, which is not the most “stimulating” environment for her forwardness…but I liked it enough that I’ll probably keep messing with it. If nothing else, it’s something *different* and she seems to crave difference and change-up, even just in gear.

1908013_10105206379470701_2106283408293509703_n

In a photogenic mood today and showing off for her new boyfriend. Someone please tell the 22-year-old mare that she’s too old to be that flirtatious?

And after riding, she got a full bath. Up to this point, she’s just gotten water-only spray-offs, but today was a full soap bath. “Yellowtail” is a type of fish, not a proper pony color designation. Plus her hind legs were all nasty and peed-upon from her aforementioned flirtations. And the flies and mosquitoes are out, so she’s itchy. And it was triple-digit temperatures. All good reasons for a thorough scrub-down.

I judge the temperature levels by her willingness to get her head wet — normally she really hates water on her face and it’s a wrestling match to try to get her face as white as her body.

Today, she stuck her head under the hose running at full blast and let me scrub her face and rinse it. Without me even holding her head down to a reachable level.

11246975_10105206379460721_2848260255614152626_n

I have to say, she does look good for 22-years-old. Maybe a slight dip in her previously tabletop-flat back, and she has a *different* look to her face (more mature?)…but I’m very pleased with how she looks right now. Not fighting trim, but still reasonably fit.

And finally, she got a fly sheet today. The next-door neighbors at the barn train bucking bulls for rodeos, so there are a lot of cattle on the premises…which tend to attract more flies, no matter how good the barn protocol is for stall cleanup and maintenance (and it’s very good). The barn owner is apologetic, but there’s really nothing she can do about it — the downside of an area that has properties in somewhat close proximity to one another — but she’s willing to fly spray/fly mask/fly sheet all the horses as long as we provide the materials.

So one online visit to Riding Warehouse later, I found a flysheet that met my criteria of: belly band, neck cover (for mane protection — she sticks her head through the stall bars to get at her neighbor’s hay and has rubbed the middle section of her already-pathetic mane out), Euro cut, and not completely bank-breaking, since she has a history of being hard on sheets/blankets, and while I’m under no delusions that one will have a long, happy, snag-free existence, I would at least like to not cry when she does inevitably destroy it.

I ended up with the Saxon Softmesh Combo Fly Sheet. I will say the mesh isn’t quite as soft as they make it out to be…but good enough. And I’m guessing wear/dirt/washing will soften it up as well.

11665769_10105206380568501_9026019042690230437_n

Unimpressed mare is unimpressed by the new addition. The look was definitely a “Really? Are you seriously going to make me wear this?” She should be grateful I haven’t gone off the deep end and gotten leg wraps as well.

11058695_10105206379480681_3819690293170896020_n

Spotty pony! Her spots have gotten crazy — and you only see it when she’s wet, when her dark skin shows up through the wet hair. Sometimes you can kind of see it this time of year when she’s in her summer-bald coat. But she’s got a crazy Appaloosa blanket color pattern…had she not greyed out, she would have been a flaxen chestnut with the frosted blanket.But as striking as that would have been, I absolutely prefer her as a grey. It suits her. And makes her look even more like the little Arab she tries to be.

Another weekend gone, another week approaches. Monsoon season is starting, with a major dust storm last night and a minor one threatening this evening. Monsoon rain in the forecast…it’s just gotta cool off enough to not evaporate the rain out of the clouds. Summer plans on the horizon, some horsey (Tevis crewing, again) and some not (camping trips). Stay cool, pop electrolytes, and hug an air conditioner!

Functional Pony Roulette

IMG_4176Part of having an older horse pony is management…and part of management is recognizing they have good days and bad days in terms of how “functional” they are.

From a “normal” perspective, Mimi is still very functional. But my perspective is a bit skewed, coming from the angle of a high-demand performance sport…so I’ve had to learn to readjust my settings to better align with what she is capable of offering me at this time.

