Barn Rule Number I’ve-Lost-Count

No changing out the curb chain on kimberwick bits.  Ever.

A few years ago, I got the bright idea of swapping out the curb chain on the kimberwick I was using for a beta-ended, Western-style curb chain, the theory being that I wouldn’t have to undo it all the time.

Great in theory…doesn’t work for Princess Pea-Head in practice, since I only recently figured out I couldn’t actually get the curb chain properly tight enough under her cute lil’ muzzle.

How long have you been riding?!?

If you’ve ever tried to remove a curb chain, you know that wrenching apart the J-hooks with pliers twists them out of shape and renders them really hard to use in the future.

But did you also know there’s a certain way to put new ones on?  As in, there’s a right one and a left one, and when hung right, won’t poke the horse’s jaw with the open ends of the hooks?

I learned these things this afternoon.

This curb chain is never leaving this bit again.

The Hardest Part of Shopping…

…is knowing where to go.

Part of the fun of endurance for me is all the stuff that it can entail.  My motto is, “If you can’t ride fast, ride pretty.”

I think this picture makes my point:

Note all the coordinating purple and gold and wild tights (from Evelyn).
Although my shopping is down to pretty much a bare minimum now (not much I actually need anymore), I still end up picking up to occasional replacement piece…stuff does wear out over time.
But it’s really hard to decide where to shop.  I’ve had the pleasure of having very, very positive encounters with all of the endurance vendors I’ve ever done business with.  I’d go back to every single one of them…and many of them, I have.  You can see the “Recommended Gear and Vendors” tab at the top of the page for a more detailed write-up of some of my favorites.
But yesterday, Action Rider Tack got a double thumbs-up from me.  I love browsing their webpage…they tend to stock stuff no one else does, and I’m pretty much insatiably curious about what’s out there, even if it’s stuff I don’t use or need.
After about an hour of browsing, I finally placed my order (proper sharpener for my loop hoof knife, if anyone’s curious).  Less than an hour after placing it, I received a notification that my package was shipping out, along with a fabulous, creative customer service email from the ladies at ART, thanking me for my order.
Now that’s fast turnaround!  Definitely impressed me, and I’m sure I’ll be placing future orders there.  
I have to spread out where I order things, since I like/am friends with quite a few of the vendors out there.  It helps when a specific product is only carried by one vendor.  
But I love good customer service.  I’ve been raised in a small-business environment where I’ve watched my parents go out of their way to provide their clients excellent customer service in both the carpet cleaning business and memory art business.  During high school/college, I working in a shipping/mailbox center that emphasized cheerful, helpful customer service.  That has continued to be the case now in working at Renegade.  
So I’ve pretty much had a lifetime of providing customer service or seeing what good customer service looks like (and bad…I’m looking at you, ASU and Gateway CC…good customer service obviously isn’t part of the college make-up), so when I’m on the receiving end of it, it feels really good to know that plenty of other people out there also care.

Just when I’ve got things figured out…

You would think, after 15 years together, I’d have my pony figured out.

Except not.

I’ve written in the past about just how dead-set she is against bits.  Have yet to find one she really likes, blah-blah-blah, she goes best in her s-hack, so on and so forth.

Of course she had to prove me wrong yesterday.  I’ve made mention of my bit collection and how it is almost physically impossible for me to get rid of any bits I own, and so always have plenty of bits floating around for various experimental purposes and kicks.

Just for some of those kicks, yesterday I pulled out the Myler Full Cheek snaffle I own.  I used this bit on her quite a few years ago, when we were first starting out in NATRC.  I don’t remember if it was good or bad.  The couple of ride photos I have of her in it, she’s not tugging and fussing and pulling faces.  Always a good sign.

Exhibit A: (It’s hard to see, but trust me, it’s the full-cheek snaffle.  It’s a picture of a picture, since my computer ate my flash drive that had all of the images of my ride pics I had scanned and I wasn’t going to tear apart my ride scrapbook to rescan ’em all.)

