Thursday, December 31, 2009

Abby's on the Way!

Hey!

Abby left her temporary home at Legacy Farm late last night (around 10). She is being hauled to my barn by Tapp's Horse Transportation and should be here very early Sunday morning. I'm so excited that she's on the way! For anyone looking to adopt a horse, I would DEFINITELY recommend New Vocations, Maker's Mark Secretariat Center, Tapp's Horse Transportation and several other private parties. They were awesome through the whole experience!

Friday, December 25, 2009

Miss Abby

Hey!

As I said in my last post, this was seriously the best Christmas ever. And a large part way was due to getting the best gift ever. That I got for myself :)) I paid for it and am currently in the process of paying my mother back for the rather large shipping fee. But it's perfectly fine with me. Because it is actually a she. And she, is a 10 year old, 16hh off the track thoroughbred. Her history post 5 months ago isn't known because she was being starved in a field with another horse. After that lovelyyy ordeal, she ended up with the best owner a horse in that situation could wish for. She's now happy and healthy with over 200 lbs gained since being rescued.



I've yet to meet her but she apparently has a sweet temperament and no vices. Except disliking cross ties. But since we don't have cross ties in my barn it shouldn't be a problem. Plus, Jazz use to dislike them too. She vets pretty clean too. No health problems with the rescue and no lameness.

I'm hoping she'll be my next jumper with some work. She's got a big jump and a stride that I loveeee. Hopefully some dressage, grid work and more schooling will get her to slow down, balance up and snap those knees up! This is her video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hUx8hdmZrok

She should be hear in the first week or so of January and I'll have TONS more pictures and video of her. I can't wait!

<3 Katie

p.s. We decided her show name would be Never Say Never. I think it fits.

Christmas!

Hey!

I had an absolute awesome Christmas this year! My family is awesome and I love them to pieces! We had an awesome dinner at my grandmothers that was absolutely hilarious. My grandmother gave each of my brothers $25 and practically duct taped the boxes shut. They were wrestling to open them for nearly 5 minutes.



My full brother, Matt, and I went to my dads house to open gifts on Christmas day and I got the best horse stuff! A Micklem bridle, 2 bits (one a Fulmer!), a horse cooler, 3 training books (101 Dressage Exercises, 101 Jumping Exercises and a book of using grid work), new breeches, shorter round spurs, white polo wraps and 2 new schooling pads (one light blue and one black) ! And my favorite thing, a college text book of equine anatomy! I found all of it on sale(expect the bridle and anatomy book... but I reallyreally wanted them).

I can't wait to get everything out to the barn and use it all! Except the white polo wraps... those are not getting any where near a horse until I do something important that involves dressage... like a rating or anywhere I probably shouldn't wear my rather used and abused brushing boots. They might be old and too small but they serve their purpose and I like them. :))

Anyway, Jazz is doing awesome. Getting fat and kind of hot since the rain makes consistent, hard riding impossible. We're playing with his grain and supplements to create a diet that holds the weight but less hyper. The old boys Largo and Duce/Dunkin are doing well also. They're both on a supplement to try to keep them feeling good. The cold slows 'em up a bit but the supplements seem to help. And new news about horses coming and going! Can't wait to write about it but got to go for now!

Merry Christmas!

Monday, December 14, 2009

Weird Weather

So the weather has been beyond crazy here. On Saturday there was a high of 50 and it was miserable out. Rain and wet mostly. But I caught a break in the rain and went out to the barn for a bit. I ride Togiferd (Togey) barebark with a surcingle for the first time. He was HIGHLY confused at first, especially when I vaulted on, but he lived and we ended up having a pretty nice ride. There was a little bit of fast cantering aka IDONTWANNASTOP! from him but that was no doubt to to me trying to hold on and say stop with my seat (not hands!) at the same time. After we just chilled out in the barn for a really long time. He probably munched through 2 scoops of alfalfa cubes and 2 lbs of the apple treats.

On Sunday it was 70 degrees! I rode Jazz in just a tank top and jeans. He was beyond amazing! The improvement in his gaits is incredible!! We've been doing a lot of exercises that trainers have suggested and it seems to be paying off. He's got much better lateral flexibility as well as swing/the beginnings of impulsion in his gaits. Its so much fun to ride him on the flat now because he feels sooo good. At this point I like doing dressage with him more than jumping! crazy! We still have a lot of work to do, especially on our transitions but that will come eventually.

We ended up not going to Clemson for a variety of reasons but its all good. Jazzy and I have a clinic with one of the best show jumping course designers in the country, who is also an AMAZING coach next weekend so I'm really excited. We are signed up for the 3'3"-3'6" ground. Hoping that goes well!

<3 Katie

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Really Long Time, No Post

Hey so a quick re-cap of whats been going on in my world....

1. I went for and passed my H-B rating for United States Pony Club, thus becoming a full fledged C-3 Traditional.
I'm looking at taking my C-3 Show Jumping Specialty around March to hopefully become the 6th rider with that specialty in the United States. I have received very good comments about my ability to pass this rating from National Examiners so I'm feeling pretty excited already! The C-3 Show Jumping is done at Level II and III show jumping heights.
I'm also looking into going for my B Traditional in September. I am almost positive I will fail at that rating because so many examiners refuse to pass young candidates and refuse to pass people on their first time through the test. It will be a good learning experience and while I plan to be a prepared as I can be, I am also going to be realistic. The B Traditional is based on Preliminary level eventing.

2. Jazz has been doing AMAZINGLY well with his dressage training despite the fact that I have only had one lesson (a jumping one!) since August. I've learned a TON off the internet and by watching/listening to much better dressage riders verbalize what they are doing on their horses. Jazz has fantastic relaxation, rhythm, contact and the beginnings of true, good impulsion at the walk and trot with it really developing at the canter. Some days are better than others but on our good days we have a lovely extended trot, stretchy trot, free walk, medium trot, 20/15/10 meter circles and a very nice balanced canter. At this point the fact that our canter is not perfect is not bothering me. I found this quote "Walk for muscle, Trot for balance and canter for wind". It was more directed at conditioning training but I use dressage to make a better jumper so I feel it connects to us. The walk and trot give us muscle and balance. The canter, as long as it is freely forward, balanced and rhythmical, is just fine for jumping around a course.

3. The big chestnut Dutch Warmblood, Togey, is now living at my barn! He had a bit of a rough settling in period but now that everyone is use to the addition, he is AWESOME to have around. The woman that lives on the property and feeds in the morning has always dreamed of having a 17 hh Chestnut Hanoverian and Togey is just close enough to her dream that she has totally fallen in love (after a brief period of being scared of the new big, somewhat wild-ish horse). He's buddied up with my old pony Largo who Jazz continuously tries to beat up and together they hang out becoming best friends.
The first few days of riding Togey were rough with him throwing me the first two times I rode then trying really really hard to throw me the third day (I ended up holding onto the check pieces, mane and reins with my legs wrapped around his neck.. BUT I STAYED ON!). Yesterday we had a super good workout with him quietly jumping 2'6" WITHOUT rushing or bucking and WITH flying changes so he can STAYYY! (well until the show in the 12th/13th then we will have to re-evaluate). I'm really excited to see what we can do together.

4. This isnt a re-cap but on the 12th and 13th, Jazz, Togey and I are going to a schooling show to hang out with friends, show some new heights and generally have some fun. At this point I am either doing Training or Prelim CT, High Jumpers and High Gamblers Choice with Jazz. And with Togey I am looking into doing the High Hunter/Eq division and some flat classes. Depending on how the next couple weeks with him go we might make some adjustments to that.

