A Word of Caution

I am fortunate to have beautiful no-climb horse fencing with hot wire on top and capped t-posts, and for the most part my horses are safe and accident free. However the property we live on is an old one (like finding Indian artifacts on it Old) and with continued use things have a way of working their way up out of the ground and appearing suddenly and unnervingly. For example, I found a fist-sized hunk of rusty iron in Joey’s paddock last month and promptly removed it. Yeah, scary!

In the hubbub of daily life–or just feeding time, if you’re me and have multiple animals of various species clamoring at you FEED ME NOW twice a day–it is occasionally tempting to just throw hay and go on your business without giving the animals a thorough once-over, at least visually. I can’t caution you strongly enough against that, it is so important to invest those few extra minutes in carefully checking your animals head to tail for any injuries, lumps, bumps, etc. Because while you may provide your loved equines with great fencing, feed, and regular health care, things can still crop up and let’s face it, Shit Happens.

Case in point. This morning my 15 month old filly, Sheza, was chipper as usual, looking for scratches along with her breakfast, basically just her same old self with no outward signs of distress. As I was throwing hay to her, boss man mini Bandito, momma Desire, and the yelling goats, my eye was caught by something silvery behind Sheza. My heart sank as I realized she had about a foot of old wire wrapped tightly around her right hind fetlock with a little tail of wire sticking out behind, the only part that had caught my eye as it was otherwise quite close around her leg. She gave me no clue anything was wrong and the wire had not visibly cut her, but was wrapped tightly enough around her leg to be SCARY.  I crooned to her and rubbed all over her body and down to the fetlock where I untwisted the wire enough that when she got nervous feeling the wire move and tap danced away from me she stepped right out the wire.  She was free and uninjured and trotted away with all her filly arrogance intact. But PHEW.

She didn’t tell me there was a problem and I didn’t see it at first. So please, friends and readers, check your loved animals head to tail to toe, daily if not twice a day, and be sure there isn’t something hiding there that might cause you all a lot of grief later.

You AIN’T Seen Nothing Yet

I can’t speak to gymkhana events in other parts of the country but in Butte County, California, local gymkhanas are like a three ring circus always teetering on the edge of going wrong. I went to the local Sheriff Posse’s monthly gymkhanas fairly regularly when J still lived close by–in fact I should post one or two of our buddy photos with Chief and Blaze from a few years ago–but hadn’t been to one in over a year, since my focus honed in on LDs with Blaze, endurance, and conditioning, and training and and…Today’s gymkhana was the first of this year that didn’t conflict with an endurance ride on my schedule so I loaded up the Blazer and had a go at it.
Feel so naked without breastcollar, boots, packs, etc! My saddle sure was light though..

N joined us with her other mare, Kate, who I have never met before. She is a very beautiful coppery chestnut and looks great in the yellow/tye dye N has her in.

Untying the ribbon

canter home

 So fast they were blurry 😉  Look at the roost Kate is throwing up

Like this shot, nice looking mare

We entered the 6 single events (2 team events we didn’t do) including single stake, barrels, and the bow race. Blaze trots nicely in frame for the most part, with the odd nose in the sky for effect, but whenever I ask for a canter at a gymkhana he immediately sticks his nose down and starts trying to buck. He’s always done it and I can’t decide whether he’s totally sour on the thought of running home or wants to be let out to flat out run home. I bought him locally as a 12 year old so there is a good chance (especially in this area and the size that he is) he was run in gymkhanas in his life at some point. Since I’m not wild about joining the ranks of those who eat shit off their horse at the gymkhana (however unlikely that may be), I usually “EH EH” him for the naughty thoughts and stick with the trot. We didn’t get any ribbons, as trotting haughtily around barrels in frame doesn’t beat galloping flat out, spurring and hollering at yer pony.

