Wednesday, October 29, 2008

My photography skills

I just thought I'd share a little bit of the pictures taken in the past few months of horse adventures. Not that I'm a good photographer or anything, but I think a few of them turned out really well!!

[caption id="attachment_343" align="alignnone" width="499" caption="This picture is of Junior, my ex-horse. We asked his new owner Barbara how he was doing a little bit ago, and she actually told us that he is up for sale!! So, Junior is currently in need of a home.  But, man . . . he looks SOOOO pretty in this picture! He never got that clean for me, lol! (all credit for this picture goes to Barbara)."][/caption]

[caption id="attachment_344" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="Here's Stella (name sound familiar? I wrote a post about her before)."]Here's Stella (name sound familiar? I wrote a post about her before).[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_347" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="What do you think? Good . . . bad . . . ugly?"]I tweaked the picture quite a bit, but what do you think? Is it art?[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_348" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="Here is Indianna, the Friesian that was one of the runaways we 'rounded up'."]Here is Indianna, the Friesian that was one of the runaways we 'rounded up'.[/caption]

Friday, October 24, 2008

Recent Going-ons

Sorry about the non-updates. I just haven't got around to blogging lately.

Currently, Moose is the alpha in our pasture. So, interestingly enough, Dancer is at the bottom!! And if you know Dancer, that's extremely unusual: shes a very dominant horse. Yet, I can't say I blame her, for she probably feels like a midget around the other two. Hehe. Oops.

But now Ms. Bella!! She's definitely a hungry girl, holy cow!! The other day I caught her standing on some planks of wood next to the barn eating weeds. I guess drafts really do eat more. . . anyways, some observations:

  1. Bella goes on adrenaline quickly, especially when taken away from her buddies.

  2. She is pretty herd-bound, though that might change in the coming weeks. As of now, if her buddies are out of sight, then that's cause for concern.

  3. She doesn't like the carrot stick. I'm guessing that's because she was trained by an Amish man to drive. (no offense intended if anyone's Amish. On second thought, if you were Amish you probably wouldn't be reading this right now. Never mind)

  4. She's comfort-oriented, though when she is comfortable, food becomes a priority.


Okay, enough about Bella! Moosey's doing well, too. I'm still a little lost about what to do with him, exactly. But at least I've realized that if I get confused, or don't know what to do in a situation 'Stick to Me' really helps. I'm not good at it, per say, but the rules are simple and easy to grasp! So, Moose is going to get quite good at that! Anyways, I've still been spending a lot of undemanding time with him. I wanted to take him out and let him graze the other day, but it's hard with more horses here. They all want to get out, since 'the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.'

And I just had a real 'yahoo!!' moment. Our library has Parelli Level 3!! (Not that I need it anytime soon, it's just nice to know!!)

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

It's a girl!!

Yes, my mom got a pony! (YAY!!). Her name is Bella, she's a black 6 year old Percheron. At the moment, her horsenality is RBI. Though, it's not bad at all: she's pretty mild (it's mostly confusion), but such a sweetie, though!

Anyways, Bella was trained by the Amish to drive and was later trained to ride.  She's supposed to be 16.1hh, but she doesn't seem that tall to me. I think she's more like 15.3, but who knows? We're going to be getting her on Sunday. Unfortunately, my mom thinks it's a good idea to leave at 7am. . . whatever happened to sleeping in during weekends? Jeesh! So, it'll be about a good 2.5 hour drive to pick her up.

So, yay! Another pony, finally! Mom's a bit nervous, though. As she keeps saying, this is her first horse "in 3 years and 5 months, as of Monday." I think it's a bit ridiculous that she kept track, but anyways I'm still excited for her! I'll have more details once she arrives.

[caption id="attachment_323" align="aligncenter" width="500" caption="An older picture of Bella! She's such a sweetie!"]An older picture of Bella! She's such a sweetie![/caption]

Monday, October 13, 2008

Karen Rholf clinic

[caption id="attachment_303" align="alignright" width="300" caption="Noelle Weiss with Coco and Kris Fulwhiler with her gooorgeous Friesian Wouter"]Noelle Weiss with Coco and Kris Fulwhiler with her gooorgeous Friesian[/caption]

Just got back from 7.5 hours of intense intstruction! That's enough to fill my brain, though, that's for sure! It sure was interesting!

Well, Karen started off doing an interesting simulation about Finesse, while entertaining us with the concept that Freestyle lives within Finesse.  The example she showed us was about Finesse being similar to dancing. Let's say I'm a bad dancer, and my dancer partner also isn't that great. Well, casually we can both dance together and not look so bad. But if we tried ballroom dancing it'd be a complete disaster! Now, if I was dancing with a good dance partner, ballroom dancing would be a breeze. My only job would be to keep out of his way! Well, these 2 types of dance are meant to be Freestyle and Finesse. In Freestyle, you're not really connected to each other, and it can be more laid-back and still look alright. But ballroom dancing is the real test of your partnership.

The simulation she demonstrated elaborated on this. Kris was the 'horse' and Karen the 'rider', so they held onto a pair of reins accordingly. She showed what it was like if Kris pulled back, and Karen braced in response. It pulled them both off balance, so they balanced on each other to make up for it. Then, she showed the right way to do things: stay in balance, and if the horse pulls back 'think forward' (sorry for the bad explanation). Also, another interesting note: when you use your hands in fists to hold the reins, don't make a fist. Make a box intead! When you make a fist, you use muscles in your forearm, and it causes your arm to get tight. If you instead think of making a box with your hand and wrapping (rather than grabbing) your hand around the reins, it uses muscles only in your palm. This makes it so that your arms aren't braced to begin with!