Anyway, I'll post some more later!

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Five Favorite Photos

So I accidentally deleted the post about champs... oops...

Anyway, I've been super busy lately so I decided to just post my 5 favorite horse pictures. They're of me and the horses I ride or have ridden.

Jazz. USPC Championships.


Jazz. Schooling grids at home.


Togey. Lesson with Kevin.


Jazz. Schooling 4' for the first time.


Largo. Just hanging out being retired.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Seabrook Schooling Show

Hey!
Had a really great day at the Seabrook schooling show (local hunter/jumper/eq thing). I met up with a really great local trainer who is letting me ride/show her aMaZiNg horse, Togey. He's a 16 Dutch Warmblood with potential through the roof. He's been trained through second level dressage but is a bit brainfried about it so he's being retrained for jumpers. He is quite possibly one of the coolest horses ever.

We had a bit of an interesting warm-up considering this was the second time I’ve ridden him (first time was a month ago). I made the mistake of getting on and thinking ‘second level dressage horse must totally understand being ridden off the outside rein and inside leg’. He might know what it is, but he didn’t like it. So after some figuring (and one tempi’s and random jumps into the air) we got everything going fairly right. At the jump. And clearing it. And even looking like a hunter. We tried a 2’ hunter class (unpinned but would have gotten 3rd) and everything came together really really well. Had to do simple changes and had 1 majorly funky spot but besides that, we had the pace/jumps/turns/ down nicely. After that we had some break time and then back on for the 2’6”/2’9” jumpers. We weren’t trying to be competitive. Just put something safe together as a good learning experience. The warm-up was supper great and we jumped up to 3’. He was really good over everything with nice pace and pretty jumps (good spots/nice square knees/happy horse). Once we got in the ring, he got a little disoriented with the course and moved jumps and newly soaked footing (it had been raining) so we ended up with some slightly funky spots and a few trotted fences. We ended up trotting most of the second course because he made it clear that that was where he was most comfortable and after a point, if he’s more confident trotting that’s ok. I was really happy with his performance through the day especially after our rough spot and it being his first jumper show.

So all in all, good day, good learning experience for both of us. Besides that, I also got to hang out with Togey’s owner who is absolutely amazing as a trainer/rider/owner/person/whatever. And with some pony club people. And it was pretty awesome.

Best Quote Ever: “Did those kids really just tell a trainer and formally attired rider to get out of the way while we’re course walking?”
“Yeah, I think they did.”

Oh and an older rider letting a young kid get chewed out by a judge for something they did like, I don’t know, screaming a curse word in the ring, is wrong. And is something people don’t forget easily. Or at least I won’t forget easily. Adding insult to injury by wanting to threaten show management and complaining about the fact that someone figured out the horse/rider mix up and let the judge know so you could receive the chewing out as well, is also really really not cool either. No worries, won’t forget that part either.

Besides that little issue, it was a great day with good rides and lots of funnn! Hoping for pictures sooon!!

Monday, September 21, 2009

Second Try - C3 Longing

Hey!

I managed to pass the C-3 longing retest this weekend with very good marks and almost an exceed standard. Jazz was not fed any sugar cubes and was very well behaved. Actually acted like a trained pony this time around. The only reason I did not receive an exceed standard mark, got a check plus instead, was because I attached my side reins in the non-classical way. I have always attached the inside first, then the outside side rein then stepped around their nose to start longing. The correct way, which makes total sense, is to attach the outside rein first, then the inside so that if a horse starts looking like it will back up or think about going up, you can send them on immediately without having to step around their noses.

That afternoon, I also got a separate lesson in longing to further dressage training with Jazz. We also talked a lot about correcting training problems on the longe line. It was really really informative and fun as well!

Side note, Jazz and I are hopefully getting a new dressage trainer (we've been without a consistent one since about early June) and I'm really really excited to see how much she can teach us. She's a great coach that has brought plenty of young horses and riders along to even the highest level of dressage competition. Can't wait!

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Crazy School, Awesome Clubs and Skinny Jazz

hey!
school has been like beyond crazy lately with AP classes and whatnot. Love AP Bio, APUSH and H. Anatomy but they're kind of crazy sometimes. And with 2 more classes on top of that plus riding plus pony club stuff plus a 45 min drive to the barn plus student government things are getting kind of crazy. one thing I'm realllyyy looking forward to with school though is the newly formed equestrian club at my school.

The first meeting was today and it sounds like its going to be REALLY fun to be apart of. I signed up to be a coordinator for the events which will consist of some clinics, shows and fund raising. There will also be some cross country schooling but I will probably be loaning Jazz out to one of the club members who cannot take her leased horse off the property. Either way it should be a ton of fun.

And last but not least, I need some help with something. Jazz is a 13 year old off the track thoroughbred who is THE hardest keeper to I have ever dealt with. No matter what I feed him he still looks skinny and underfed. His coat looks really good, his hooves are great without shoes (currently has them on for added traction while riding though), he's perky and has tons of energy but he just will not put weight on for anything. He gets:
1 lb of Purina Mills 32% (32% protein, 5% fat)
1/2 lb of Omegashine (flax seed)
1 lb of Dry Beet Pulp (soaked before feeding)
4 lbs of Alfalfa Cubes (soaked before feeding)
5 lbs of Seminole Wellness Senior Mix (12% fat, 10% protein) - soon to be switched to Seminole Wellness Show and Sport (12/12)
and Consequin with MSM and a daily strongid wormer.
he gets all that PER FEEDING!!! (cept for the consequin and wormer, thats once a day)

This is what he looks like: (add in a little more muscles through his hind quarters since this was taken this spring)He had the Panacure Power Pack regemin done (with Probios to keep healthy gut bacteria) before switching to the wormer last week in hopes of getting rid of any possible resistent worms. It was also suggested last week that he could have ulcers so he's going on ulcer treatment starting this weekend. This treatmeant won't hurt him if he doesn't have any but it could always fix something. I'm not thinking he has ulcers though because he isn't displaying any symptoms besides lack of weight gain. After this though, I'm at a loss for possible reasons for the lack of weight. Any suggestions?

I'm going to call the vet to come out and just go over everything if none of this works but really trying to avoid that. I've asked the vet about his weight a few times but have tried everything that was suggested so far but nothing has really worked. Giving free rein to a vet to just test everything will probably be extremely pricey though.... fabulous.

So any suggestions would be much appreciated!

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Championship Pictures

Just random pictures from Champs in Lexington VA. I should have the videos and better quality pictures I ordered soooonnn!

Getting ready to salute the judge before the 3rd Speed/Knock-down Class
On course.Take Your Own Line Class.
Majorly angling an oxer. Funnn.
I like his knees. And kind of my leg. Thats about it though. Low fence in Speed/Knock-down 1
Fun parallel oxer in the Take Your Own Line Class.
3'6" oxer in the muddy ring on Sunday.
Same Jump. Different Angle.

The End! :))

I PASSED!

