A Collection of Updates

Who’s that big red working horse? Oh shoot, that’s my filly girl, Sheza, excelling at Moore Horses!

 Scrappy’s saddle rubs are growing hair back beautifully with the aid of Dy’s Liquid Bandage, and in his off time he is glorying in his breed transformation to a pinto poopaloosa.

Wonderful endurance friends stepped up for me big time in the last week, and I am so very grateful once again both for the great community and camaraderie present in the sport of endurance, but for the silly social networking site Facebook, which has enabled so many horse and tack purchases, new connections, learning opportunities, and hey look–2 treeless saddles to try!
Sensation English and Sensation Hybrid. Thanks LCT!!!

 ***Crazy Wiener Dog interlude!****

my husband crossing a fork of the river with the pups

tired wieners are good wieners! 😉
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Five years ago this week I drove a few hours north to check out a craigslist ad that I had been looking at off and on for months. The horse I went to see was a 12(ish) year old, 14.3 hand(not!), Arabian(?) gelding with an unblazen face–and the unlikely name of Blaze. He pranced and trumpeted and bucked at the canter on our short test ride and when we got back to the barn I declared “Sold!” and spent an hour trying to get him to load in my 2 horse straight. 
Blaze the day he arrived at our then-rental, May 2009
Since that perhaps inauspicious beginning Blaze has pranced through gymkhanas, sorted cows, given many a child their first horseback ride, taken my mom and husband on special rides with me, ponied many the project and youngster horse, gone thousand+ conditioning/trail miles with many good friends, and completed 190 AERC Limited Distance miles (25-30 mile rides at a time) with me all over northern California. 
cache creek ridge ride LD 2011
Georgia riding Blaze who is telling past project Joey to STAY for me
My niece Araceli riding Blaze

 Wild West 2013 Blaze completed 2 LDs

 He has a farm plug walk, a kidney pounding trot, a build that makes people call him Fat even when you can see his ribs–and he’s the best darn little horse I’ve ever had. I have a big grin as I type this just thinking of Blaze, and that’s even after having perhaps the most frustrating and ridiculously slow ride on him ever yesterday. It simply doesn’t matter what this fella throws at me, all he has to do is turn that big soft eye at me and I’m melty again.

see look, RIBS! as well as that luscious belly

 once you hide the ribs any notion of svelte is long gone but he’s so adorable ❤

A of GoPony had mailed me a full cheek Myler bit to try out so I rode Blaze in that yesterday and that was the most satisfactory part of the ride for sure. He carried the bit nicely and responded to it very well with no giraffey shenanigans and A was kind enough to sell me the bit after I decided I liked it! Scrap will try it next as he has been bumped back from the hackamore and has been going pretty well in the same 3 piece Herm Sprenger snaffle that Blaze was. Tack hoarder and expert friends rock!
Blazey rocks our first Myler
 I will attribute the appallingly slow pace of the ride yesterday to a surprisingly humid day (both horses were *soaked* after 10 miles), a bad pairing of horses in Blaze and Willow as neither of them is a forward leader, Blaze being barefoot in the front which he milks tragically despite always going barefoot at home and in the hinds– and finally the gigantic pee that Blaze desperately took in the cross tie stall when we got home. He’s not a great drinker so he had an electrolyted mash with breakfast hay, drank and ate and pooped wonderfully out on the ride, but just had NO forward momentum. I pedaled my little legs off and vacillated between extreme frustration and concern that he was dying, but when N’s Willow finally decided to trot in the lead for a bit Blaze immediately perked and *charged* forward in fine fettle, so I decided that 1) he was dogging me and 2) he probably had to pee. I did of course pull off trail, spent time on foot, we stopped to graze a few times; he certainly had chances to pee but he held it, and it sucked for all involved. In a perfect world I would have stayed out there til he peed and/or got his act together but we were all just done after 10 miles so we called it a day.
lovely day for a plod 😉

 Yet another great buddy helped me out and we have now finally gotten RC Rory’s fecal run, 3 different ways no less, and concluded that she has a low dose of worms that is totally safe to be treated with a standard dewormer like the fenbendazole Safeguard dewormer that I just happened to buy the other day! Woohoo, progress! Rory has shed out quite a bit more and is finally getting some shine to her but her ribs are still showing and I was nearly certain she came with worms but didn’t want to dose her until I was sure where we were at.