Descanso Desperados NATRC
October 2002
Photo by Cheryl Erpelding

Especially when this is the alternative:

Chino Hills NATRC
April 2003
Photo by Ray Brezina

Safe to say she doesn’t like the loose-ring, French-link snaffle.  Especially since I have another several pics that look almost exactly like above.

So yesterday, out comes the Full Cheek again.  And she decided it was perfectly acceptable.

Of course.

She loves likes tolerates the one bit I don’t like to use.  (Something about those full cheek pieces getting hooked on things like belts, belt loops, bridle cheekstraps, water troughs…get the picture?)

What I’d like to know is if it’s the bit, or the mouthpiece.  It’s the Myler Comfort Snaffle with Twist.  The slightly rigid aspect of the comfort snaffle means it’s pretty solid in her mouth…not a lot of play or wiggle, so she fusses with it less. 

*shrug*

Apparently she likes to keep things interesting.

Innocence

A Bit of A Collection

I have a confession to make.

I collect bits.

I probably can’t even count how many bits I’ve used/owned over the years.  Start between “a lot” and “a ton” and go from there.  It started with my show days and went from there.  I think I probably used seven or eight different Western bits over the years, starting with a snaffle and very quickly moving into all manner of ported/shanked leverage bits.  The joys of a young pony with no brakes and a young rider with no upper body strength.  Shortcuts R Us.  But I didn’t know any different at the time.   I was still trying to figure out how to ride a young horse, let alone train one.

English was easier…very quickly moved into a kimberwick and stayed there for pretty much our entire show career.

And gymkhana quickly complicated things again.  Snaffle while I was still teaching her the patterns, then over to a mechanical hackamore when we started picking up the speed.  But of course it couldn’t be that simple…maybe one style of mechanical hackamore works better than another?  And then on a whim, the week before our last show, I snagged an S-Hack while at the feed store.  I had done about a year of distance riding at that point, and had seen distance riders using them.  I figured I might eventually be able to use it.  The real whim came about at the show when I put it on Mimi (without any testing/pre-riding at all) and ran all of the games in it.  (And had some of the best runs ever.)

But distance riding really fed my bit obsession.

Mimi’s always been a bit fussy.  She has a low palate and a tiny mouth, and spends half of her time evading the bit rather than working with it.  My trainer and I spent a lot of time swapping out bits, trying to find one she would work in.  Fortunately, I learned my bit collecting ways very well from my trainer, and she had an entire box of bits to raid.

Distance riding also expanded my horizons and really furthered my education.  For the first time, I was really examining the why of things, instead of accepting that something was “traditional and always done this way.”  Bit function was one of those areas of education, and that exploration brought me to the Myler bits.

I love Myler bits.

Mimi tolerates them.

I’ve gradually gotten rid of all of my other bits in favor of just keeping the Myler ones.  I really appreciate their form and function and how they’re designed to work with the horse.  I feel like I end up with more of a connection and softer feel of the horse’s mouth.

(Not a spokesperson/representative/paid mouthpiece for Myler.  I just really like the product.)


And irony of ironies?

I barely use any of the bits I have.

As mentioned, Mimi really doesn’t like bits.  She tolerates the Myler ones.  But she prefers to go bitless.  Remember that S-Hack I mentioned earlier?  Yep.  That’s her preferred headgear of choice.

It sort of looks like a jumble of purple spaghetti, but that’s Mimi’s trail bridle.  Zilco Deluxe Endurance Halter/Bridle with the Wind Rider Aluminum S-Hack and Hought Beta-Biothane Noseband.

I really like the flatter beta nosebands that are out there now…much easier on their faces than the stiff rope-style nosebands.  I’ve seen the rope-style used on horses that pull, and they eventually develop a bump on their nose from rubbing/pressure. Several layers of Vetwrap is supposed to combat this…

My major caveat on the hack: I prefer to use it on a horse that’s already well-schooled in giving to pressure and going along nicely in a bit.  Mimi responds really well to it, and I think a lot of that is due in part to the fact she’s just happy it’s not a bit, and therefore will cheerfully obey without fuss.