Hey! Well I went for my C-3 last weekend and passed! So excited that that is *mostly* behind me. I didn't pass the longing because I fed Jazz a whole bunch of sugar cubes before going and then couldn't get him away from me! I never hand feed Jazz, or any horse really, because it makes them so pushy but I was so happy with how good Jazz was being that I fed him the sugar. My bad.... He would not go to the end of the line no matter how much I shook the whip at him/his shoulder and clucked him on he just turned right in and tried to come at me for treats. It kind of sucked. But he's back on a no treats not ever regimen so hopefully he will back back to my nice little longe pony by the restest in 2 weeks. Anyway, it was really fun besides the longing issue.

Jazz was really good for the flat portion and we got through Training Level Test A without too much trouble. For my switch ride I got to get on a super cute 5 yr old Clydesdale/TB cross who was really fun. Reasonably good marks all around from the National Examiners.

The next day was the jumping portion which is, of course, my favorite part. Jazz wasn't as good as he had been (very much wanting to run on the forehand) but it ended up working out really well. When he is being naturally forward and not as determined to travel on the forehand I have a tendency to get more layed out on his neck and be less active with my leg so it occasionally will get a touch out in front of me/not totally under me. So by him being a bit lazy I really had to sit up and ride him through everything. But he was still forward enough to blast off my leg when I needed it XC so it all worked out. I got an Exceed Standard in my grid work meaning I surpassed the standard of riding. The NE was really funny about it, I could hear her as I went over each jump correctly going YES!YES!YES!. It was the same woman who had had to fail me in the longing the day before so I was really happy to be back on her good side. The actualy course work was kind of annoying becasue there was this hil going through the middle of the open area with the jumps and that realllyyyy messes with how you have to ride a course. The hill and the fact that it really wasn't a jumper course to show off exactly what I can do got frustrating. Jazz and I don't look as good or stand out as much over spread out courses with wide turns as we do with snappy turns and bending lines. But we got really good marks so I'll take it. The switch ride was soooo much fun! I got a 16.3/17 hh green warmblood that had a bad bolting tendency but it worked out. We put together a resonable nice (safe!) course that I was ok with. He had school the practice fences so nicely (waiting for my direct of whether to hold or go to the fence and keeping balanced) that I was kind of shocked when it all went out the window after the first jump on course. Anyway, the NEs again had really good remarks. :)))

After that was cross country. I am not a fan of it. And probably never will be. But we got through it fine (minus a little galloping issue - I have very bad depth perception with anything distance and I let Jazz get into a big gallop only to look up and not be able to tell where the water complex was so after a little bit of a rough pull up we ended up being a good 100 yards from the complex). The NE was happy with the work and had the canidates check our horses pulse and respiration as an added fun test. Anyway, it worked out fine.

The last little briefing where they handed out results was probably the scariest and most depressing scene I've seen in awhile. 6 people started the rating and only 3 passed. Hopefully they will go for it again soon because they're all very talented riders.

So now even with the C-3 is out of the way, my next year is still packed with crazy stuff! I am planning on taking my H-B rating in Novemeber to complete the second half of the C-3 rating. After that I plan to take the C-3 Show Jumping Speciality in the spring (both the NEs said they would have passed me on it this weekend!) and might look toward the B Traditional before college. If I pass the C-3 Show Jumping I will be one of 6 in the country which would be SO cool! hehe! It would make me a good pick for the Show Jumping International Exchange that I would like to go on. It would also mean I could do some traveling instructor stuff with PC. While that opportunity would be fabulous I'm not sure if it can be done becasue of college NCAA rules and amature status things and weird stuff. I'm also planning on qualifying for show jumping championships this spring but possibly at a higher level! Can't wait to see how everything comes out

oh and we moved Jazz to my families farm FINALLY! So excited that he's out there. Can't wait to move there myself!

Sunday, August 30, 2009

C-3 Rating - 7 Days

Heyy

Jazz and I have spent the summer working, not only, toward Championships but for our next Pony Club Rating. The C-3 Traditional. This is a fully mounted rating (well except the wrapping and longing) and the first National Level rating I have gone for. The jump height is 3' when you're without stirrups or on your switch horse and 3'3" whenever you jump your personal mount. The rating is comparable to Training Level in eventing (actually have to complete the training level dressage test and jump a modified training level course). This rating is my next big step in Pony Club. I feel prepared for the most part but just nervous in general. Jazz is going super well with both the jumping and dressage so if I can just hold my head together and talk my way through everything I think we will be just fine.

As I mentioned we schooled up to Training Level XC on Monday with no problem. One of my friends who has only jumped up to 3'6" once in a Chase Me Charlie class schooled him over 3'3" XC jumps with no problem. I was super proud of him for carrying her safely over big heights that she was inexperienced over while in the open!

We went to another barn on Friday to school their jumps because the ones at my barn are being fixed/painted and Jazz was good for the most part. I rode kind of funky but I know what I need to change and will get it done. A HUGE THANKS once again to Mrs. Holly who is not only letting me ride her aMaZiNg new horse but stayed on her own accord on Friday in the rain to help Jazz and I out. We even figured out a big 3'9" oxer (I hateeee oxers) with her instruction. Following hands, secure leg and seat with a more upright positition that had a nice approach, take off and landing. THANK YOU!

So the next week is going to be absolutly crazy with school and riding but I'm hoping it all works out. Can't wait!!

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Recap...

hey!

long time, no post. my bad. anyway for a quick recap of everything:

Jazz and I went to USPC Show Jumping Championships in Lexington, VA. We placed 8th out of 40 in equitation and our team placed 4th out of 10. It was a great weekend all around. Fantastic people, really talented riders and everything else that makes a show great (minus one day of bad weather).

I have been prepping for my C-3 rating which is in 2 WEEKS!! AHHHH! Jazz has been going really well though. He goes in a nice little round frame, giving through his neck and back as well as correctly using his hind end at the walk and trot. He does it reasonably well to the right at the canter but its still iffy in overall consistency which is just fine for the C-3. We schooled cross country on Monday with no problem (one refusal over a 3'3" skinny but considering the funky angle you have to take to get to it, that he'd never seen one before and he went right over it the second time, I'll take it). We're going out to a wonderful barn tomorrow (Friday) to school stadim becasue my barn is having its jumps repainted. Hoping that goes well.

I'm really excited to jump tomorrow because 1) it will probably be my last jumping school before my rating and 2) I finally am figuring out the concept that several trainers tried to teach me this summer. I went out to switch ride onto a very talented local trainers new horse and to ride one of her students horses. Both are very very nice but very different from Jazz. After getting jumped out of the tack a few times I ask how to fix it and got the answer so many havent been able to get accross. Its weird to explain but I'm really excited to change a few things and see how Jazz goes.

Also a HUGE thanks to above mentioned trainer for allowing my to ride those horses. One of the horses is extremly well trained up to Second Level. Its soooo cool to be able to ride something trained in dressage after working with Jazz.

Anyway, I'll post more later. BYE!

Monday, June 15, 2009

Dressage Update

Hey!
Since my last post we took a day off then spent today working on our dressage which I can happily say is steadily improving. Actually, some HUGE leaps forward with only a few steps back. He carries himself very well in a forward working walk with his back feet stepping into his tracks if not stepping over them by an inch or sometimes more. I can move his shoulders apart from his neck with that apart from his hind quarters and then put them all back together to have a nice nose to tail bend. At the trot he is fairly consistent with traking up and maintaining the pace that I want. He is also giving to the bridle a lot more and allowing me to do what I want with his body which is good. Our work at the canter is still very.... um.... exciting. He will occasionally 'get it' and be soft/track up/ect but the rest of the time, you would think he has 5 legs. My dressage trainer got on him to work out his canter after I just couldn't make any headway with it. She told me later that she thought his canter was the strangest ever trying to work on a 20 meter circle. He just recently figured out how to canter anything but a straight line or wide turn without getting super unbalanced. I've figured out that figure-8s are the best way to remind him what he needs to do at any gait without risking a fight. I've tried to use them before but I didn't ride them correctly to get the reaction that I wanted.

