Renegade Glue-ons: Application & Removal

There have been a few requests for both application and removal tips regarding glue-ons, so here’s the whole shebang in one post! If you are more of a video person there are company provided Youtube videos on the same.

Application

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You will need:

  • denatured Alcohol, DA: (NOT rubbing alcohol)–can be found at Home Depot or equivalent
  • nitrile gloves–GLOVES ARE GOOD!!
  • glue gun
  •  Glue ons, with spares, and ideally a size above and below the size you think you need (I just had 6 size 0s, the size he wears in strap-on)*
  • Glueing tips, plenty to spare*
  • fresh tube of Adhere*: while you can keep a used tube around at ride weekend, if you are gluing for a new event: don’t cheap out, buy new glue!
  • approx. 40 grit sandpaper–I  used both block and flat paper and they were both good
  • tin snips or similar to cut notches in shell if needed
  • Hoof stand
  • rasp
  • hoof nippers–to nip off excess boot shell if needed
  • if weather is over 70, cooler with ice to rest glue in before use
  • paper towels
  • trash bag
*available at Renegade Hoof Boots

Hoof prep is key in gluing. Vigorous sanding of the lower 3/4 of the hoof must be done until no imperfections can be seen or felt. This is Morgan/Welsh Kenny’s wonkiest foot after sanding, hard to tell here but it’s high to the outside among other things.  This foot particularly did not entirely seat in the glue on shell and gapped the quarters out, which is highly inconvenient as the quarters are your main glue adhesion area.

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Fortunately, with tin snips or similar, you can cut triangular notches in the boots as needed to adapt fit.  In this case, we cut *2*small triangle notches out of each front boot. Just like that, with flex points added by notching, the boot was able to match the odd angles and seated well at the toe, with nearly zero quarter gapping. You can see here how unevenly seated that right front looks, that’s merely an accurate reflection of the high sided hoof/crooked leg. The left front is more normal but also benefitted from the notches, while his hinds are quite regular and required no alteration. (that left hind hasn’t been prepped/sanded yet in this photo)

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After sanding the bottom 3/4 of the hoof AND the inside of the boot shell, the shell and hoof are carefully cleaned with denatured alcohol, placing a spare shell on the cleaned hoof as a slipper so it doesn’t retouch the ground. Glue is squirted around the quarters and toe of the boot, ever careful not to get any on the sole, and the boot is applied *quickly* and held strongly in place, with thumbs pressing down the quarters to really encourage a smooth tight seal. The glue is warm to the touch as it sets and you can feel from the outside where glue is smooth to hoof and where there are gaps (ideally there aren’t gaps). After a few minutes of holding the hoof up and pressing, the hoof can be set down, but it’s important the horse not wiggle or torque while the glue is setting. Holding up the opposite leg can assist in stillness.

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Kenny rocks his glue-ons at Whiskeytown Chaser 2016

Removal

I removed Kenny’s Renegade Hoof Boots glue-ons in about 30 minutes.

Note: You can carefully break the glue seal and pry off the boots, using a dremel to remove excess glue for shell re-use.  Illustrated here is recommended company one time  use and removal.

You will need:

*Box cutter
*hoof nippers
*flathead screw driver

 

Cut along the bottom of the shell, there are guidance lines around quarters

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Grab hold of the back of the boot, nipping a starter notch/prying up with screwdriver if necessary

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Peel the top of The boot shell away along your cut

(if you peel more slowly than I did here, you can get the glue off with the boot all at once better than this too)

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Only boot Sole remains, easily wiggled off/pop with screwdriver if necessary

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Carefully grab hold of glue chunks and peel them off, prying up with flathead if necessary

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Hind and front, post glue-on removal/hoof knife clean up

Take a bow Kenny!

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Cache Creek 50 2016: One Tough Mudder

I already have a 12 hour Cache Creek completion story, but that’s a more typical one, involving heat, endless boot losses, and electrolyte worries. This was the first year that Cache Creek had 2 days of rides and also the first year ever, as far as I could glean, that it misted, rained, and drizzled darn near all weekend. It’s a notoriously hot and hilly ride with generally great footing–generally, but not when you add water! Of course we mortals can do absolutely nothing about the weather except worship the NOAA app and pack everything *and* the kitchen sink because you just never know in these events if you will need shorts or a waterproof parka and it’s really unfortunate if you have neither.

Friday travels, redhead friendly weather anyone?!

