Crewing Team Chaton: Tevis 2012

Hear about Tevis 2012 from our rider, Karen Chaton, on her blog here: http://enduranceridestuff.com/blog/2012/08/tevis-2012-fun/
Tevis 2012 has come and gone! Preparing to prepare to prepare, wait, mad dash, wait, mad dash, wait, mad dash, Finish! Need I say more?
this is my Off to Crew at Tevis face!

First signs! Yahooo

Driving into Robie. I fear my big diesel truck fared better on the bumpy, DUSTY, road than the (no longer) cherry red Corvette that followed me in!  And yes many “did ya buy that orange truck just for the Renegade occasion?” jokes!  Hard to resist

Found team Chaton, flying the flags as usual 🙂

Quick trial trot out before vetting Bo in on Friday at Robie

Time to vet in! 

Bo and Karen vetting in at Robie on Friday pm

Trot out

 Bo gets his numbers! We’re in!

 I braided Bo’s mane for Tevis. I’ve never hyperventilated while braiding before…Really though crewing for an organized gal like Karen in such a big event, I felt like those braids had to be great!
They all lasted the ride and were still in Sunday morning, fear and awe is good for my braiding skills apparently

We were up at 4 am to get near the front of the line heading into the Robinson Flat vet check. 

Tevis morning

All set up at RF for Karen

Pulsing in at RF, 36 miles in

RF vet check

RF trot out

Booting back up to head out of RF

Now THAT is how a horse leaving a Tevis vet check should look!

Karen’s awesome husband, Dave, BBQing for us spoiled crew folk at Foresthill vet check

Dave and crew member L with Bo at Foresthill, 68 miles in

Clouds came in and the jacket, headlamp, and glow tack came out!

Trot out, Foresthill, 68 miles in

I thought I got a sweet tan but then I took my socks off..

McCann Stadium, Auburn: The Finish Line!

Karen came in at 2:32 a.m., ahead of her 2010 completion time with Bo. Bo’s pulse was 48, he trotted out great, and proceeded to eat 3 mashes in a row without pausing for breath. This, my friends, is an endurance horse!

Bo on Sunday morning, looking great!

This is 10th place rider Alyssa Stalley showing her gelding for the Haggins Cup on Sunday morning. Her gelding was bright and alert, moved loosely, in fact she had a hard time keeping up with him! Hard to believe this horse just did 100 hard miles, too!

What more is there to say? Well, it was an awesome learning experience! Karen is incredibly organized and had lists with her needs/wants for each check written out for us. It made life pretty easy! It was my first time crewing in this high pressure environment and I won’t deny I had a few moments where I wish I was more on top of things, but overall I think we helped out quite a bit and we did our best to make Karen’s day easier. I do hope to complete Tevis some day and it was great to see how things can be done efficiently for horse and rider to get through the holds smoothly. I appreciate the chance to gain this knowledge and aid Karen on her journey to her 4th Tevis completion.

Oh, and did I mention it was fun! I saw lots of friends, old and new, from various parts of the country. I glimpsed Funder lurking with her camera a few times and I met and hung out with Go Pony blog author and Renegade rep Ashley. We had some good times waiting deliriously at the finish line into the wee hours of the morning and again checking out the vendors after the Haggins Cup judging. Karen gave us some crew swag and I did some shopping so I ended the weekend with 3 Renegade shirts, a Renegade hat, and a Tevis 2012 shirt. I love getting t-shirts for stuff, it makes my bulging dresser sad when a ride doesn’t give completion t-shirts! Anyway, it just so happens that my Tevis shirt is a fine wine color that, when paired with my blue breeches, will take my matchy-matchy to yet another level. Yeah, I said it.

Glad to be home, exhausted, I missed my critters..am going into full gear getting Desire going in the Renegades tomorrow. After this weekend I actually have some clue on what a good Renegade fit really looks and feels like, so I’m going to cling to that confidence and see what I can figure out. There might be big riding plans in the near future….*redheadsscheming*

I’m sure Karen will write up her Tevis experience on her own blog and I’ll link it in here when she does. Congratulations to all the Tevis 2012 finishers and for those that didn’t finish, I have a sneaking suspicion you’ll be back to try again. I know I can’t wait to!


postscript:  for any contact lens wearers out there, keeping ’em in for 24 hours in the dusty, hairy madness that is crewing Tevis is not advisable. After Foresthill, take them out and put your glasses on. My dry, sore eyes beg it of you!