So we're working and learning and poking around this new type of training with some success. We're going to start seriously working on the counter canter, trot lengthening, side passes and 10 meter circles once we get more consistency with his basic gaits. We've played around with these movements but mostly just adding them in when Jazz was having a good day, not walking in the arena with the intent to work on them. So far the counter canter is proving to be the mostly difficult for him to understand but after 7 years of people trying to drill auto-changes into his head when going across a diagonal or through a turn so I'm not surprised. He'll get it eventually with some more correct muscling, added impulsion, better balance and more schooling.

We'll get there sometime!!

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Jumping Without Stirrups

Hey!
Well today I schooled Jazz over fences by myself which is kind of unusual for me but really fun. I don't particularly like jumping over 3' without a trainer but I wanted to work on some stuff before Pony Club Camp. My goals for this lesson was the school giving to the bridle/flexing (mostly on the flat but working to carry that over fences) and to confidently school 3'6" oxers (ramped and square).

Our flat work was pretty ok. Jazz was not really wanting to work, especially if it was working at the trot on dressage so I just made him do what I wanted before moving onto the canter. We did some flexing exercises at the canter to both sides (the right side is the stiffer one) before doing some more basic work with our counter canter. Jazz will canter a nice bouncy (not on the bit but we're working) 30-40 meter circle on the right lead tracking left. He's correctly bend into the circle but loses it and tries to swap leads if the circle gets any smaller. To the right (bent right on left lead) he cannot maintain a circle so we are just doing nice canters up and down the fence counter flexing to the right then straight then counter flexing to the right then straight. We've only schooled it a few times and he is already a lot better about giving in the jaw and poll but not quiet flexible and balanced enough to canter the large circles. We're a work in progress. : )

Anyway, after that I went into the jumping arena and began with some 2', 2'6" and 3' warm-up jumps. I then started jumping a 3' parallel oxer with a halt at the end. There was a just little more than 20 meters on each side of the oxer to work with so everything had to coordinate to keep from having a bad stop/run into the fence. So after jumping that for a bit we started a figure-8 over the jump just playing around and working on waiting for spots, going to spots and balanced turns. Then I decided to drop my stirrups. We schooled to 3' a couple times without stirrups before tying the reins in a knot and coming up to the jumps on a loose rein before dropping them a couple strides out. We did some jump exercises (no hands, playing with deep spots, ect). I ended up mostly scraping the requirement of completely balanced turns when I was giving up my reins to jump. He just had to stay well enough balanced (not totally on the forehand, not dropping his shoulder, ect) to get to the jump correctly. Eventually we worked our way up to 3'6" doing the same exercises. By the way, on a 15.2 thoroughbred that is super narrow, 3'6" is pretty big. We've done up to 4' but its big. My trainer came out at one point and checked my riding/Eq. before we moved up to 3'6" by the way.

So after one of our breaks we wen't back up to the fence (no reins, no stirrups, been riding for over an hour) and I let Jazz back off the jump when I didn't see a spot. Big oops. So he kind of jumped, kind refused and kind of landed on top of it. Sort of. He was fine and I checked him nose to tail and besides a small scrape on his nose he was just fine. For whatever reason, I had put on our thick neoprene XC boots instead of our leather jump boots so Jazz had a fair amount of leg protection. I reset the jump and we went at it again. This time when I didn't see a spot I foze in the saddle and Jazz made to correct decision to not go over the fence unbalanced with a non-functioning rider. So he refused/stepped out of it and we circled back to take it again. This time I put my leg on and went to the fence when I didn't see a spot. And we cleared it without a problem. We then jumped is 2-3 more times to make sure it was a good exeperience before quiting for the day.

I was pretty proud of him and am looking forward to camp next week! I also got some videos of the ride and put them together in a video. Here it is::

Friday, June 12, 2009

Swimming!

Hey! Well to start off, I'm trying to keep up with this blog a little bit better now that schools out. The only thing is that there is a delay between when I do things, write about them and when I post them (obviously) but I like writing using the word today when writing soooo that's just how it goes. Anyway, not that it really matters but I can't help but tell whoever might read this blog. Does anyone read it? I hope so but honestly, I just like being able to write and show pictures. So yeah.

Ok, today I went out to the barn and it was honestly 95 degrees. So I scraped any real training and decided to teach Jazz how to swim. Which kind of worked. I can ride him into water up to his belly but after that he gets worried and tries to bolt toward land. I got off and lead him into the water this time until he started to feel uncomfortable then let him stop and started splashing him with water until he stepped in a little bit more to follow me. We messed around for 30-45 minutes with him getting deeper and deeper until he needed to actually swim. Then he'd launch himself into the water, swim a circle around me and try to run back to shore. The circling around me was actually him getting worried and deciding to deal with that by coming toward me and me having to push him away.
He acts big but the second something happens that makes him even a touch uncertain, he has a bad habit of crowding my to stay confident that something isn't going to kill him. After 3 and a half years he trusts that I won't ever ask him to do anything that he can't do. Including swimming. So he kept comming in deeper and deeper as I asked him to which was really fun. Finally we concluded the day by swimming across the pond. Which is only about 25-30 meters wide bit gets deep enough in the middle that I (I'm 5'8") can't touch the bottom and Jazz actually has to swim.
Anyway, I kept asking him to go deeper until I pushed off the bottom and asked him to swim after me and he DID! I was super proud of him and as he swam past me I grabbed his mane and had him pull me across as I slid lightly onto his back. Once he could touch on the other side we walked then trotted out of the pond and with some big pats we galloped back to the barn.
I had some videos of him swimming around me but I can't get them to go from my dad's Blackberry and save to the computer. Hope to get something up soon!!!
Overall a very fun afternoon!
Bye!

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Random Pictues

^^ Trail riding with Jazz

^^ This is from Show Jumping Rally. I don't particularly like this picture because my release isn't so hot. This was the first in a 2 stride combo so I was holding him for that. I'll leave it open for someone to guess what else is really wrong that lead to a hard/difficult landing.

^^ This is from Show Jumping Rally in the Equitation round I think. 3'3".

^^ This picture is from the Mateeba CT show. Its not the greatest jump but I still like it. 3'.

^^ This is also from the Mateeba CT show. Jazz just canters over 2'6".

Summer

This pictures shows a tiny bit of the ring, barn and pastures that we took the C-2 rating at. Jazz and I are on the right hanging out talking to the examiner. Here is a pic of us going cross country for the test:

Summer is finally here and wow, is this one going to be busy.

Recap of the last month: Jazz got a week long break after eventing rally because we had been training really hard all spring and he was getting a bit brain fried. He was still jumping and riding fine but he just didn't seem happy to be working. We then started back up to get ready for the C-2 rating that we found out about 2 weeks before the rating. After running through some more training and riding 6 days a week we passed the rating and Jazz got another week off. I just started back with easy riding 2 days ago and he seems happier after the break. He will come up to me in the pasture and stick his head in the halter instead of looking sullen and annoyed when I go out to get him. He even left his girlfriend who he is OBSESSED with to come find me in the barn. It was really exciting to know I had my happy-go-lucky horse back.