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As of Cache Creek, I have had sale mare Ellie home 4 weeks and ridden her 3 times. She’s a high drive, forward, impatient mare and an impressively gifted athlete. She is a mare that can drive you crazy if you don’t accept the simple fact that she is who she is. That is not to suggest that I allow shenanigans, I am an endless  foot placement and general manners enforcer, however accepting the very nature of the beast allows you to not let it affect you mentally or emotionally, because it’s merely the mare being her. She’s a little spacey, and she wants to go and she always will. There’s so much more to it than that, however. This is an athlete gifted from birth, like one of those 10 years old with mind blowing voices on reality television, she’s born to do it and flourishes in her element. And that is why a horse that moves restlessly and sweats trailering alone, finds herself on her first solo camping trip in ride camp, feeling like this:

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zzz

Simply put, she loves it. She settled right in, camps phenomenally, eats, drinks, poops,pees, stuffs her head into her bridle, chomps down electrolyte paste and carrots with equal enthusiasm, and eats all night. Like ALL night. She’s a racey greyhound built mare and requires plentiful groceries, but she consumes and expels, yes she does. Many of my horses drink best when walked to troughs intermittently in camp but she drank well from her trailer bucket, too.

I managed zero photos of my vet card this weekend which is incredibly annoying, but things quickly devolved into a drizzly mess and even sharpies were barely writing on what remained of the cards by the end, so there’ll likely be no recovering it. That said, she grazed her way through the vet line, vetted in quite stoically for a movey mare, 40s pulse, one B in a gut quadrant and otherwise As, body score of 5, FIVE PEOPLE, my god I was excited for that as I’ve been pouring groceries to her–“looking great” was to be her vet commentary of the weekend, though it wasn’t entirely that simple.

With the bog and a rainy year in mind, I saddled up with two friends to pre ride Friday afternoon. While pre riding obstacles is totally worth doing and I recommend it, it didn’t actually get me any better behavior ride morning 🙂   Both times we did lots of wiggling and a bit of dramatic thrashing and there may have been some “oohs” and “aahs” from witnesses but we sure as shit *did* ride across that bog and across the creek each time, and after the first strong refusals, quite nicely I must say. Glorious shenanigans like that don’t often afford moments for one handed photo moments,  unfortunately!

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a more serene pre ride moment..

There were about 103 starters in the 50 from the originally projected 110, one of the biggest fields I’ve been in. The 50 started at 5:30 am and T and I got on trail about 10 minutes late, trying to avoid a group but realistically it’s nearly impossible in a ride that big with open view spaces.   We rode the whole ride with my buddy T and her mare Niki that I rode Whiskeytown with, it was her mare’s first 50 and they were fabulous companions as ever. Here’s a fun one T took of climbing into the fog:

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It being an especially grey early morning and factoring in the bog excitement and working for the insisted upon non-giraffe mare headset, my first photos came some miles in:

 

Photo credit Baylor/Gore, T and I climbing! Grey mare power:13118975_931627953226_7202401624474234958_n

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The vet checks were all at the bottom of the epic hills which was a great idea for hot weather but didn’t do me a whole lot of good on a fresh intense mare in relatively cool but borderline humid weather. Excitable+humidity=hanging pulse, and it did take Ellie a few minutes at both the 13 mile trot by and the 25 mile vet check to pulse in. I credit that to her fresh intensity and inability to relax in those moments as she pulsed immediately through as the ride continued, doing better each vet check as she calmed down. Her last ride was the Whiskeytown Chaser LD last month which she won, which can set a certain mental expectation in a horse but fortunately this wasn’t the first time I brought a winning mentality mare through a mid pack paced 50. Ellie reminds me strongly of my girl Desire, Sheza’s dam, with two major bonuses: Ellie has dressage background and is far lighter to ride in all ways *and* she’s non spooky. Huge deals there in my opinion!

It had progressed from humidish to light, steady, drenching drizzle by the 25 mile vet check.  After stripping tack and convincing Ellie to stand still we pulsed in, then led the mares with handfuls of alfalfa and carrots to the vet checks where we all zipped through nicely with A’s aside from a gut quadrant each.

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pulsing at mile 25

T and I are both heat stroke risk overheaters, so we weren’t yet totally bummed out by the weather, but wet everything is certainly not the most charming. Soggy sandwiches and hay sprinkled, dye streaking peanut m&ms still taste great after 25 miles though, and the mares rifled through our plentiful hay, mash, and carrot offerings, getting along admirably for two, well, mares.

might as well caption this “my god young lady, do you want a coat?!?!’ 