There was a tiny pony being ridden by a little girl and Blaze was in love. He usually spooks out and is terrified by small/baby animals (goat kids, foals, etc) but for whatever reason this petite pony looker was his kind of gal. He watched for her, snuffled her whenever she was near (and she politely nibbled his face back), and nickered at her so softly that he sometimes didn’t even make noise but I could feel his diaphragm fluttering with it. Then he tried to eat the pony rider’s little brother’s Doritos out of the bag and that won him some serious fans, so we spent the latter part of the gymkhana extricating ourselves from a pony/kid crowd to trot our events. Blaze is a charmer, what can I say.

I was so bummed I didn’t get a picture of the pony and then I loaded my photos on the computer and saw that N had taken an accidental shot of her mare’s butt, but just behind it in the background was the pony! Gotta love zoom, here she is:

A few people fell off, some horses bucked, a horse or two reared, one lady was wearing shin guards and had her boots tied into the stirrups with baling twine–but we all survived.

Did I mention it’s way too hot? 98 in the shade here..

Happy Birthday and My Filly is Growing Up!

First of all, happy birthday to my wonderful husband! He is a great, positive, supportive guy and I am very lucky to have him.
And now…
TA DA!! Sheza-filly in the trailer!!!!
But first, Joey worked in the surcingle and long lines. He came out of the paddock spooky and snorty and after 2 weeks off from the trainer we were sure he was going to majorly regress at worst or be pretty hot at best. Once his fly mask was off (no limiting this guy’s visibility when things are going down!) and he was in the cross ties he quieted into the routine right away and then had the best session in long lines he has had yet! He trotted off relaxed and loose instead of his usual initial high-and-tight, and even slowed to a walk in the lines a couple of times of his own accord. His head set is better each time and today he carried himself beautifully almost the whole time. It was a relatively short session as he was so much quieter and more responsive than we were expecting. For the first time when she whoa’d him and asked for a turn around with the outside rein he slowly turned and walked out of it, instead of spinning and immediately taking off. When he walked out so nicely and collected from the turn she immediately quit and took him up for a bath. He got tense and circled her for the hoof handling but by tricking his brain some more progress was made. Instead of going to his sticky right side which immediately makes him tense, she stayed on his left side but was rubbing and touching his right hind. His brain didn’t go into auto-panic since she wasn’t on the scary side, and he stood pretty nicely for her to rub all up and down his leg. She did go to his right side again and he circled and circled and circled endlessly until she switched sides again and touched him from the opposite side, then went back to the right, and that was apparently the combo of brain trickery he needed, as he gave in and let her rub his right hind from the right side. B thinks a step ahead of him and it isn’t always easy as he is very clever! But by keeping him guessing and introducing new things while still working him on areas he feels confident and can excel in, I am seeing Joey grow in self confidence, fitness, and overall “thinking” ability.  Good things are to come with this one.

 Thinking…

And then it was trailer time! It was a cool, breezy day, we even had some rain drops this morning–perfect weather for Sheza’s first loading. I backed the trailer onto the grass, loaded Blaze in one stall, and B started the pressure, release as reward, game with Sheza. There is simply no way to drive a horse into the 2 horse straight load (especially with a buddy in there!) and Sheza wasn’t particularly alarmed by the whole situation so the pressure and release method was the thing for it. 
Hmm, you want me to go in where?

Filly out the butt end, Blaze’s head out the front end, hehe

Sheza was content to stand at the edge of the trailer and lean in, snuff Blaze, eat hay, but was not getting the step-up concept. I lifted a front hoof and set it in there and that prompted a few theatrics but nothing spectacular, so I tried again. She kept back pedaling so B told me to get a broom. A whaaa? A broom. I fetched a broom. Now tickle her ankles. Hmm. Really?

And tickle I did. At first the tickle worked, and it unstuck her feet and moved her forward without any undue pressure. Then she got used to the tickle and it was more of a prickly poke. If she lifted a foot or stepped or even leaned forward, all pressure stopped. She still wasn’t getting the step-up under way so I started picking up her front hoof, setting it in, and then as she got used to hanging out with it there, I went around and tickled her other ankle to encourage the step up. I probably set her hoof in the trailer a good 30 times, maybe more, and then we could see she was checking out. She would get to the edge of the trailer, then sort of relax and start to get sleepy eyed. B took her out and lunged her in both directions to get her feet moving, led her back, I set her hoof in, tickled her other front hoof, and UP she went!