Here are some pictures of him hanging out in the pasture and in the barn. I went out to unpack the trailer, clean tack and check on Jazz twice during his week off and got some pictures on Saturday. Here they are:


Anyway, that has been our week! Next week, Jazz and I will be traveling to train at Pony Club Camp! Hope to have some more awesome times with friends this year!

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

C-2 Rating - Pony Club

Hey!
This past weekend my mom and I traveled 6 hours (each way) to a beautiful town to complete my C-2 rating for Pony Club. It was a great experience and has opened more than a few doors with with riding which I am very very excited about.

These are the basic expectations for the C-2
RIDING TEST EXPECTATIONS: Candidate should ride with confidence and control on the flat and over fences, demonstrating
a secure balanced position and progress toward an independent seat and coordinated use of aids. The candidate should begin to
initiate free forward movement establishing balance and rhythm while developing a light contact.
HORSE MANAGEMENT EXPECTATIONS: The candidate should show a solid awareness of cause and effect in horse
management skills. Assistance/supervision is allowed in the demonstration of bandaging, longeing, and loading mount.
The full test is here: http://ponyclub.org/files/bin/3524

Anyway, I was suppose to take this in December but several factors (horse injury, lack of experience in XC and dressage, lack of confidence) made we wait until the spring to go for the test. The only issue with that is that all the clubs in my area were not having a C-2 rating because the girls that were ready had moved up in the winter! So with some major help from the amazing woman in charge of ratings, I got a date. 2 weeks before my rating was take place. In a different state, with a club I didn't know, on a weekend in the middle of exams. Jazz and I have trained our butts off this spring in dressage and XC so I was hoping everything would pay off.

We had a smooth ride up and stayed over in a GORGEOUS barn and woke up bright and early to begin the rating. It started formal inspection, checking of bandages and going over common unsoundnesses. Formals went well, bandages were great, and I almost got through the unsoundnesses without an issue. I couldn't describe navicular well enough for the examiner. I could see what I wanted to say and show but it just wasn't coming across. Thankfully, splints, sidebone, ringbone, curb, thoroughpin and a trick spavin question came across perfectly. Everything met standard. Then came the mounted portion.

I was BAD sick during the rating so my riding was just average but thankfully all our work paid off and average for us was more than enough to meet the standard for all the riding. The examiner had some helpful critiques that will help us with our riding on the whole. Everything met standard for this part too. The unmounted went alright with a couple mis-steps in wording that caused a little issue. One of the people rating up had had a tough time with the mounted and was super uptight. He knew all the answers and was determined to show he was a good C-2 so whenever I mis-spoke or paused to think he jumped on my answer before I could say it. That happened once or twice and I guess the examiner say what was happening and gave me an extra question to answer so I could show what I knew. I met standard in all the unmounted portions and EXCEEDED standard in my Record Book. I put over 15 hours of work into perfecting that book and was super happy that that work was being rewareded.

SO I PASSED!!!!!!! YAY!

After the test, I talked to the examiner for a bit and we are trying to work a few things out that could really help Jazz and I and allow us to progress. Can't really say much right now though!

Either way, this rating is out of the way and I'm signed up to take the H-B in September!!!

I'll keep this blog posted (hopefully more often) with our going-ons in training, PC camp, Nationals and everything else!

BYE!

Saturday, May 16, 2009

First Horse Trial

Hey! Long time no post but its been crazy these last couple weeks. AP testing for the last two weeks. yay! actually, not really. My AP European History exam the 8th of May (a Friday) and I got to leave right after the end of testing (4:00) to go to Jazz and my first horse trial. A mere 5 hours away. Fun! We finally arrived at the barn at 11:00 at night after a looonnnggg trip. Picking Jazz up from the barn (an hour away from school) and stopping for gas and water breaks along the way added the extra 2 hours. Anyway, we were there and safe so I was happy.

Bright and early the next morning I was up feeding, getting through jog outs, formal inspection and freaking over my first actual non-schooling dressage test. This was a pony club rally which meant there were about a million things that had to be done besides riding. Like formals. Long process short, you get all dressed up and make everything perfect to be told what is not perfect enough and get points off. It sucks. Then came the dressage test.

(pictue is of us schooling the test before the rally) We did Beginner Novice Test B. And got a 44.5. Most scores were between 38 and 48 so I was very happy with him. We had all 6s and 7s until the downward canter to trot to walk to freewalk transition when the horses in the rings next to us left. Between the difficult transition (for him) and the horses leaving he completely bugged out. So we started getting 5s. Then two 6s. Then 5s. Oh well. We learned and the judge had lots of constructive criticism.

Jazz was very good through the staduim phase (late saturday afternoon) where we worked at adding speed to our courses for the first time. We went clean with a nice round.

He was AMAZING for the cross country portion on sunday. We saw our first cross country jump about a year ago and we walked away terrified (horrible instructor who did not pay attention combined with a shy kid that didn't know how to really speak up for herself). Now he he the XC BEAST. Haha.. just kidding but he was pretty awesome. Never looked at a jump and had a lot of fun with it. We came in 20 seconds under the optimum time and recieved no time faults.

Overall a VERY VERY VERY fun weekend and I am very proud of Jazz!

Friday, May 1, 2009

After Having Not Posted In Forever...

I think my last post was about Quiz Rally 2009... anway, since then we have done Show Jumping Rally and advanced in our dressage lessons. We are also going to our first Horse Trial next weekend. Beginner Novice WOOT! Just kidding. Its not all that grand but you have to start somewhere. Recap of Jazz and my crazy world:
Show Jumping Rally...
We had a so-so first course in my opinion but went clear and well under time. The next day we had out Eq. class and Take Your Own Line round. My Eq. round was clear and under time but still just alright with my riding. The Take Your Own Line (TYOL) was kinda crazy. The course I chose, made up by my coach, was 3 rolebacks in a row and then flying over a few jumps before a tight roleback to a long-ish gallop to the last jump. Tight, short and effective in theory. I crashed in a roleback pretty bad about a year ago and its kind of become one of my not so favorite things to do (we're pretty ok at them, I'm just not a fan). We took a funky turn for the last roleback and the jump was about 3 feet to the left of where I thought it would be. Big, solid looking 3'3" parallel after an unbalanced roleback isn't cool. Jazz calmly turned before the jump and we flipped back around a went at it with no issue. Finished under time still. Lost the bonus points though. The first round is the speed round to give you a base score and you can earn points for good rounds in the EQ. and TYOL that are subtracted off your speed score and Horse Managment score (low scores are best). The runout means no bonus points in that round. With 1 HM point for a piece of stall shaving in his tail, no faults in speed and bonus points in Eq. my score was alright. I ended up like 7th out of 24 for my Eq. score... whatever place it is, its a big brown ribbon.
At the end of the day, my slightly dysfunctional team won with a score of 1.76 which is INCREDIBLY low. The next lowest was something around 10.something with scores going up to 40.
I am the 5th in line to go to Nationals with 1-4 guarenteed to go but I'm hoping to get a spot.
Oh, and I figured out after rally why my position was so aweful.... my stirrup leathers had stretched a good inch giving me a less than secure base to jump out of. I had just been using the same mark and didn't really recognize the issue till I saw pictures. oops....

More on out Dressage adventured later!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Quiz Rally

Hey! Been really busy lately and haven't had much to say but now I do!