Joey Session 6: But My Behind is Behind!

Yesterday Joey was a Good Boy for the trimmer and had his front toes nipped, rasped, and manicured. D rubbed on his hind legs but didn’t do much to the left hind, though he’ll now take it, since she can’t yet work on his right hind.

Today B, our trainer, made it out despite the fact that it was about 100 degrees in the shade. Luckily she comes in the evenings and by then the round pen is shady!


Just WHAT are you doing on my precious right side??

While I understand and appreciate everything B is doing with Joey, in my head I was wondering, “what’s the next breakthrough? or step?” I tend to think analytically and like lists and knowing what is to come. It’s not always the best approach with horse training, in fact one of the things I admire about B is her calm, go-with-the-flow, let the horse show you, approach. She put him in his tack and long lines, which he is good at and is now relaxing wonderfully into, and Joey answered my question of what’s next, what’s the next breakthrough.

Walking quietly off from B in the beginning, first Walk departure! So calm! Look at that head!

Joey’s go to move is, predictably, to flee. Of course horses are flight animals, but Joey has also been low man in the herd for much of his life until he came here 4 months ago, so he is very practiced at fleeing–he had to flee so he didn’t get his little behind whooped! When B started with him it was all trotting, much of it nervous, high headed, and if we got a step of walk we were beyond happy. Today was just so different! Joey was very in tune to B and when he did become uncomfortable, while he would squirt away into a brisk trot, he would stop himself in a matter of a few steps to look/tune in/ask what’s next. Even when B started shuffling her feet, akin to the bunny hop, a suspicious human activity which prompted a panic high speed trot, after about 10 circuits he was stopping to stare, trotting, stopping to stare, and then deciding he wasn’t maybe so scared or impressed by that anymore. He was much more into thinking, investigating. asking, and giving–than fleeing. Huzzah!

What’s next?

Love that trot

I feel pressure to my left..

I think this is what she wants..

Smart Boy

More nice walking

Look at the bend 🙂

 AND THEN! As usual, about 3/4 through the session, Joey got warm, tired, unimpressed, and decided to stop. He seemed quite content standing there, so B sidled over next to and slightly off his right hind. This usually cues a panicked trot departure, as he doesn’t like things behind him, especially on that precious right side. This time he just sort of eyeballed her but didn’t move, so she sidled behind him, still holding the lines. His head went up, nervously, but he stayed with his feet planted and turned his head slightly left to right to watch her on each side of him as she moved slightly.

Peeking right, Hello Joey, he says SHOOT, she’s on that side too, Just breathe man!

He did so wonderfully having her standing behind him a couple of times, so she decided to completely switch it up and take some pressure off. She un-tacked him and let him loose in the round pen to relax, but he was still glued to her, following her around, circling her. It was pretty cute.

Whatcha doing? 

She decided to get up out of the round pen to let him figure out he was on his own.

Where ya going???

 He stood around, kinda confused, then not too concerned. He checked out his tack hanging on the round pen, gave the pad a bite for good measure. As soon as B got back in the pend he was interested:

You’re back, what’re we doing??

To finish up, B worked on running the stick down his right hind leg while he was loose in the round pen. Again, the key to Joey is giving him an escape, an out, and if you do that, he will try his hardest to do well. If you trap him, he goes quickly to panic and could so easily turn to dangerous just in his need to GET AWAY. It’s very rewarding though, because with him, even when he is scared, he returns to try again.

He tries to block her coming to his right side with his head, she blocks him from doing that with the stick as a bar. He can move away forward, but cannot be allowed to move *her* or into her space for his own reasons. 

 His “try” was exhibited in the stick exercise; he would get nervous about the stick running down The Precious (seriously he obsesses over it so much it deserves that title!), trot away forward (never toward or into B), then stop himself and circle right back to B. He did this a number of times and she ended on a quiet, calm stick circuit up and down The Precious, at liberty.  She just turned and walked away without an other word, and that really got Joey’s attention.

You didn’t take/murder/eat The Precious? Where ya going??

 Joey got a bite or two of green grass on his way back up to the cross ties and it was *comical* watching him trying to chew with a bit in for the first time. He was very intent on it, and the bit came out of his mouth later without a blade of grass on it! Impressive

Chompchomp, what’sthat?!, chompchomp

After a bath, a little walk just to change up his routine . See the finger pointing at him? Joey got a little rushy and B said Hey, watch yourself Son. Pretty funny, didn’t see it until I uploaded the photos but it totally captured the discipline moment.