Treeless saddles to be tried, a boarder filly coming home Wednesday, Sheza done with training and coming home in a few weeks, ah, the fun never stops! 🙂

Celebrating, and Not

Yesterday was my 27th birthday and today is my 4th wedding anniversary. My mom is on her way  here for a couple of days’ visit this morning and the sun is shining beatifically despite a wild wind that hasn’t entirely quit for days now.

Here’s Sheza the other day, doing wonderfully with April at Moore Horses, and just confirmed to be staying for another 30 days of brain boot camp:

9 month old RC Rory is finally starting to look better, shedding out her Nebraska fluff and gaining weight. Her legs go on for miles it seems!

morning filly yoga

There are indeed many things to be joyful about and grateful for this day, but going forward with my intended ride schedule doesn’t number among them. After a final Decider test ride on Scrappy this past Saturday I have thrown in the towel on attending NASTR 75 (and thus hopes for the Triple Crown this year).

I’ve been updating the blog with my recent saddle issues, but here’s a synopsis:

*Happy Scrappy goes great in western Abetta saddle for 2 Lds and 20 miles of an RO’ed 50 last fall

*I decide I miss riding English, the Abetta fenders tweak my knee, and impulsively trade my Specialized Eurolight (didn’t like the narrow twist anyway) for a 17″ seat wide tree Frank Baines All Purpose saddle in January of this year.

*Scrappy flies delightfully down the trail in a saddle that seems to fit us both great for the next approx 4 months (in winter hair). His sweat marks are pretty darn good but not picture perfect,

*April 5th Nevada Derby 50,  Scrap finishes with matching sore spots on his back under my seat bones, nowhere near future rub marks and most likely due to Surprise!-traveling inverted like a giraffe (which is since being addressed with lateral/bitted work)

*1 mellow 8 mile jaunt from home a week after the 50 to stretch his legs, no real sweat pattern or exertion, nothing noticed

*3.5 weeks after Derby 50 I ride my first hot (in the 90s), hilly, moving out 15 miles of the year on a now shed-out Scrappy. Not back sore afterwards but saw the sweat pattern looked less even than has previously when saddle comes off. Get home, wash him, and with the hair clean and swirling see PINK bald patches revealed, perfectly matching, behind the shoulder where the uneven sweat marks were.

*1 week later, Have hissy fit. Assess tack room. With Trailmaster and Abetta we still have 2 viable options, huzzah! Put Abetta on Scrappy and realize it in no way fits at all anymore. Play with Specialized Trailmaster fit, goop up rub marks, reintroduce crupper, and do short but hilly 5 mile ride from home. Back, spots, and saddle fit seem good, so 2 days later goop the spots up again and ride 14 miles at the lake to see if there is any hope of getting to NASTR. Post ride reveals left side mark, which had grown some callused skin already, fine, while right side looks more pinked out.

The hair immediately in/around these pink areas is cruddy and wants to be shed out. I guess that’s the dead hair wanting to escape?   I have little to no experience with saddle rubs previously and I am totally appalled that I have matching pink bald patches on my horse now. Never were the rubs/bald spots painful but I can’t in good conscience ever walk into a ride camp with an underweight, tack galled, or otherwise NQER* horse, so there it is.

Well at least underweight is never a problem 😉

Now what? A few weeks (or however long) til I like what I see hairwise on those spots, and back to the drawing board on saddle fit. We’ll catch a 50 later in the season when we’re sorted out and in the meantime there are always other horses needing riding and training. Onward!

*Not Quite Extra Right, my personal qualification for sending in those dollars and asking my horse to carry me an inordinate number of miles

Rushcreeks: Yay and Neigh

I think I’ve cleared this up on the blog previously but just in case I didn’t, a reminder that Rushcreek Aurora will be called Rory around the barnyard. It was a nickname my birth father called me as a kid and something I haven’t used or heard since; it seems an appropriate nickname for this new little filly since we certainly can’t both march around being Aurora’s. 😉
The first 2 days Rory had eyes only for the herd. The third day she began to watch my movements around the property. By the fourth day she had begun immediately noting my voice and heading for the gate, helped into that habit by hog-let fenceline sharer Desire, who perv-whinnies at me and rushes the gate every time I appear in case I’m en route to fulfilling my sole purpose on earth, i.e. feeding her. 
oh Hey, morning, whatcha doin?
pause for scratches

sleep baby chew coming to investigate

Rory’s hooves need a trim pretty badly, having never been done, but I don’t feel the need to tangle with baby legs until she’s ready to present them to me, just like I wouldn’t want to rush and jump on a horse until the foundation was there. As my horse trainer says, “If you can’t run a rope all over it, you probably don’t want to get on/under it.” For now I haven’t even haltered Rory again since her arrival, just spending time with her at liberty, bringing her around to me theory of scratches and human interaction. She loves to be rubbed all over her head, neck, back, and haunches, and each day I run my hands lower on each leg and between her front legs and belly, the ticklish spots. She squirts away when alarmed but always circles right back for more.