I am a C-1 in my local Pony Club and love it most of the time. Pony Club is an amazing experience for any young rider. Even if they just stick with it for a year. PC isn't for everyone, but it does have something to teach everyone. In just a year I learned the basics of eventing, rode over some of the best cross country courses in the area, trained with extremely high quality trainers, went fox hunting and learned how to more effectivly ride my horse. While this can be learned on ones own with personaly trainers, I doubt it could be done for the prices we paid. $20 dollars to ride in a clinic with a trainer that normally charges a couple hundred per rider. Free use of private cross country courses. Free rides with the local hunt club. Trainers and land owners donate their time and land to PC as a way of giving back to the horse community and it is VERY appreciated. PC also offers many things that cannot be easily learned anywhere else. Discovering your best learning style, switch riding on tons of horses, managing 4 unknown competition horses at a rally/show, teaching younger riders in unmounted and mounted topics, keeping a record book of your horse, learning how to discuss what you feel as you ride and how you think you can correct mistakes, making a plan for riding a course or pattern and sticking to it and, of coursae, studying for ratings. Lots and lots of book learning. It truely is a one of a kind experience and I think any young riders should give it a chance.




Anyway, I was able to partake in one of PC's special, one of a kind events: Quiz Rally. It is designed to test pony clubbers on a variety of horse subjects. They have to know about anything and everything pertaining to horses and pony club. Names of bits along with their uses and where they are legal in competition. Different tack that many girls, including myself, have only ever read about. Parasites, unsoundnesses, conformation, shoes, competition rules, horse management questions. Everything. The competition has between 4 and 5 different phases that test different knowledge and allow the competitiors a chance to earn points with questions at their level or up to two ratings above theirs.


The first phase was the in the 'barn'. This was actually the parking lot of the school where two horses had been brought for the rally. We were asked 2 individual questions and 1 team question. I asked for 2 C-2 level questions. My questions were to name 4 other things needed in lunging besides a bridle, lunge whip and horse. I said gloves, longe line, helmet and boots. A watch was another correct answer. My second question was to locate where side bone would be and to say whether it was an unsoundness or not and what caused it. The team question had a dificulty level of our highest rated team mate (c-3) and it was to name every bone in the front and back legs from top to bottom for 20 points. We got 10 out of the 20. Apparently the shoulder is part of the leg. Ooops...


Next we had the Mega-Room phase. This is all about matching. You had to match the item on the table to the name of the iteam on your sheet of paper. You had 3 minutes at each table. The first table was feed. It had alfafa, coastal hay, staw, timothy hay, feceus hay, flax seed, beet pulp and 3 other iteams om the table. I mixed up timothy with feceus hay. The second and sixth table were pieces of tack. I have never handled any of it. There was a crumper, german martingale, bit guard and other rarely used iteams. I got 3 incorrect at table 2 and 4 wrong at table 5. The third and forth table were bits. Some were common, others not so much. Many were not allowed in competition. Dr. bristols, french links, half moon, curb bit, waterford, double twisted wire, cork screw, chifney rearing bit and even the small snaffel used in a double bridle. I got 3 wrong at the third table and none incorrect at the forth table. The fifth table was boots and pads. Half pads, theraputic pads, riser pads, theraputic pads, SMB, splint boots and brushing boots. I got all of those right. The seventh and eighth table were shoes and farrier tools. Not my stong point becaue I've never owned a horse that was shod and have only handled horses with generic un-special shoes. 4 correct. I did slightly better with the farrier tools. 6 correct.

Team mate at the second bit table in Mage room:
The thrid phase was classroom. They give you 4 different subjects and you get one question on each subject. You choose the dificulty level. It is all about speaking what you know and being able to communicate.

The fourth phase was stations. You work as a team to complete harder tasks. Match what bits or tack iteas are or are not legal in different competitions. Parasites and their scientifc names and where they are located in the horse. Vaccinations and when they should be given. My team did alright. Not amazing but not horrible either.


The possibe fifth phase was a written test that we did not do. Still no idea what it is like.


I finished the day with a score of 108, 4th highest. The highest were 135, 130 and 129 but they were in other divisions. I had the highest score for my division (4 people but one had been studying for months and one was 2 ratings higher and in intense training). My team was the only one in the Senior C division so we got the first place ribbon as well. I took the high score for my team in the classroom and barn phase. The day ended with 2 small awards for the team high scores, 1 team blue ribbon and 1 individual 1st place medal. All this went together to give me a spot at Nationals in the fall. I have a guarenteed place Nationals for Quiz Rally. Still shocked.


I have not aceepted that place and will not until after show jumping rally in a month. I am hoping to qualify for Horse 1 and go to Nationals with Jazz to compete with top pony clubbers in the Eastern US. We'll see what happens!!!


Saturday, February 7, 2009

Working at a Horse Show

Hey! I haven't gotten to try out those exercises. Been way to sick to even think about trying it. I did, however, end up working at a local unrecognized hunter/jumper show today. I showed on this circuit heavily for a two years two seasons ago. I did one or two last year but otherwise hadn't been involved till a friend called needing someone to fill in. An hour later, I was signed up to manage the Large Hunter Arena. Physically the largest ring at the show, it contained all the 'big' hunter classes. Manage a ring for a day and make $100. That was it. No problem. Mostly.

The day started off with a bang. Turns out their getting you ready for the job was:
- handing you a binder with class entries
handing you a highlighter and a pen
- handing you a big box of ribbons
- handing you a walkie talkie set to channel 3. Push the button, talk then let the button go
- being told to highlight whoever's name had gone in and strike through whoever scratches. Adds need a pink slip and need to be written under the normal entries
- report to your ring gate at 8:30
It took about 2 minutes. No problem right?

Turns out it would also be nice to know:
- who your judge is
- what information needs to be given to the judge as a rider goes in for an over fences class (which ring, which class, their number, trip number)
- what to do when the ring is over
- how to set people up to rotate through courses without pissed trainers and confusion
- how to get everyone to cooperate for a medal class over two different fence heights
Those would have been really nice to know. Just sayin.