Hallelujah!

B let her hang out with her front hooves up, then calmly backed her out, and we repeated the set the hoof in, tickle, and step up. This time she went all the way in and was SO HAPPY to start devouring the hay in the manger that had been taunting her for so long. Got to love food motivated horses.

Butt on the right: 15 yr old Blaze
Butt on the left: 15 month old Sheza
….I think I’ll need a ladder in the future

B backed her back out and it was a pretty darn nice, calm, back out for filly’s first time:

Meh, still chewing, not impressed

I had to set her front hoof in again and tickle the other front and she went right back in all the way. This time we secured everything and took them for a snails pace drive down around the corner, up to the mailboxes, and back. Just a little something to let her feel the movement and hills in a trailer without pushing our luck.  She whinnied at first but didn’t move around much that I could feel and when I pulled back in the driveway and parked we opened the hay doors and let them sit in there for another couple of minutes. She was scarfing hay and pretty calm about the whole thing.

She got nervous when Blaze backed out but she came out relatively nicely and snuffled Blaze immediately like, “Whew, we survived!”  She had a sweat up from the whole process so she got a bath and fly spray dousing and went back to join her shrilly protesting mini boss, Bandito. She was pretty cute and rushed right to Desire’s gate to get some reassurance from momma.


 I’m so proud of my red rocket girl, she was a bit stubborn as expected but not dramatic, silly, or dangerous. There were no raised voices, injuries, or theatrics, and it ended with happy people and a happy filly who learned something very big today. So proud 🙂

Fantastic Fairy Falls

A little alliteration for you on this fine, gorgeous, cool evening. Today’s high was 75, partly sunny with a cool breeze–OH it was redhead heaven!!! When I saw the forecast yesterday I rousted J about riding, so this morning we loaded up Chief and Sedona and headed to the Spenceville Wildlife Area to try some other trails and just generally bomb around in the great weather.
Heading out in the cool breeze

Posture-pedic baby! I thank my early years of playing the saxophone for my riding posture 😉

 Love to see water in July, no matter the temperature

 We’ve gone about 1/4 of a mile and Chief is already drinking!

“Who me?”

We headed out the road we usually end our rides on and took a marked trail toward Fairy Falls, just over 3 miles from the trailer. Spenceville is largely wide open spaces, so you can either follow the dirt road/trail or just wander around. It’s a fun spot to ride because you have the visibility and good footing to tear around at some speed!

Winding trail along the hillside to Fairy Falls

 I trotted ahead and set up for this shot, see how high Sedona lifts her feet off the ground? You can see the shadow her right front is casting (snug in her new Easyboot Epics)   She *never* stumbles, I’m jealous!

The falls wasn’t very big but it was very cool, there was a fenced-in view point over it as it was  steep drop off into a rocky gorge:

Lower along the falls

Climbing

 We were only at about 5 miles after going to the falls so we decided to swing out and take our usual loop backwards. J had to get back to town at a certain time so we felt the time crunch a little and pushed the horses at a good pace the whole day, lots of trotting, some cantering, a bit of hillwork. It was so great to be able to push them a little and enjoy the speed without sweltering and worrying about their recoveries like in higher temperatures.

Weee time to canter!

4 gates to open and close along the way, we take turns and our horses are sometimes great, sometimes terrible at it

Awww Chiefy

 Chief so wants to be an endurance pony. Let’s be honest, I so want him to be one! Today was the first ride where I felt like we had built a little bit of fitness and were getting somewhere. We rode 13 miles in just under 3 hours and I still had horse left under me, where on previous rides of similar mileage it took us longer and Chief was flat out exhausted afterwards. Of course the cooler weather probably helped too! Chief has a very smooth trot but has never been truly fitted up to have a bigger extended stride and today he did his first few incidents of a bigger, stronger trot instead of his jog-to-canter routine. Cool beans!