It still took me a couple of years of doing NATRC to work up the nerve to try it on her at an actual ride.  She did great when I did finally use it, but then right about that time I started getting involved in endurance, and the idea of the faster pace and more race-like environment had me scrambling back to my comfort zone of a bit for our first year of endurance.  October 2007, I used the hack on her at a ride, and haven’t gone back to a bit since, except for schooling.

My preferred set-ups for schooling at the moment.  Myler Kimberwick with Comfort Snaffle mouthpiece (MB02).  It’s considered a “Level One” (mild, typically used for intro level) mouthpiece.  I like that it acts very much like a double-jointed snaffle, but it has less “play” in it and it’s less work for the horse to hold it in their mouth.

I pulled off the regular kimberwick curb chain and replaced it with a biothane curb chain, because 1) the constant jingling from curb chains annoys me and 2) I’m lazy and hate having to always fiddle with the on/off of a curb chain.  I like the ability to switch between the curb and snaffle setting on a kimberwick.  When I was competing with this bit, I’d often start with the reins clipped to the curb setting, then switch to the snaffle setting after she settled down and quit pulling.

My only grumble is that they only stock the kimberwick in 5″ sizes.  Myler bits tend to run just a touch on the large side anyway, so 5″ is really too big for pony’s pea-head.  They do custom orders , but I use a bit so little now that it hardly seems worth it.

Exhibit B is my “cowgirl” set-up.  Myler Western Dee Snaffle with Sweet Iron Bristol Roller (MB11).  Also a Level One bit.  It’s basically a “dog-bone” double jointed with a little spinning copper roller around the middle of it.  Mimi works well in it, mostly because I think she likes the copper and sweet iron.  She tends to drool and slobber after a while because she’s so busy working the spinning mouthpiece.  Not a good bit on days when we’re working on “quiet mouth.”  Rides “looser” than the comfort snaffle because the joints on the snaffle have a lot of play between them.  Not as good in the “subtle communication” department.  But it’s a pretty bit that appeals to my inner cowgirl.  (Me, shallow?!?)

And then I’ve got several “homeless” bits…ones that live in my drawer of extra tack, ones that are either similar to something I’m already using, or have been tried and discarded as absolutely unsuitable by the Pony Committee of One.

Round up the usual suspects. Clockwise from upper left:
Myler Western D w/ Hooks, Mullen Triple Barrel MB32-3
Jumping Hackamore
Myler Loose Ring French Link MB10
Myler Full Cheek Twisted Comfort Snaffle MB01T

I’ve used all of these for training and rides (except the jumping hack…haven’t done a ride with that yet, want to replace the noseband with one of the beta ones) at some point.  The Western D was a good ride bit and I used that one several times, but the flat mullen mouthpiece made eating more difficult.  A like something with a little more “lift” in the mouthpiece and more room for the tongue.  The Loose Ring Snaffle is kind of a joke…I have more ride pics of Mimi’s head almost vertical as she gleefully ignored my requests to slow down.  And the full cheek snaffle is relegated to used as a training bit under strictly controlled circumstances only.  Those full cheeks, while wonderful for teaching a young horse concepts like turning and steering, really suck when they get caught on various things…like the cheekpiece of the bridle, or your belt, or the water trough…ask me how I know this.  ;)