She is also a fan of naps! And naps taken in/next to breakfast are generally preferable:

***Crazy Wiener dog Interlude!!***

Wilbur laying in a ditch

Kodiak excavates the other end  😉

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I had planned to spend what was a gorgeous, sunny, not-too-hot Sunday yesterday riding *the other Rushcreek* (totally tickled to type that! ❤ ) Scrap at the lake, seeing how my next-in-line saddle fit was going.

ho-hum, saddle fitting is boring

His fully shed out coat coupled with a hot 15 mile ride last week showed me pink rubs behind the shoulder with the Frank Baines that I had never seen before. I’ve been riding him in the FB just the last handful of months and he was going great in it aside from some backsoreness after finishing the Derby 50, which  I had potentially attributed to his surprise rushy high headed giraffe way of going during that ride (also being addressed). I suppose with the look of the rub spots now they might well have been brewing under the winter coat right along. Sigh.

fleabitten Scrappy grey makes saddle marks easy to see! not!

Easier to see wet, or highlighted
With the NASTR 75 mile  literally 3 weeks away my next saddle solution was to go to the Specialized Trailmaster I use on Blaze. As I stared gloomily into my tack room thinking about the unsquashed fitting cushions of the correct width that I *didn’t* have, I realized that I still did have the leather western Abetta saddle that we happily finished both very hilly days at Mendo Magic with. I was super excited about that possibility and got my husband to help me shanghai stirrup leathers on the Abetta instead of fenders–then I put the saddle up on Scrappy without a pad and discovered that he had very much indeed changed shape with all that fitness in the last few months and the Abetta didn’t fit in the shoulders at all. 

@#&$!!

Specialized it is, then. I dug out the old 3/4″ fitting cushions I used for Desire and gloomily assessed them. I knew the cushions were too thick, except where they were too thin from apparent stirrup bar pressure..
I was still determined to piece together some sort of fit, but next realized I’d butchered every shim ever and there weren’t even going to be shims to use–until I remembered my last hoarder spot, the ride vet bag in the horse trailer, where I found these, complete with god light and angels singing:
Except for that whole wrong fitting cushions part. After making a bad fit worse with the shims, I decided it was actually a mighty fine day for brushing and hoof trimming instead. And my tack room looked like this, post World War Saddle:

 I went whinging off to my Facebook friends and Funder promptly replied that she had 1/2″ unsquashed Specialized fitting cushions and would be UPS’ing them to me in the morning. Endurance buddies!! ❤ ❤

So no riding this past weekend, but after chatting with Funder, somewhat calmer horse contemplation, and now, watching for the UPS man obsessively.

Sweet, no work! Scrap doesn’t mind

 Rambo getting Scrappy’s scraps

RC Rory thinks it’s not too shabby being a California girl!

 Hey Human!

Scrap on Trail and Saddle Stuff

Scrappy and I got out to the lake trails this morning to ride with C and Sonny, local riding buddies of mine that for one reason or another I hadn’t hit the trail with in well over a year. C had only met Scrappy once when I first got him last summer and Sonny has come a longlong way since I last rode with them, and it was really interesting to discover that the previously power trotting Sonny who I was sure would leave Scrappy in the dust has totally relaxed and was just our speed. The boys rated really well together and liked snacks and drink breaks nearly as much as one another. 😉
Temperatures are in the mid to high 80s today but fortunately the rangers cleaned and refilled troughs *while* we were out on the ride so the filthy trough we spurned on the way out was clean and topped off on the way back, just after a big hill climb. Perfecto! 

I without question had a great ride, but I also had a few Laugh and Shake Your Head moments. You know, those things that are either so ridiculous, or in this case, so ridiculously contradictory to something that you just said that all you can do is laugh and shake your head.

Examples:

Me: “Yeah, he’s pretty sure footed and takes really good care of us!”

(Scrappy almost face plants)

 a few miles later..

Me: “Yes, I love this GPS, awesome battery life!”