There was some confusion to start with because I didn't know what information the judge needed but that was quickly sorted out. The real fun started when a woman asked to go toward the beginning of the rotation for my first class. Green Hunter O/F. I OKed it and got her in and out of the ring. Then she left. I ran the rest of the class and suddenly realize that I'm missing a rider. I scan the list and realize the girl from before was riding a second horse. And has now disappeared. Completely. I finish up the final rotation and sit to wait for my rider. 20 minutes later my judge is getting annoyed. I let it sit another 10 minutes. Nothing. I start going back and forth with the people around the end gate. No one knows where my rider is. Finally 40 minutes after my last rider the judge and I decide that we're just going to start the flat class and the missed rider will just have to get over herself. By the way, this show is the epotime of unrated hunter show. About 1/2 the judges are actually dressage judges and there has been more than one occasion when mothers of the competitiors have judged. Its not some huge expensive/important thing that someone trained for years/months for and will prosper greatly from showing in. In horse shows, this one is nothing. Anway, 40 minutes late we try to move on. The second I start sticking girls in the ring people come screaming. Literally screaming. If you ever need to find a rider at a show, threaten to skip her if she doesn't show. I turn to deal with the older man and woman that have showed up and get BLASTED. No lie. People screaming in my face about me having no right to move the show along and how I'm screwing everything up. All I remeber was this creepy guy screaming YOU CAN'T DO THIS like 5 times in my face. Finally I just turned away and let them continue trying to tell the people around me how wrong I was. (the rule book reads that a ring is not going to be held for an unreasonable amount of time because a rider won't show). Ten minutes later I am told to get the riders out of the ring (they had just been walking around) because the rider that won't show HAS to do her over fences classes. Twenty minutes later, she shows. We've been waiting on her for nearly an hour and a half at this point. Finally she shows up and does her courses. It is then and only then that the woman who blasted me turns me around and says "She is a trainer. You HAVE to hold the ring for her and tell the judge it is a trainer conflict. You CAN'T just move the show along not matter how long it it. YOU are WRONG. I'm talking to the SHOW MANAGER!" This is a) the first time I find out she is a trainer (she didn't ride or act like one) b) the first time that I've heard that the judges call isn't final and c) the first time that I find out that she wasn't just missing, she had little girls in another ring.
I'm not a mind reader. No one on the show staff is a mind reader. We can't guess what you know. You have to TELL us. I had already held for one trainer that class and had no problem with it. No one did. Judge, competitiors and ring staff was completely OK with waiting when we were TOLD.
Anyway, my old trainer and her daughter were ringside and are watching the other thing. The 22 year old daughter immediatly recognized the missing riders new mount. Turns out the trainer had entered a horse that had shown for 3 years over fences in a green division (a horse is not allowed to compete if it has shown over fences for 2 or more years). She takes a complaint to the show office that the horse that we waited FOREVER for isn't even eligible for the class. Neither is one other horse the trainer had entered. While she was in there someone comes in there to complain about me and the daughter immediatly jumps in and tells the manager that I had no idea where the rider had gone, that she was a trainer and I had given 3 calls over the PA for her with no responce. The woman with the complaint quickly left the office.
I know the situation probably could have been handled better but after a point, I can only run my ring with the information I have.

After that, several trainers came up and told me they saw no problem with my actions and that the woman who screamed at me was known for blasting people that she felt was under her. She also had no relation to the rider/trainer that could not be found. She just felt like informing me that I was doing things wrong. Other trainers were amazingly kind enough to let me put their riders in what rotation I needed them in instead of demanding a spot. People who asked to be put forward in the rotation were put forward while I kept other trainers/riders informed on where we were. Oh, and the man who was yelling with the older woman, no one has any idea where the he came from. Personally, I just think he liked yelling.

About an hour after the first issue two big name/well known/nasty trainers nearly went at it. I just let them figure it out. One was a private well paid instructor that only worked with two riders (who are from a very wealthy family) and the other had a large barn with lots of winning girls. Both are known for being nasty. The private instructor asked me if her riders could go in first. I was good with it and turned to mark off riders. While I was turned away, the trainer with the winning riders opens my ring gate and starts trying to put girls in. I debated on telling her to wait for me to put the other riders in but then the private instructor came up and they seriosuly had a stare off. The trainer with the big barn won and immediatly sent in her first rider. I informed the judge of the rider, class and trip then turn to watch the private trainer walk off bristling. She was pissed. Not at me though, at the other trainer. Had I tried to step in, I would have gotten blasted again but show politics took care of who got the ring without me trying to fix things. I let the trainers drive each other crazy after that. That was the closest call to an outright argument but there were several other face offs during the day.

The day was rather uneventful after that. Trainers directly told me when there would be a trainer conflict and girls told me whether or not they wanted their trainer at the ring for their ride. If I knew at the start of a class who wanted what, I could do it. Just not with people screaming or expecting me to mind read.

Oh and there was huge barn drama but I'm staying out of that. Way, way out of that.

The show was a lot of fun on the whole, hanging out with friends and horses always means a good time. I'm sunburned and tired but $100 richer and happy.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Jumping Exercises

This is the Angled Jump exercise. I would put 1-3 strides in between the center of each fence. Be sure to walk it off from the middle, not sides. The center of the jumps are meant to be taken on a straight line with the jumps being angled under the horse. Its weird to explain but the diagram should show it alright. I'm using this one to practice angled fences and keeping Jazz straight. This exercise does encourage run outs. Just fyi.



This is the Cloverleaf exercise. I am planning on trotting in to the first fence then cantering out. Stopping on a straight line then picking up the trot for the role back to fence two. Cantering out then halting and repeating. I'll then canter in, canter out, halt, canter the turn, canter in, canter out, halt...repeat. Playing with varying combinations of this, I eventually want to get up to cantering the whole thing. I'm also planning on entering the cloverleaf from different sides each time and exiting before or after the three loops to keep it from getting boring. I'm using this exercise to school role backs and maybe play around with lead changes.

First Dressage Lesson

My first lesson went like this:
She had me do some exercises at the start of my lesson to get the two of us warmed up. We worked on turns on the forehands then were given the basics for turns on the haunches. It was a really interesting exercise that I have ended up playing around with a lot. She then put us on a 20 meter circle around her. She told and showed me EXACTLY where she thought my body should best be positioned then let me settle for a minute to make that position useable. This was really important for me. I was able to blend the formal dressage position with my body type, riding style and horse without constant nitpicking. Through the whole lesson I was only corrected for things like: dropping my shoulder, turning my thumbs and other equitation issues that directly affect how Jazz works. I know that classical dressage position is very important for correct riding but after a point if I'm worrying more about 'sucking my belly button in and keeping my back straight and sitting directly over my seatbones and....' then there is no way I can put my thoughts on Jazz like I should. My position seems to work for Jazz and I at the moment so I'm not making any major changes. Just tweaking so we work better together. Anyway, we walked on the circle and she told me to take contact, close my hands and STOP fidgiting with the reins. Never thought of it, but part of the reason I might have had problems in the past with getting him on the bit was I obsessivly fidgit with my reins. Always have done it. I don't keep a firm grip on the reins unless I am dealing with a problem horse. Flat and over fences work is always done with a loose hand and if I accidently give away too much rein then I just pick it back up. Its become such a habit that I have started unthinkingly re-collecting the reins even when I have not let any go. My trainer put it this way "If you take contact, then you are telling him where you want his nose to be. He needs to work towards that spot because you feed him and you're in charge. If you keep your reins steady, consistent and fair then he has something to work toward. If you keeps adjusting the contact then what he has to work toward keeps changing and he's eventually going to get frustrated and zone out." This makes sense to me. If I want him working from behind and filling the bridle then I need to be consistent as to where I want the bridle and in turn, his face. I'll write about my opinions on training fair in a bit. Back to the lesson. I took my contact and worked to hold it while she explained what she wanted next. She wanted me to bump his sides with one heel at a time while on the circle. Hard enough that he knows you mean go forward and that it gets annoying but not so hard that it hurts. This bumping combined with the contact had Jazz shuffel stepping with his nose in the air. My trainer said the goal in this was to make it uncomfortable to do the incorrect action (resist with his nose in the air pulling and strung out) and immediatly make the correct action (soft contact and pushing from behind) comfortable by softening my fingers and immediatly stopping the bumping. If he started pulling again, resume contact and bumb him till he softens again.
We went at this for 20 minutes with no headway before my trainer did the unimaginable. She asked to get on Jazz! I had always wanted a dressage trainer to get on him and feel what I feel. Just so they know what I'm dealing with. I never asked though because many were no longer riding and I thought the ones that were would never agree. My trainer got on Jazz and they immediatly had a spat. She was telling him what she wanted instead of asking like I was and he was not happy. They fought for about 10 minutes before Jazz finally gave and would go back on his circle. When he fights, he just runs backwards and acts stupid. Its nothing major. But he finally went back on his circle and she started working him. As she was going around, she would occasionally tell me what she was doing and way but for the most part she stayed quiet and worked him. After 20 minutes he went from resisting to suddenly softening. The softening and pushing from the backend only lasted for a second or two but it was there. In the next 5 minutes she got him to soften and hold that fame for 1/3 of the circle then 1/2 of it. Finally he went around a whole circle while correctly on the bit. Then she pulled him up and had me get up. She waled me through what she had done and adjusted her instructions to fit my horse. Maybe 15 minutes later he was softening and rocking back on his hindend for me! We quit on that and I had instructions to begin a couple rides a week with these exercises then take him on a trail ride for fun. I guess its working!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Lock n' Load

Lock n' Load.