T’s 25 mile vet check 🙂

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We had made decent time up to that point but as we began to climb back out of the 25 mile 1 hour hold I started to get a Han Solo feeling. The trail had been traveled with 2 way traffic pretty heavily by then and the moisture had been persistent and, well, things had gone to shit. What was great footing dry was now slick clay, uphill, flat, or down. And there’s mostly uphill and down on this ride, by the way. We had a brief period of optimism where things like “surely it will get better up ahead!” were said, but no, no, they didn’t get better.

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There’s been much discussion of what type of footwear or lack thereof did the best on this footing and it’s my opinion that a lot of it depends on the horse. I rode with booted, bare, and was on steel myself for the first time in years; I compared notes with lots of others and everyone seemed pretty sure that their option was either the best or the worst. I am quite confident steel did not feel best, it felt quite treacherous at times, but realistically everyone was having a go of the footing, period.

Having accepted the footing was shite and with quite businesslike mares under us, T and I dedicated ourselves to safely traversing the endurance ride we found ourselves in in that moment. It wasn’t what we expected but it was what was delivered and we had the answer for it in horses that gamely climbed hill after hill, slurped at troughs, grabbed bites of grass on the move, pooped and peed as they needed, and just generally kept moving and not killing us in adverse conditions. If that isn’t endurance, what is????

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Vet check 3 at mile 38 found us realizing our great lack of foresight, as we had both sent crew bags to the 1 hr hold but neither had sent anything to check 3, where it was decidedly very wet, we were soaked through, and coolers would have been a grand idea for the horses. Fortunately all the vet checks had copious water, hay, mashes, and carrots, and our mares were quite warm from their efforts and happily tucked into the vittles, shivering not a bit. Ellie and I got to vet through with Mel which was really cool and I realized it’s very hard to act professional at all and not devolve into chatty cathy when the vet is your good friend, but I held it together mostly and Ellie got great scores and returned to her grub in a jiffy. 

I had clear flashbacks to the cheery reassurance of “only 12 miles to go!” last time I had left Vet check 3 racing the clock in 2012 as we left in the rain this time, but at least it was a fairly familiar 12 miles, and racing the clock is getting to be a familiar feeling for me perhaps? Hah! I was really pretty proud of our mares and ourselves at this point as they gamely strode on, ears up; we got to ride some of the last loop with an old coworker and buddy of mine which was great fun and extra happy timing as I was there to hand off a spare Renny I was carrying when she needed it.

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those wild flowers though..

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We made the best work we could out of the last miles in, the horses strode quite boldly through the creek and bog, and at soggy last we came into the Finish in camp. Ellie pulsed in immediately, vetted through with 50s pulse, all As, and was happy to dive into her hay back at the rig. We completed near cut off and somewhere in the 50s of 75 finishers.

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Everything was thoroughly, sopping wet, but it wasn’t distinctly cold beyond that, so I had a conundrum of a very warm horse but crappy drizzly weather and a definite need to protect used muscles. I settled for a fleece cooler, waterproof sheet, Sore no More on her legs and Equiflex Sleeves, and after dragging me briskly around camp that evening she chomped steadily at her hay bag and noisily drank all through the rainy night.

good morning, can we do it again???

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I had to laugh while simultaneously helicoptering my line and checking Ellie back into manners land when I walked her around camp the next morning as her steel shod, eager, even, 4 beat gait turned heads with it’s staccato  insistence. “Well she’s on a mission isn’t she” someone said. Yes, she is. She loves this sport, she’s on a mission to get it done, and she does it well.

A couple hour trailer ride home, warm bath, and mountain of food found Ellie trotting out to see her friends with tail flagged, rolling vigorously, then taking a gallop lap before pursuing me like a cutting horse for her mash.

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she knocked some dirt off this morning, here’s mash pursuit 

FOR SALE

Noelle Le Fey, “Ellie”  *AERC #50550  *14.3/15 hh  *12 years

310 miles, 2 wins, 0 pulls *registered Sanskrit daughter * dressage background

$5,500 OBO contact Aurora Grohman/auroragrohman@yahoo.com

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Character Building or..Puzzles!

“How was your ride today?”

“It was great! Kenny was a total jackass and then I thought something was wrong for part of the ride but great!”

Said with no false honesty, even a smile, as I check my desk calendar for the next available moment to ride. These are the moments that I am sure that I am an endurance rider. I haven’t done a 100 miler, don’t have shiny buckles, and I’m just knocking at the door of 500 miles (about the same # in LD miles). Not impressive, definitely not unique. One of many, and happy to be. It’s definitely not distinctions or impressive achievements then, it’s the work, the trying, the failing, the problem solving, the angsting, headbanging, depressing, thrilling, exhilarating work in pursuit of that Ride Camp dream that leaves no doubt in my mind. I am an endurance rider.

