Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Happy Birthday Harley!

14 years young

Harley was born just a few months before I graduated high school.  I was going off to college and riding a huge Hanoverian/TB mare, but little did I know, my heart horse was a sweet, little, buckskin quarter horse who was busy growing and finding his way to me.  After almost nine years, we finally met and we have not been apart for very long ever since.  I am forever grateful for my husband's encouragement to just "go for it".  Having waited since the age of three to buy my own horse, it was difficult to know when was the right time.  After five years and counting, it turns out that Harley-time is always the right time.

Happy Birthday Harley!

Thanks for being my 
dressage horse, 
trail horse, 
bareback/trick/circus pony,
wild mustang,
black stallion,
beloved pet, 
and most importantly, 
my heart horse. 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Riding Reflection: Working To An Ideal


Harley felt great yesterday.  We started out with a ten minute walk on the buckle.  Then, I picked up my half of the contact and Harley picked up his.  He has such a nice way of softly arching his neck and touching the bit.  He feels like a horse who knows his job.  We worked some circles, leg yield, and half-pass away from the wall, all in walk.  I tried to feel him lift and cross each hind and front leg.  I didn't want any rush in the movement.  We were still warming up our bodies.

"Take time opening your shoulder to the left, Harley."

I watched his ears carefully.  They stayed level as I felt the inside rein meeting my outside seat bone and leg.  Harley listens for the half-pass.  Lateral work feels like the riding equivalent to puzzles.  I think he likes it.  I like it, too.  After a few steps to the left, I sent him straight ahead and he anticipated by starting to go sideways to the right.  I accepted his idea and asked him to leg yield away from my inside leg back to the track.  I could feel him thinking.  Now, we had warmed up our minds.

I asked for trot and Harley picked up the first step nicely, maintaining his half of the contact.  Yes!  That nice first transition is still a novelty.  I am trying not to take it for granted, because it used to be pretty raw, not like the elegant transition he is offered this time.  We stayed large at first and then worked some circles.  The energy was flowing really smoothly.  I kept my thumbs pointing at the bit and he motored along with a consistent frame.  I kissed him into canter and he found his rhythm almost immediately.  Little snorts escaped his nostrils at the end of each stride.  I love the staccato they create.  I gently hugged his sides with my lower legs in time with the canter.  I melted my seat and encouraged him to lift his back.  Harley was a workhorse.  He wanted to just keep going.  The canter and the contact in the bridle became steadier as I felt his back fully release.  We returned to trot and his back stayed with me, but he started to "over-flow" himself.  This feels like he is pushing just a bit too much for the amount that he can carry.  He feels very round, but with the scale tipped too far forward.  I gently half-halted on the outside rein as I sat in the posting trot to encourage him to shift some of the weight to his hindend.  He understood and found the strength to lift himself up a little more.  The sensation was awesome.  He was working at the edge of his balance, but he seemed to understand and wanted to try.  It is possible for a horse to want to improve as an athlete?  After a short time and a great effort, I asked him to walk and we called it a ride.  He blows my mind.

A+ for Harley

The kids are studying Newton's Laws right now.  Once a net force is applied, additional force is not required to keep an object in motion.  Although, we are not living in a frictionless environment or weightlessness, it is nice to image this physics concept when riding your horse.  Apply the aids to go forward once and then your horse should continue on.  He has overcome the collective inertia of himself and his rider, so he should not need additional aiding to keep up the pace.  His inertia is what makes transitions such hard work and so effective for conditioning.  He must apply as much force with his muscles to transition down as he does to transition up and skipping gaits requires even more strength.  Once the horse is moving, it is, in theory, easier for him to keep going.  The large muscles are all close to his body, leaving the tendons and ligaments of his lower legs free to return elastically to their starting position as another stride begins.  The fluidity and effortlessness is remarkable to experience as a passenger.  I find myself imaging that the purpose of dressage is to get the horse as close to the ideal as possible.  The physical ideal.  The physics ideal.  Combine this with a living, breathing, feeling, responding creature and you truly have a recipe for wonderment. 

Friday, March 23, 2012

Headshots and Health Report

A friend recently took some photos at the farm.  I was not expecting a photo-shoot, which was basically spontaneous as we walked to the barn, but, thankfully, my horse was very clean for just coming out of the paddock!  What a Good Boy.


Thank you so much for the photos!

This week has been hectic and stressful.  Unfortunately, I was on the phone with the vet earlier in the week, because Harley was not feeling well.  He was going off his feed and acting like his tummy hurt.  Harley has never colicked before and only refused dinner when he was ill last December.  The vet came out and did an exam.  He was bright-eyed and social by the time our vet arrived.  Nothing like presenting a perfectly healthy and  happy-looking "child" to the doctor, although I am not complaining!  We are not really sure what the problem was.  He could have had a low-level colic, was having trouble with the heat, as it has been unseasonably warm here, or something else which is not obvious at the moment.  Of course, we will all be keeping an eye on him and I am happy to report that he has been eating his dinner voraciously since his exam.  I can't help feeling nervous about it, but I am confident that Harley will let me know if something is not right.  When I was wondering if I should call the vet and asked this question aloud, Harley started raising his head and neck high in the air and doing the Flehmen response over and over again.  It was not your typical "Look at me.  I am cute." behavior, it was definitely more like "Look at me.  I am acting weird, so you notice that I do not feel normal."  My vet trusted my judgement.  She said that I know my horse and he knows that I will listen to him.

Thankfully, the vet's visit was positive and yielded unexpected delight.  She was raving about Harley's weight.  She said that he is a "6"!  What?!  I think that she was being overly generous, because she knows how difficult it has been to get him to put on weight.  Between his teeth, his metabolism, and his high-energy personality, putting condition on him has not been easy.  I never in a million years thought that my horse would gain weight over the winter.  That alone tells you how mild our weather was this year.  The downside is that we barely had a hard-freeze, so there are a lot of plants and other organisms that simply did not die or go dormant.  Pollen, fungi, and other pesky critters will probably be a problem early this year.  I have already found a couple ticks on Harley and his paddock mate is having some issues with his skin, probably from the persistent mud and the microbial life which it is certainly housing.  Let's just say that the vet was very busy during her barn visit.  As a teacher, I know what it is like to be bombarded with questions, but even I was amazed by how my vet just takes everything in stride and at the end of an already long day.  I do not think that I could do her job.  There are no "breaks" when you are a vet, especially when you have your own business.

Who is this round pony?  Looking good, Mr. Harley!