Did I mention he never stops eating?

If all goes well in the next couple of months we have a tentative plan to take Chief and Sedona to the Chamberlain Creek endurance ride end of September and ride them in the LD.   🙂

Gold Country 2012: Good Times & THAT’s Why I don’t Ride Him in 50s

No ride photos for the 30s so here is my version…we are Small but Mighty!

As I sit here in front of my computer feeling far more crippled after 30 miles than it is fair for a regular (read consistent) endurance rider to be, I am sore and tired and my back hurts and–Wait, When is the Next Ride again?? 
Don’t be alarmed, I’m crippled in a good way! No incidents or accidents, just 30 miles of good ole kidney/back pounding fun on my air-lift ride, Blaze. I have officially confirmed that my body is more torn up riding an LD on him (even now, with him moving better barefoot and with me 20 lbs lighter and more fit than last year)  than riding 100 miles on Desire. I “hovered” in some sort of 2 pt/not posting for at least half of the ride on Blaze yesterday and that was a good thing to give myself a break from the epic posting (he throws you about a foot out of the saddle)–but Oh, Yeah, I am feeling it today. People love to query why I don’t jump into 50s with Blaze, maybe I should just let them take him for trot and see if they still wonder!
To begin at the beginning, I’m a mean horse mom and decided to wash Blaze Friday morning before we left. It was 75 degrees in the shade by 7 am so I wasn’t particularly worried about chilling him and washing him any day prior would be foolishly erased by the 4,395 rolls he took before we actually left. So Friday morning it was. Of course despite the fine weather his hind quarters started shivering lightly by the time I rinsed the conditioner off so I felt guilty and had to let him move around and warm up. I figured if I put him in the “aisle” that runs between our stand of Italian Cypress and the paddocks (aisle can be shut off on each end with hot tape) he would roll but at least it wouldn’t be in the epic little pig sty dirt hole he has created in his paddock. He let me know what he thought about the whole thing by immediately rolling, but also cantering back and forth, bucking and putting on a big ole show, too! Always nice to see high spirits from your mount on the morning you leave for an endurance ride!

It was 90 miles from our door to ride camp. The drive was quite easy from our place to Auburn and then sent me back to childhood with the hairpin turns on the 49. A very windy but relatively short bit of road and before we knew it we found camp! The people at check in directed me to my camping spot next to D, my hoof care expert, who brought her home bred Arabian, Launi, for his first LD. She was majorly nice enough to speak up for me so when we got there we found not only friendly faces to camp next to, but a sturdy, empty horse camp corral for Blaze! Such luxury since my mounts are generally quite unglamorously tied to my 2 horse Miley at rides. The corrals were permanently installed and part of the very nice horse camp setting, there were a few scattered around camp but not many and it was very nice of D to save us one.

Launi was waiting to welcome Blaze 🙂

 Setting up the sweet digs:

 Happy campers:

 

Launi and Blaze took to each other right away and alternated between sharing food and trying to nibble on each other’s faces passive aggressively.  Blaze was gelded late and has some stallion-esque tendencies, he has always maintained neat stallion piles where he lives and if he lives with a mare he is a total Herd King snot and has been known to mount mares in the field. Launi is about 7 and was gelded 2 years ago, with foals on the ground, so he appreciates the ladies himself. You can almost imagine them chatting up the chicks together 😉

Let’s be friends and bite each other:

Camping effort was minimal, with the ride so close to home and a shorter ride day overall we downsized the Arabian Nights compound a bit:

Funder was there to do the 50, while D, my regular training buddy N, and I were all planning on the 30. Here we are in the middle of a no-doubt serious ride camp chat fest:

My Crew Husband and the 2 sidekick pocket dogs came along since it was going to be a short trip, and as usual they were quite popular in camp.
Wilbur the Wonder Wiener

I was recruited to trot out Launi for D, he is hugely tall and she is, well, not! He was lagging it in his pre-ride vet check and causing some concerns for the vet so we did a practice run and then re-checked him through:

trotting the Launi-Moose:

Don’t forget important pre-ride activities like reading your welcome packet. Don’t study too hard though, soon you’ll be at the ride meeting where 5 ppl will tell you 6 different answers and none of it will make sense anyway. Just look for ribbons!