It’s a bit of a roulette game in that I’m never quite sure on any given day what her level of function will be. Since I’m pretty sure what I’m dealing with is a creaky/crunchy/arthritis/aging joints scenario, “function” or lack thereof generally relates to how she’s moving, and her general outlook on life, and I have to go down to the barn ready to either move forward with potential plans for activity, or be willing to alter/cancel those plans at the last minute is she’s just not feeling it that day.

IMG_4172

“Trails” around the barn, such are they are. At least it’s open space and (mostly, sans some gopher holes) good footing.

Fortunately, as the weather gets warmer, the happier she is, and a 10-minute loose-rein walking warm-up goes a long way towards better performance as well.

Yesterday was a good day, so after an arena warm up, we headed out around the barn neighborhood…not my favorite compared to real trails, but better than nothing endless arena circles.

She’s always very “up” in a urban/semi-urban setting, despite having lived in some kind of a more-urban-than-rural setting for the past 18-1/2 years. Some of that is probably me — we had some “incidents” fairly early on, including a spin-n-bolt parting of the ways that resulted in me splatting and road rash sliding on pavement at a young-and-impressionable enough age that I’m pretty sure I’m still subconsciously cringing.

Yes, I can handle narrow, drop-off, cliffy trails way better than I can handle a stroll around the urban neighborhood. Judge at will.

But honestly? Most Arabs don’t have anything on this pony in terms of “up”ness, reactivity, and the power to pull a fast one.

And yet I still adore this pony. She makes me a better rider, even now, and I have to actively ride her shenanigans and manage the zoom-brain. (There’s a reason she’s the original Go Pony.)

 

IMG_4165

In a very cheerful, “let’s do something!” mood.

I also finally managed to make the English hackamore I’ve had laying around here for ages work properly. In the past, I always issues with the shanks sitting up too high (to the front of her face, not height in relation to length of the face), thus bringing the headstall cheekpieces way too close to her eyes. So I pulled off the traditional fleece-padded leather noseband that comes standard on many of these types of hackamores and replaced it with one of my longer and lower-profile beta nosebands.

And it worked. I was finally able to position the hackamore in a way that was functional and not too close to her eyes.

Why mess around with another headstall?

Because I can. :) I love messing around with different bits/hackamores/headstalls/etc, just to see how they all work, and the different effects of each one. This style of hackamore is very mild in terms of leverage and severity; and I know I definitely had “less” brakes with this set-up on this particular horse than her standard s-hackamore or a bit. Probably good I never got it rigged up for an actual ride, but for yesterday’s purpose — a ride that requires some pretty good contact and “hold” at points — it worked quite well, as she was not in a frame of mind to be allowed too much loose rein, but I didn’t have to feel to bad about hanging on her mouth or exerting too much pressure on her.

(Will also likely be a good introduction to bitless riding for future young horses without quite as many/as strong pressure points as the s-hack.)

It’s also an environment that encourages very good control of your horse — despite it being a residential area, people zip by really fast, and there’s some real redneck-in-the-worst-sense-of-the-word behavior, especially when it comes to driving…not at all uncommon for people to speed up, rev engines, or squeal tires. So you might call it defensive riding, but there’s not a ton of leeway there to be able to handle overreactive spooks or antics.

IMG_4175

Scratch those itches!

Fortunately for us, the idiots were not out in force, so I only had to give the stink-eye to a couple of people that went zooming by, and the pony’s only major indiscretion of the whole time was to forget herself in her “want to trot” quest and trip on a pavement-to-dirt transition, for which she was spoken sharply to and then made to walk as punishment. The horrors.

IMG_4177

Vacant property was housing a hawk — we stopped to watch him for a few moments, and he was holding some kind of prey (gopher, looked like) when he took off.

IMG_4178

“Open space. Can I GOOOOOOO???”
(No, you may not, since cars like to zip by at way-over-the-speed-limit on the [residential] road next to us.)

And then once we were done, she got a nice bath, as it is officially summer here in the Valley of the Sun. Really can’t complain, though, as we were fortunate enough to have an unseasonably-pleasant May. And hot weather just means the inevitable overspray from horse bathing feels really good. All told, we did about 4 miles, which, for both of our fitness levels, was good enough.

IMG_4180

And so summer (and heat conditioning) begins.