(a mile later notice the GPS died)

a few more miles later..

Me: “Yeah loving this saddle! It’s so comfortable and been doing well for both of us.”

(get home, wash horse, with filth gone and clean slicked out hair swirling around I see obvious pink rub spot behind left shoulder)

The plan? Break out Blaze’s Specialized Trailmaster and the bucket of shims and see what I can come up with coz I’ve got my first 75 miler in 3.5 weeks…

Filly Photo Updates (big Sheza news!)

Rc Rory experienced her first CA thunderstorm/lightning/hail/rain storm not long after arrival. With typical Rushcreek aplomb she marched her tiny self into her open shed alone, let her ears do the worrying, and addressed FOOD.

The next morning the rain stopped and she had her first California lie down with Aunt Desire watching over her. 
*Sheza Update!*
She’s gotten more gorgeous than ever as the baby fat melts away. She is a total teacher’s pet and is doing wonderfully.
working out the weeees

down to business

Rory has been quite sure from moment one that Desire is her source of comfort, indeed for the first 2 days I could all but wave my hands in front of Rory saying “helllooo” and she would barely give me her attention for looking at Desire.  On the third morning her attention had started to come around to me. She isn’t into treats yet, the carrot bites I offered her the first full day here still lie on the ground where she abandoned them, and she bit and dragged the bucket of wet mash offered that day but didn’t deign to try it. Still she’s been a hay eating machine and drinking great throughout, and having experienced Scrappy’s askance eyeballing of some of my notions of spoiling horses, I’m not too bothered that she isn’t keen on treats yet. 
baby butt ❤
 *Desire* likes treats though, so I’ve been whistling her up and giving her micro rewards since Rory arrived and by today I could see that Rory’s eyeballs were firmly fixed on me as I moved around the property instead of just the horses. She isn’t spooky about hoses and water and things that used to make Sheza put on a show, which is interesting. She now already marches up to me if I come to the gate and kiss and she boldly walks at my side when I bring hay in for feeding, but she TOUCHMENOT!s if you turn your energy *at* her, which from her bold attitude gives me the impression is more bad/permitted habit than true shyness. 

The forecast calls for sun and sudden escalating temperatures starting tomorrow so I hope to get some good work in with Rory, get more of that wild hair shed out for the heat, and work toward getting those hooves trimmed up!

**Sheza Update!!!**
Sheza had her first go under saddle with a rider solo today!!! She was reported to be quiet and relaxed about it and I think the photos certainly reflect that. So proud of my girl and grateful to April Moore of Moore Horses for doing such a great job with her.

Welcome Home Rushcreek Aurora!

An adorable bay filly with a big freckled blaze arrived at the end of my driveway last night. It was 6 months wait since I committed to this little darling last fall and I can finally say Phew, it was worth the wait. She was nervous to be caught in the trailer box stall by the calm, friendly shipper (check out Lightstar Horse Transportation for your shipping needs, they ROCK!) but I had a really good feeling as I watched the adorable, leggy 9 month old Rushcreek Aurora step bravely off the trailer 1500 miles from her birthplace– and go right to work on the California grass. 🙂

 She was big eyed and taking in all the smells as any horse that arrives here does but she was also bold in a very Scrappy way, eyeballing things and then decidedly marching right up to them. We had a mini leading lesson as hasn’t had much ground work done with her but she gave to pressure nicely with little resistance. The moment she heard Desire’s whinny her head snapped up and she marched in her direction, obviously certain that there was a momma horse and she would be okay.

settling in last night

 This morning she startled out when I walked around the corner but immediately trotted toward me and came up to sniff my hand at the gate.

She certainly is a Rushcreek in the groceries and drinks stereotype, every time I look out she is eating or drinking just as often, which is something I distinctly remember saying about Scrappy after his arrival.

breakfast

She wasn’t thrilled that Desire wandered away from their shared fence line to graze in the late morning and had a chat with the hot wire on that fence line, whereupon she quickly decided that hanging out in the other corner next to Blaze was a mighty fine alternative. She’s no slouch in the brain department, that is clear already. She can, however, call Desire on the run with one adorable baby whinny; that broodie instinct is there and obvious. ❤

she’s majorly shedding and butt high and can use some weight but what a cutie

 Filly fun!

I also heard from Sheza’s trainer that Sheza is feeling confident with the program and is doing great, including having been mounted with the saddle on successfully a couple of times now. Ahh, fillies! ❤