Hallelujah

 “So then they strapped this crap on me, and I had to let them touch The Precious, man, Blaze, it was rough!”

Tevis Time!

I’ve been spending lots of time talking, emailing, printing, and reading about Tevis in the last few weeks and then realized I haven’t actually said a thing about it on my blog. Suddenly here it is coming up on Tevis weekend in just a few days!

I am honored and excited to be crewing for Karen Chaton and her gelding Bo, who completed Tevis 2 years ago together. Karen is incredibly organized and Bo is fit and ready– I can’t wait to be involved in helping them towards another buckle! So here’s the plan:

Heading to Robie on Friday afternoon pm to collect my rider’s gear, crew passes, etc, and returning to Auburn to spend the night and meet up with a carpool to Robinson Flat in the morning. Crewing RF and Foresthill and plan on being at the Finish line in the wee hours! I’ll head home Sunday whenever Karen is done with me.

Hope to see many Facebook/blog/web friends from across the country throughout the weekend and best of luck to all riders, horses, crews and volunteers involved in this exciting event!

Catching Up

Blaze and I joined C and her gelding Sonny at the local Wildlife Area for a mellow ride this morning. We hadn’t seen each other in ages–since Cache Creek in May, I think?–and it was great to take a relaxing ride and catch up. It was Sonny’s first ride back since a problem after a ride last month and today he was a champ, taking the lead for most of the ride (unheard of for him only a year ago), and walking long and low and loose.  He is an athletic guy who knows all the Go and is working on learning the Whoa (and relax). He is making great progress though and even popped right into his trailer to go home. Go Sonny!
Heading out
Year-round creek, sooo nice (but sucks for Boot retention)

Blaze threw me a true stiff buck on our first canter of the day, all the more impressive since we were headed uphill. I hadn’t cantered him since his crowhoppy gymkhana behavior last weekend and he reminded me of it! Little snot. Other than that we just cruised uneventfully, though a Glove did pop off his front hoof when trotting uphill after the deep water crossing. I’ll confess my taping job was pretty shoddy and the tape itself disappeared when the boot came off. Eh, whatevs.
Trail ends on the backside of Collins Lake:
Recruited a random passerby for a photo:
C and Sonny enjoying the day:
A nice ride on a nice day. After riding 3 different horses in the last 3 days I just might take a break tomorrow. My skin is reminding me that it’s had rather a lot of sun lately, while I haven’t gotten sunburned I’m getting my annoying friend the sun rash on my chest and hands after the ride today.

If you’re looking for me tomorrow, I’ll be kicked back in the shade with a good book.

Desire Rides Again!

It’s been 4 weeks since Desire’s last trim and almost 6 weeks since I last rode her. In fact, with one exception, I hadn’t hauled her anywhere off the property since Hat Creek Hustle in early June. And here it is, almost August! I must say that while I missed riding her, my 3 other horses (oh yeah, and life) have been keeping me quite busy. It was great to get another successful LD in on Blaze this month and finally get my filly riding in the trailer. But I was definitely ready/terrified to get Desire back out and on the trail. 
I’ve evaluated her and worked her a handful of times in the last few weeks, just on the ground in the arena and round pen. She had been working completely sound, but I kept chickening out of riding her! She is such a fabulous, fun ride but is 16 years old next month and I am very concerned with her health and happiness over the long term–and boy, there is nothing like a lameness in your teenage endurance horse to throw you for a loop and make you question, well, everything.
 Anyhoo this morning I had a ride planned with N–had told her I didn’t know what color horse I’d be bringing–and I finally bit the bullet and decided to pull Desire to take along. We got an early a.m. hay delivery (huzzah!) and then I set the Specialized up for Desire, loaded her tack, combed the 200 stickers out of her mane and forelock, and off we went.
6 weeks later, she’s still a piglet

I put her in thickly padded Easyboot Epics in the front and her usual Easyboot Gloves in the hind. The theory is that the slim line Gloves weren’t giving her nearly-flat, thin soled front hooves enough protection and since her lameness was inconsistent and confusing, my trimmer and I figured eliminating one potential problem (being footsore vs. muscle/tendon etc sore) might be useful.