My crew:

Blaze does not require a pre-ride of any sort but I was bored waiting for the 8 pm ride meeting while being simultaneously too lazy to do the whole tacking up thing. Plus I needed to visit Funder’s camp and say hi to Dixie. And thus, bareback riding over for a chat and back (with a beer) was born.

Ride meeting was how most ride meetings are: long, sometimes painfully confusing as 8 people ask the same question at different times and occasionally get different answers..I was used to being on the 50 so was all ears at first, then remembered I was on the LD so tuned out..by the end I was cold and hungry and had concluded that my ride strategy was much the same as it had been before the meeting: Ignore Babble, Follow Ribbons.

The 30s had an 8 am start which meant that I was up by about 4:30 and seriously twiddling my thumbs by 7 am. Then I found the green glitter in the horse trailer and some time passed bedazzling Blaze’s number and a heart on his other flank:

 Launi and Blaze ready for action..or eating

Here comes N and Willow! Ready for the ride

 N and I have known each other about a year now, since meeting at the Patriot’s Day FEI ride last July. We ride quite regularly together at home, but we hadn’t been in the same distance AERC ride at all this year and I didn’t have any photos of both of us on board, so this time I was determined to at least get some photos of us. D hadn’t been to a ride in 5 years herself, so of course we didn’t have any photos together either. Til now!

Ta da! Here is the home team from the Lake Oroville trails, ready for the GC 30 🙂

Corral buddies ready for the trail:

 N’s Game Face! She means business–and so did Willow!

Away down the start we go:

 The 30 miler was a 5 mile loop, a trot-by the vet’s as we passed camp, and straight on out on the trail until a 1/2 hour vet check hold at 22.5 miles. There were 5 or 6 road crossings done with the assistance of volunteers with signs and one road crossing that you were required to dismount at and walk along until safely back off the pavement. Water troughs were relatively plentiful, and there was a creek too though we didn’t go in it since it was full of horses at the time.

Oh, and the footing? Fan-frickin-tastic! Okay yeah there were occasional tree root/rock sections (very short,) some weird cement blocks kinda half sticking out of a few short climbs (easily avoided), but on the whole the footing was great: either single track trail, shady dirt logging roads, or gravel road, but that was always shady and pretty friendly for gravel road.  Hills were minor, mostly very short, sometimes steep, but we couldn’t even tell which was “Their Hill” as in THE hill of the ride, so that tells you something–and really, after death marching hand walking Desire up Berkeley Hill in the heat of the afternoon, no hill impresses me anymore. Having made rocky Whiskeytown and Hat Creek and the hot hills of Cache Creek a yearly habit, I sooo appreciated the moderate difficulty and great footing of this ride.