Well, from there, the riders got their horses ready. Karen told everyone to pick a yield to work on and get it going pretty well - Phase 1 or 2. The yield could be anything - going backwards, HQ yield, FQ yield, whatever you

[caption id="attachment_308" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="From left to right: Sherri Kuss on Breeze, Dave Anderson,  and Janet. "]Dave Anderson is in the middle. Don't know the other two riders' names.[/caption]

wanted!! Well, Dave was having trouble getting his horse to do a HQ yield. So, Karen hopped on! She got things going really well on him: the horse had a lot of try, and Karen said he just needed to learn that it was okay to think. He was used to people doing things for him! Well, after a little while Dave' s horse was doing the yield fantastically! So, once Karen worked out the communication, the rest was easy. By the time she was done, we got to break for lunch.

After lunch the private sessions began (oooh. . . ahhhh). During Dave's session, Karen had him try to back up at frequent intervals, because his horse leaned on the forehand. Also, the biggest thing they addressed was that his horse had a tendency to lean on the reins. So, she had him switching between Finesse and Freestyle a lot to get the horse to stop leaning. But they didn't do too much of it: Karen said that if his horse has been leaning on the reins for a long time, going around a circle even one time holding his own neck up would be hard for him.

Sheri Kuss and Breeze played with sideways. Sheri was extremely advanced in steering, for Breeze followed her focus REALLY well. I don't think Sheri ever needed her reins! Well, in order to get her horse to go sideways Sheri would do a L2 sideways, so her intention was really obvious, but she kept getting left behind the movement. Karen told her to try to make it less obvious (exaggerate to teach, refine as you go along: she needed refining now). Once Karen found out Sheri was really stiff/tight, Karen rode Breeze to see if she could help. Due to the high level of harmony between Sheri and Breeze (a blessing and a curse), when Sheri was tight, then her horse became stiff, also. So, Karen had the pony do a bit of sideways (remembering it was hard for her), and then let her trot off. Though, as soon as she'd get tight in the trot, she did more sideways. Basically, she conveyed the message that if you relax, sideways is easy!

During Noelle's session, they played with keeping Coco's head up. Coco was previously a Western Pleasure horse, and was trained to keep his head down very low and lean on the forehand. So, again Coco needed a lot of backing up. But in this session Karen had Noelle on a circle and pretend it was a clock. So, on her 'clock', at 3, 6, 9, and 12 she would back Coco up. Then, she would immediately go into a canter departure. At first this exercise was all about the backing up, but as they went, Coco started getting much lazier in her canter departures. Karen said Noelle had to get the timing right: it's "get ready, I'm cantering, you should've gone!" So, for a few strides they did that until Noelle got a really good departure and they quit.

Overall, the main theme of Saturday in my mind was "Make yourself comfortable." That seemed to be the thing that Karen really pounded into the horses brains was to be comfortable. For instance, if she pulled on the reins to get the horse to raise his head her attitude wouldn't be "Put your head over here!" it would  be "find a way to relieve the pressure." So, I learned a nice new attitude to take when applying pressure!

Well, I learned a whole assortment of new things. So, if Karen comes next year, I would love to go!! The variety of riders was interesting, because they each were having different problems. So, I'd say it was a pretty good clinic!!

NOTE: the Quote of the Day today was one Karen used in the clinic. I'll leave it up for a few days.

[caption id="attachment_316" align="aligncenter" width="499" caption="Couldn't resist another pic!"][/caption]

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Drumroll please . . .

I have some exciting news!! Yesterday, I went out to take Morrie for a walk. Well, our driveway basically lines the horse's pasture. So, I was walking Morrie down the driveway and Moose picks his head up. And then he whinnies to me, and actually starts trotting to me!!!! :-0 So, he walked with me around the perimeter of the pasture a little bit. I started grinning like a fool (hehe). Heck, I was really excited!! We've finally made a leap of progress!!

Monday, October 6, 2008

One step at a time

Well, Moose and I have made some more progress. He'll now let me itch him which is exciting!! Plus, he's getting a little more LB. He actually turned into the alpha horse and now bosses Dancer around, which is a little suprising. Dancer's been the alpha around here for quite some time. It's quite interesting to see her finally resign her position. Though, smart of her: Moose could squash her with a hoof (lol, jk).

More about the itching thing: his favorite itchy spot is right on the middle of his neck. And he loves treats, too. Moose kicked Dancer out of her stall the other day, because I was trying to give her a treat and not him. Silly guys! So, he's obviously settling in better. Also, Moose is getting a little more accepting. He'll now remain LB when I put the halter on him, which is great news! Before he would kind of freeze and wouldn't move his feet very easily when I walked off.

So, slowly but surely we're getting there. I remember someone saying "If you get their confidence, they'll give you everything else." Currently, that's going to be my main focus. I'm just excited for the guy buried inside: a Dancer in disguise. Oh. . . yippee . . . lol. (hopefully, I won't have the same problems with Moose as I do with Dancer).

And we checked out that other Parelli 'trainer'. I think me and her would get along well, but she's a little too expensive for my liking. So, I'm just going to stick with Shirley (and Vicki, my current lessons instructor) which is fine by me!! :) This lady still wasn't 100% Parelli (she can't be, because she has competition-based clients) and Shirley is, so more power to her!