The name of this blog is, of course, horse related. Everyone has heard the phrase at some point or another and its pretty fun to say too. A couple years ago I was heading into the hunter ring to do my first course of the show and Jazz was being antsy. I was calm for the first time that day. My nerves always leave in the few minutes before my class for some reason. Jazz didn't want to go in the ring and was throwing a temper tantrum so my trainer took a rein and led us in. As we walked in I reach down, patted his neck and whispered "its ok boy. we got this. come on now, let's lock and load." It doesn't really make sense but for some reason the phrase stuck and different variations are whispered before each course and sometimes on course if I can feel him starting to falter.


Lock n' Load. The phrase makes me feel like Jazz and I are unstoppable.

First CT Show!

Combine Training is a shortened version of 3-day eventing. It consits of a dressage test and show jumping round. Dressage consists of an exact sequence of movements ridden in an enclosed (20x40 or 20x60) arena. The test is judged by one or more judges who are looking for balance, rhythm and suppleness and most importantly, obedience of the horse and its harmony with the rider. Each movement in the test is scored on a scale from 0 to 10, with a score of "10" being the highest possible mark and with the total maximum score for the test varying depending on the level of competition and the number of movements. Therefore, if one movement is executed terribly, it is still possible for a rider to get a good score if he reorganizes and does well in the following movements. Show jumping tests the technical jumping skills of the horse and rider, including suppleness, obedience, fitness and athleticism. In this phase, 12-20 fences are set up in a ring. These fenc.es are typically brightly colored and consist of elements that can be knocked down. This phase is also timed, with penalties being given for every second over the required time. Penalties are also added for refusals, run-outs, circles or moving backwards.

Anyway, Jazz and I spent two years training hunter/jumpers together. Before that, I did crazy riding on Largo for three years and he trained hunter/jumpers for the same amount of time. Neither of us have ever done anything like a dressage test. Ever. Never ever. Next to no training in it either. Hunter/jumper and lower level show jumping on a naturally forward horse have a fair amount in common so I wasn't particually worried. Plus, we have done two SJ shows before. The dressage was definintly intimidating though. Jazz has not been trained to go on the bit (yet) and has a tendency to get hollow through the back when I take contact which kills any chance of round and supple movement. We gave it a try anyway. I spent the 3 days before COMPLETELY flipping out and obsessivly running through my dressage test (Beginner Novice Test A) in my head and on scraps of paper at school. The night before and morning of, I was crazed. Horse shows, even the schooling shows like this one was, are always stressful for me but this dressage test had me freaked.

We got there and the first horse I see is gorgeous. A big dark bay with a braided mane along with a beautiful black leather saddle/bridle combo. His rider is wearing full formal attire. White breeches, black coat, white shirt and stock tie. I glance down at my show clothes: navy blue polo, black tall boots and tan breeches. The information sheet had said attire was to 'casual but neat'. I'll put this out here now, I HATE being underdressed about as much as I hate being late. Both are major reasons that often contribute to me freaking out at horse shows. Now, both my horse and I were seriously underdressed. I didn't have my coat and don't even own an acceptable dressage saddle. The hour and a half up to my test consisted of unloading Jazz, grooming, tacking up and flexing practice. Each of these activities was broken up by me having to sit down and remember to breath. Jazz couldn't have cared. He was busy with his favorite hobby: eating. Then up and on to ride. The dressage arena was running 30 minutes EARLY so our quiet, relaxed 40 minute warm up was crammed into 10. At least I wasnt late. While riding the course, I thought of nothing but Jazz and the pattern. It wasn't perfect, no where near, but we had both tried and it worked for me. We had mostly 6s with a few 5s thrown in for a score of 41.6. We had the comments I was expecting "above bit, counter bent, no frame, needs to be rounder, fell in, ect..." We stayed on course though and Jazz was confident in what he had done. After we left the ring, I started hyperventilating but it could have been a lot worse.

A short wait and bridle change later, we were ready for show jumping. By then it had started raining and the warm up area was grass. The ground got slick fast so I kept out warm up short. Jazz already has had one major slip that landed a girl in the hospital. I was not looking for a repeat showing. We hung around the ring for a bit waiting for the jump heights to be raised and checked then went in for out 2'6" course. We picked up a trot then canter and I immediatly new this was going to be a good run. Jazz found his pace right off and we were gone. The ring was getting messy from the rain and the jumps were hardly 8 feet wide but I don't remeber ever thinking that on course. On course, my thoughts were only on Jazz and the fences. With him, its all I need to think about. I do part job and he does his. We put a solid course together and I was proud of him.

Another, shorter wait later, and I was in the ring doing a second course. This one was just for kicks but a slight miscomunication had me going over 3' fences instead of the 2'9" I had signed up for. We hadn't schooled anything bigger than 2'9" in months but I was confident we could figure it out. Our course started out with me playing it safe (safe = slow) which resulted in eating (badly chipping) the first 3 fences. After that I just gave Jazz his head a let him decide what pace to use. I simply pointed him to each fence and stayed out of his face. Jazz set his own pace and took the jumps as he was comfortable. Most of them were really good.

After that we made a beline for the trailer and quickly loaded up to go home. Jazz got a bunch of carrots and hay for the ride home and even more once we arrived back at the barn. His behavior for the day was very good and I feel like we both learned something and gained a whole bunch of confidence from taking a chance and trying somethng new today. Can't wait for the next chance!

Videos of the day are coming!

First Post

Hey! My name is Katie and this blog has no true purpose. It is simply a place to do one of my favorite pastimes: writing. Most posts will be about my horses and my family's new farm but as for the rest, I have no idea. Keeping an open mind.


To start with, my horses are my life. No doubt about it. My first horse was Largo, a 16 year old orney buckskin quarter horse. We had some great times together and lots of stories to tell. We will continue to be partners in crime once we are both living on the family farm, but for now, he lives the easy life of full retirement. After three years of riding Largo, I was gifted with my current horse, Jazz.


Jazz is the most amazing animal I have ever come across. He isn't the best trained horse out there, not by any stretch, but he has more heart than any I know. He was a wild child nine year old when I was gifted with him 3 years ago. He was an off-the-track thoroughbred with hunter/jumper training and a flair for theatrics. Now, nearing age 13, he has transformed into a level headed show horse who puts up with the crazy ideas of an active, often creative and determined 15 year old.

These two horses will both soon live on my family's gorgeous new farm. The un-named 7 acre plot of land will undoubtly play an intrumental part of in this blog. My horse story.

And apparently there is no tab key on here.... saddness....