Cruising the forested trails with Nikki and Willow

I hadn’t been planning to ride with anyone, in fact I didn’t have much of a plan, since Blaze is pretty reasonable and you can never count on what everyone *else* has planned that may or may not affect your ride start. I think anywhere from 5-10 riders left before  us and then I saw N strike off in a perfect gap in the riders and decided to tuck in “behind” her (like a 1/2 mile, for starters). Soon enough Blaze got whiff of the ride spirit and picked up a fantastically lifty, bouncy trot and we caught them, and from there we rode the entire way together! It was so cool to do the whole ride with a regular riding friend from my home trails, and particularly with N, since we have a blast riding together. Willow, she of the shying, spooking, uncertain, unmotivated behavior at Lake Oroville trails, was channeling Desire right down to the way her boots smacked the ground purposefully all morning. I had never seen that side of Willow before and I was impressed. Sure she was also channeling Desire in that she was a bit checked out and goey at times but N was her match and they led the way probably 70%  of the ride. I have to stress again how mind boggling that is, since often Willow won’t lead for even 500 ft on our training rides at home without stopping/balking/shying. Clearly she has a much higher opinion of new trails and a little competitive spirit!
The first miles went well, Blaze was perfectly happy to trot along behind Willow, he has much shorter legs but has incredible reach, I was at 2 pt on his back trucking a 10 mph trot easily which feels very different on a 14 hand horse than on a bigger one! I even told N I swear his feet weren’t hitting the ground at some points. 
We had an interesting little interaction with a rider on the trail and N and I were both rolling our eyes so hard we might never have gotten them back to the front of ours heads if it had gone on any longer. Out on the trail we came up behind a rider just walking along on her horse so we said hello and proceeded to pass but she immediately let her horse pick up the trot right next to me and then go faster and faster so that all of a sudden the 3 of us were in a foot race. N and I slowed back to the walk, rolled our eyes, and watched as the woman slowed back to a pokey walk not far in front of us. Okay, we decided to try again and this time N merrily announced we were passing on the right, only for the woman to take off again, cut off N, and charge along. This happened a third time and by then we weren’t into this 3 horse race situation AT ALL and in fact were pretty appalled by her trail etiquette or lack thereof. N happened to recognize her later as a longtime rider and Tevis winner, which is ironic in and of itself. Luckily a sharp left turn came up in the trail and we managed to pass her and take off without any more issue.
Blaze gets Quench electrolytes in his feed daily but I totally spaced syringing electrolytes in the morning (coz you know, I didn’t have enough time..eerrr umm..) so I gave him a dose at about 12 miles out. Then the regular troughs suddenly dried up and we didn’t see another drop of water until mile 21 or so. 9 miles isn’t long, it’s true, but the great softer footing and time of year made for a lot of dust and we were keeping up a good pace, so we were at map checking-re-checking point by the time those 21 mile water troughs showed up. Both horses took long, I mean LONG, drinks there, I even spaced out completely in my brain for a minute or two and when I tuned back in Blaze was still drinking. Impressive. He then stopped at each of the 4 water troughs on his way by and drank from each. Love!
It was only 2.5 miles to the vet check at that point and we followed the very well marked trails (complete with ribbons, signs, paper plates, and chalk work) down a narrow winding alley trail through the pygmy and trotted until we saw the 1/4 Mile to Check sign. We dismounted, loosened girths, I pulled Blaze’s bit, and went to pulse in. Basically, I was operating like I was riding Desire, who’s pulse will drop like a stone if it isn’t already down, by doing those basic things. Blaze is not Desire, and was always slower to pulse down. He was at 68 bpm his first check but he drank, started eating while I poured water on his neck, took a long pee, and was down below criteria in a couple of minutes. I got the usual helpful hints to not let him eat for pulsing, but then maybe you should but then maybe you shouldn’t–and took my daily grain of salt. There are so many answers and options and shades of grey in this whole endurance thing, every horse really does behave differently and taking anything anyone says as gospel truth does NOT do you any favors. So smile, remember that YOU know your horse, and proceed accordingly. 
Blaze and Willow chowing at the vet check:

Just as I snapped  an Eating picture Willow’s head snapped up and it became a Posing picture

All told we were 5 minutes behind Willow for our out time but N kindly waited for us and after stuffing our faces, vetting through (all As with B for gut sounds), getting a glimpse of D still alive and on board Launi (hooray!) we were off for the last 7.5 miles to the finish. Willow started to slow down and lost her motivation as leader at the point so Blaze took over and was more than happy to charge along at a good trot.  It was a relief to switch up to some cantering in there too, I train him at the canter fairly regularly and think I might do so more, since his trot takes so much out of me.

We emerged out of the trees to the finish line and the kind volunteers clapping for us. There was some general confusion and misinformation spread around but basically we had to pulse to 60 for our Completion and then had 1/2 hr to do the final vet check. I hadn’t realized how close to camp we were so we were trotting right to the finish line and it took Blaze a couple minutes to pulse down but he did in short order and that was that!

Cooling Blaze at the finish:

 Gut sound bribery..you know you wanna eat it..

