Posts Tagged With: freestyle patterns

Two shoes thrown in two days

Rocky threw his last remaining shoe this morning. I am borrowing a pair of Easy Boots from a friend … and taking this as a message. Horses always provide feedback, right? Well, I think Rocky’s inability to keep a shoe on for more than two weeks is saying: take ’em off.I haven’t wanted to go barefoot in front because he has special wedge/orthotic full-circle shoes, and whenever he’s had just flat U-shaped shoes, he’s been uncomfortable and lame. The wedge shoes change his posture and his personality because he feels better being a little up on his toes.

But now it’s not the mud sucking them off, it’s the running around in the Back 80 — the grassy hillside behind the Back 40 where they get to spend a couple hours a day now that it’s stopped raining. I think he’s flat-tiring himself and ripping the shoes off.

I always stopped riding him when he lost a shoe because that’s what we did in Los Angeles, but it’s seeming like here the advice is to put a boot on to even him out and ride anyway, especially as I’m only doing the Level 1 Freestyle patterns which are mostly walk with some trot.

I’ve investigated barefoot transitions before, but today I’m researching in more depth, with an eye to how people have taken horses barefoot at Rocky’s age (just turned nine) and with the soundness issue (arthritis in the coffin joint, worse on the left).

Categories: Health | Tags: , , | Leave a comment

Patience is waiting. Not passively waiting. That is laziness. But to keep going when the going is hard and slow – that is patience

Rocky yet again played the perfect family pony this weekend, patiently lugging all three of us around (one at a time) as Dan and Jan learn and I re-learn how to trot comfortably. Dan felt better sitting the trot than posting, while Jan and I prefer to post. Hm, how interesting.

Hug the pony!

I find that explaining things to Dan and Jan helps me clarify what to do in my own body, not just in my own mind and emotions. They are clean slates, fresh wax, no previous horse experience to unlearn or ancient fear to overcome. And Rocky likes them.

Good thoughts for the weekend:

  1. Patterns are everything, because Rocky needs a purpose and I need a plan.

    Whether from the Parelli program or just stating aloud what you’re going to do — weave through the cones then figure 8 at the barrels then half a rectangle then direction change then halt and back up at the bridge — a pattern gives you and Rocky both something to accomplish and feel complete. I told Jan “It doesn’t matter if you zigzag around the entire arena twice, backwards, as long as you keep your belly button pointed at the cone and you end up there.” In saying it aloud to a newbie, it fell into place in my guts how to engage the power of focus, how not to nag the horse, and how to balance consistency (repetition) with variety (new challenges).

  2. I am better at this than I remembered.

    Without the irrational fear I finally let go of — when? October? — I am much better at posting and convincing Rocky that Big Trot is more fun than Evil Trot and Easy Trot is even more fun than that. If I persist through the first awkward minutes, we both get smoother. Letting go of any need to be at any particular skill level riding has also lifted a pressure-stress I didn’t realize was so strong. Becoming creative with obstacles in the arena, and having music on the P.A. system (I love this place!), has made it more fun for horse and human.

  3. Teaching others is how I transition from classroom to laboratory.

    I’m more interested in getting out there and doing, rather than stuck inside reading and watching, when I have buddies to share it with. Teaching is an added bonus as it keeps me completely engaged and helps me strengthen my weak spots so I can Be A Good Example. I think Rocky felt the goodwill and joy all three of us humans were emitting on Saturday, because he stayed mostly engaged and entirely patient.

First posting trot debrief

I should note that I am in no way setting myself up as an instructor, and Dan and Jan both know this is the novice leading the newbie. But it’s so much fun to share the love of horses and the journey of horsemanship, I can’t possibly require friends to study Parelli intensively like I do, nor am I going to say “sure go ride the pony” without teaching them how to communicate with him.

I am worried that he might be getting ouchy in the front again, but if so, it’s too subtle for me to be sure. With the new storm it’s going to be even more difficult to tell as we will continue to be sporadic in how many times we get to move.

Certainly though it’s time to move more — to make the obstacles much more challenging and to do our patterns all at the trot. Both of us need to get our life up if we’re going to make it through the rest of the winter doldrums.

Categories: Freestyle, Language, Leadership | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

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