And of course, I have a couple other bitless rigs floating around as well.  This one’s a vosal…mechanical interpretation of the old-time rawhide bosals.  I’m on the fence about this one.  Definitely a lack of fine-tune control.  No side-to-side lateral control whatsoever.  I still keep it around, though.
Not pictured is a traditional sidepull.  Well, the braided nylon variety of traditional.  It lives down at the barn as my “backup” headgear, but I rarely use it other than for aimlessly wandering around the arena for a few minutes.  Requires way too much force to get Mimi, in a strong-and-opinionated mood, to listen to it.  But I keep it around because it’ll probably be a good young horse training tool in teaching them to give to pressure.  But Mimi needs a little more authority in the form of the curb chain and leverage of the S-Hack.
And I have, of course, the rejects.  Those aren’t pictured, since they got sent on their way a while back.  Aside from some of the show bits, I’ve gotten rid of comparatively few bits and/or headgear that I’ve used for distance.  The ones that stick in my mind are:
– Myler Combo Bit with triple barrel mullen mouthpiece.  I didn’t care for this bit at all.  It was too fussy to mess with, harder to use with a halter-bridle on pea-headed ponies, and it just seemed like it was too much at one time.  Mimi hated it and fussed a ton with it on.  Down the road it went.
– Myler Kimberwick with Forward Tilt Ported Barrel (MB36).  I liked the comfort snaffle mouthpiece better. This was one of their Level 2-3 bits, and it was a lot of bit.  It was great for the arena, but I tend to have “controlling hands” when out on trail, and prefer to ride with a mouthpiece that is a bit lighter and doesn’t give them so many signals at once.  Plus, I don’t think Mimi’s tiny mouth accommodated the more forward set of this particular mouthpiece.  Didn’t see the sense in leaving it around, so…sometimes I wish I’d held onto it, jsut in case I need it again.
– Dr. Cook’s Bitless Bridle.  As far as bitless goes, not my favorite option.  Used it on the latter half of a NATRC ride and spent that seven-or-so-mile loop feeling like I was getting the proverbial middle ringer from the pony as she gleefully barged through it.  Nice.  Also didn’t like the fact that it was tough to get it to release the pressure once it was tight.  It found a new home pretty quickly.
To a lesser degree, I passed some of the bit interest along to Dad.  His horses have been less complicated.  Lucky him.  His Foxtrotter mare Kelly came to us with a good old Tom Thumb snaffle and a habit of head-tossing.  Gee, wonder why?  We quickly swapped her over to a Myler short shank comfort snaffle and the head tossing really settled down, then several years later, put her in the same Myler kimberwick as Mimi.  She really loved that bit, and when she went to her new home, we sent the bit with her in an effort to keep her happy and encourage the new owners to keep using said bit.
Beamer was even simpler…Myler English Dee snaffle with French Link mouthpiece (after schooling him in my Loose Ring snaffle…but the English D doesn’t have the same “pull through the mouth” potential as the smaller-ring cheekpieces, and therefore doesn’t need a curb strap attached…one less thing to fiddle with) for several years, and then transitioned him into an S-Hack.  Sent both of those along with him, since he works well in both, but prefers the S-Hack.  (Anything that makes eating easier…and it’s less work, not having to carry a bit.)
And I have no doubt I’ll still keep collecting as I eventually expand the herd, since I’m big on each horse having their own bit.  You might say I’m a bit obsessed.  ;)

My "Other" Life

It’s been clear to me during this past week that I’ve been on break from school that I’m one of those people that, when functioning at normal capacity, always has one thing too many to do.  Court reporting school and working part-time for my parents and horses and non-horsey interests and things that normal humans require to function, such as regular food and sleep. 

Right now, I’m going into week two of a three-week break.  Based on the fact I’ve not yet managed to register for fall classes, you can see how thrilled I am to be starting yet another semester.  I’m over this school thing already, and ready to be done and be a working court reporter.  And once I’m working, that will merge two activities — school and work — into one.  See, timesaver. 

(Of course, this is me naively ignoring all of the aspects of Real Life that will come with having a Proper Job and Entering the Real World.)

I’ve actually been able to ride Mimi more in this past week than I have since the summer began.  That in itself is a sad commentary on my state of riding affairs of late.

That said, I’m going out riding tomorrow with a couple friends.  Yes, back on trail again!  Naturally, it would be at this time that she chooses to rub the outside of her tail, right where the crupper sits.  Tail was perfect all summer…and the week I need to start using the crupper again, she opportunistically rubs.  Ponies.

Off to hunt down all the extra fleecy, fluffy covers that might work on the crupper and give further protection, in addition to the layers of desitin liberally gobbed on the area.