Did I mention 6 weeks off meant she was very, erm, “natural,” read filthy..yeah those legs are supposed to white/grey not brown/red but oh well…

Desire was very happy to see Willow, when I brought her over to say hello they snuffled each other and Desire gave a very breathy, tender little nicker/grunt. We decided to take a mellow ride around the 6 mile horse camp loop and along the way encountered D, another endurance friend out for a ride on her Arab mare with her granddaughter riding her Foxtrotter mare:

Grey Girls hearing things

Desire charged along at her brisk walk in the lead for pretty much the whole loop, we barely trotted more than a few steps and she was sound and quite talkative. She kept giving little squeal/grunts when Willow would come alongside/as if to pass her, something she usually does aggressively at horses she doesn’t like but sounded pretty gentle directed at Willow. She did have her ear and eye trained on Willow’s every move when she was potentially going to take the lead. *eyeroll*

We passed the horse camp near the end of the loop and there were some campers and horses in corrals. Desire wanted to stop and say hello and hang out and in fact was not very happy to walk off and leave the camp. Maybe she thought it was a ride camp and we should be sticking around in case there was a ride starting in the morning 😉


 Sheza put on a big show when we got home and I led Desire back to the shared gate of their paddock/pastures. There was a big dust cloud rising and I could just see a red streak fly past once in a while as we walked that way.

“Mommymommymommymommmy”

Ohhh mommymommymommy you came back!

Then Mommy dearest shared some of her hay and Sheza lost all interest in mommy dearest. As it should be.

Cruising the Chiefster & Sharing the Boot Love


Booting and maintaining the barefoot horse is, as with so many horsey things, like maintaining a regular drug habit. At first it’s: OH, yeah, best idea ever, my horse should be barefoot like they are in the wild, this is IT and it feels so right! Then you apply (and lose) your first boot(s) and come down hard to the reality that these things aren’t nailed on and can and will fling off and disappear entirely, unless they decide to hang on half attached and cause some other sorts of problems. BUT, before you know it, that farrier name isn’t back on the list no, no, you’re ordering some other sort of gadget for your boot or a different brand of boot or a different sized boot, because you WILL get your barefoot fix, no matter the impact on your bank account or sanity. Your friends ask you how it’s going and your eyes roll back in your head as you say, “OH, it’s awful, great, I mean, you *gotta* try it!!!!” And now suddenly you’re spreading your habit, encouraging others, even as the roller coaster of the booted barefoot horse continues to screw with your body, mind, and soul. 
Am I Exaggerating? Anyone who has a hard-to-boot/maintain barefoot horse would say No. 
And yet. There is a beam of light in the darkness. Here comes my friend J with her Mustang, Sedona, and the Pintabian Chief and she’s looking for another direction for their hoof care. Ohhh yeah, I say, try the boots! You’ve heard how unbelievably aggravating awesome my booting experience with Desire has been, you gotta try these boots! She drank the Kool Aid so I eyeballed Sedona’s hoof size and on the next ride brought along some size 0 Easyboot Epics for her. The boots popped right on, Sedona stepped out nicely, and despite the hardware not tightening correctly, the boots stayed on perfectly over mileage, climbs, walktrotcanter, and literal boot-sucking-sinking mud. Amaazzzing! Now that’s how booting should be.
And it continues! This morning J hauled the horse’s up to her property nearly next door to my trimmer D and they connected and got Chief’s front shoes pulled and all of J’s horses some good trims. I met J at the lake afterwards with my tack and bucket of boots and we played the boot game now that the trims were fresh. The Epic wires had to be pulled into a tighter configuration but they stayed on Sedona perfectly for 15 miles, and I slapped the size 1 Gloves on Chief with about half a roll of athletic tape and they stayed on too, despite being large enough to literally twist on the hoof. 
Un-frickin-believable! This really hammers home the point that so much of booting success depends on the horse’s movement. I’m in the testing phase of Renegades with Desire but the battle to keep Easyboots on her has been unending and costly. It soothes me somewhat that this booting experience for J and her horses is going so well! And another person is hooked…
Big antlers on the buck, squint and you can see it..lot’s of deer out today

“This is my Deer Face”

 Black lined ears all around

*Slurp slurp gobble gobble*

 Knee-Knocker Bridge

 Osprey nest and the Osprey had a LOT to say

Cruising back to the trailer

Look at those mucky Gloves..still on though!