I love this pic, he looks soooooo cute and small:

Cleaning him up for the Vet Check, good boy eating 

Willow and Blaze final Vet Checks:

Cute little pony trot out 🙂

Blaze is always making friends, see that tilt to the tall vet’s head? Can’t you just hear him saying “awww hiii”   Yep, everyone does

Some leg love for snoozingBlaze:


D and Launi were back and Finished when we were done vetting and she was happy to report a successful first LD for her big boy. I trotted him at the vet for her again and he got his Completion,
yay Launi and D!

While the husband packed, I stuffed my face with Strawberry Crepes and ride dinner, and we were on the road and home before dark. It was a great ride and a great performance by Blaze and all our local horsey buddies who went. See you at the next ride!

And Then There Was Heat

Suddenly, it’s summer. Up until this point we’d only had 2 or 3 relatively hot days in 2012, and on those days I was off near Lassen at a ride, so they didn’t count in my mind (I can’t be the only one who thinks like that..). We even had a few weeks recently where the highs were only in the mid 80s and it was positively brisk at night. Then, in the last 5 days it’s been no lower than 95 during the day with highs of 100-105. Set to continue through Friday and finally start coming down over the weekend, almost but not *quite* in time for Gold Country. Georgetown is still showing a ride day forecast of 90 currently, but hey, that’s better than 100 and way better than 105.

I squeezed in that short, spooky ride Monday morning on Blaze before the heat hit but otherwise have been laying pretty low on the horse front. Desire has been off work, chilling in pasture for 2 weeks now since her last visit with the trimmer. I have a box of Renegades on loan to try out on her but haven’t yet mustered the desire (harhar) to actually set to work on fitting them. Partially the recent heat, partially burnt out on boots. Oh yeah and partially just really scared to start working my mare again and see that lameness show up. So the plan is after getting Blaze through Gold Country, when the weather cools next week, I’ll bring her back into work lightly and see what she shows me. And play with a completely different booting system. Hurrah, can’t wait…Was that believable?

If she isn’t pounding the trails she is pounding large quantities of food..

Joey didn’t have a session with the trainer last week due to scheduling, so I’m planning to have her come this Thursday even though it’s the evening before we leave for Gold Country. Joey is doing really well and I want to see him to continue to realize his potential. In the meantime he has been dozing in his fly mask and stuffing his face..and he is still a little unsure about all of the strange behaviors his humans exhibit.

Well I don’t know about this whole camera in my face thing, I’m just here eating and then you show up and I can’t help but be interested and yet…

 Sheza is larger than ever, dopey, friendly, occasionally still dramatic but WAY less so in the last month or two. She ditched her fly mask in the pasture the other day and greeted me at the gate that evening all bareheaded and pleased with herself. Figures that I had patted myself on the back that morning for how snugly and evenly the mask was seated.

Blaze is on Quench daily feed-through electrolytes and I’ll be breaking out the EnduraMax-Plus tubes this weekend. I didn’t electrolyte him at all in his season of LDs last year but it’s been a truly hot week and now that I have and am more familiar with electrolytes I figure it will only help the little bugger through the ride. He has been drinking, eating, and pooping out on the trail really well lately, but still holds his pee til I dismount back at the trailer. From what I understand Gold Country is one 30 mile loop out of camp and back to the Finish, so here’s hoping he pees before we get back to the trailer on this one!

GC is only 80 miles from the house and I’m doing the LD, so I’m not very excited/nervous for this weekend. In fact, I feel quite EH about the whole thing. Probably because I’ve got some residual angst/guilt over Desire’s lameness and not riding a 50 this month, plus it’s hot and that always makes me at my cheeriest..not. Still it’s a new ride to check out, an area I’ve never ridden in, and it is nearby. Blaze will be happy to have a chance back at it and I’m sure it will be fun.

This is a volunteer Sunflower that decided to grow down near our front gate, on my Polaris feeding route. I’ve been dumping mash-pan loads of water on it every day as I drive by. Today it popped it’s first petals open:

Off to stick my head in the freezer…