Some part of me thought for a brief moment, moving on from the Scrappy saga, finding Rory her perfect home, that horse things will be simple now. It’s a laughably human notion that I often try to persuade good friends shouldn’t be entertained in the larger picture. You’re never done until you’re *done,* life swings up and down constantly and if you can’t accept that you will find yourself helplessly clawing at some illusion of Thereness that can’t be achieved. Some tenets for me in general are stay fluid, take deep breaths, use your best instincts and knowledge, and don’t be afraid to ask for help in this life.

So.

Puzzle 1

Kenny the Morgan/Welsh Pony has proved to be great fun–and a lot of work. Taking up his physical pony challenges and backing them back down to some semblance of manners, toning him physically and mentally, and working with his challenging boot aesthetics , have already given me innumerable learning experiences and mini triumphs.  

Yesterday’s ride, a 20 mile out and back, revealed *something* about mile 8, when he was still giving a loose happy swinging walk and nonstop EDPP, but a new short stridey unenthusiasm to trot. We made it to the 10 mile stop, had a 30 minute rest, normal pee, and grazing from Kenny and he behaved the same on the way back, happy to walk, rather not trot,  until about mile 18 where he suddenly loosened up and was happy to trot again. I had my friend trot him out back at the rig and he looked great. Perfect sweat marks, no chafes or issues to be found, great appetite.

He rolled after his bath back home, successfully to the right–and just as I was cursing him for a pony liar, he tried to drop and roll to the left but his hind end said Nope on the crumple-to-roll, twice, and he gave up on that side. He’d been extra snarky that morning so I was pretty happy with essentially starting the ride up some decent hills, but I wonder if we didn’t warm up enough for him. He gets regular salt in wet mashes but having talked to a few knowledgeable friends, they suggest electrolyte/vitamin E supplementation if it happens again. The common consensus is some sort of muscle cramp.

(note: He went down the hill to the big pasture to graze with Apache before sundown last night so wasn’t feeling too immobile)

Jazzy says whaaaaa?

jazzy1Puzzle 2

Despite properly fitted boots, decent hoof angles, and Vipery hoof conformation (round capsule, defined heel bulbs), Apache has been getting hair disruptions/chafe from his Renegade captivators. I tried both styles of captivators but that made no difference; in my years of Renegade use and time as a Rep, I’ve never seen this happen with them but as a local vet would say, “that just means you ain’t been doing it long enough.” I’ve noticed a tendency for Apache’s pink areas to lose hair easily (ie. pink nose rubs from tack) so wondered about a sensitivity in general and maybe specifically to Neoprene. Fortunately and not surprisingly, I’m not actually the first to encounter this. First I did try lining the caps with moleskin but that failed gloriously, the moleskins were soggy and mostly disintegrated after a sweaty ride with water crossings. “Fabric lined” captivators from the company are now en route to us and we’ll cross our fingers that will be the fix.

jazzy1

 

Meanwhile, good ole Blazer motored beautifully through yesterday’s 20 miler with my newbie rider N and they are on track for an LD or two this summer. Seeing them enjoy the trails and each other lets a little light back into the picture when the problem solving gets frustrating.

“So, How was your ride today?”

“It was great! Kenny was a total jackass and then I thought something was wrong part of the ride but great, great!”

And I mean it. Almost all of the time 🙂

Proven High Drive Endurance Mare For Sale

**ELLIE IS AVAILABLE & WILL BE AT CACHE CREEK RIDGE RIDE, 5/6-8, entered in Saturday’s 50**

Noelle La Fey – 12yr old Arabian Mare, gray, 14.3h.h., registered out of Sanskrit (Belesemo Stallion) and Evening Princess, AERC#: H50550, 260 lifetime miles.

$5,500 CONTACT AURORA GROHMAN auroragrohman@yahoo.com

http://www.allbreedpedigree.com/noelle+la+fey

“Ellie” is a proven endurance competitor. Last ride was Whiskeytown Chaser 2016 on 4/9 where she won the 25 mile ride after a winter off with a 470 out of 500 vet score. Last year she won the Grand Canyon 50 on 9/5/15. She has completed two 55’s ending with lots of spare energy and has 100’s potential. This horse was bred for Endurance and loves the sport. She takes care of herself, eating and drinking well, is very sure footed over difficult terrain, and will pulse down right when you enter the vet check.

Not for beginners or children, Ellie is high energy, competitive, ambitious, and loves to work hard. She was trained in Dressage and did some jumping in previous years but is happier doing Endurance and likes to be in the front of the pack. She loves to lead down the trail, does not spook, and her happy pace is a 10-12 mph trot which she can maintain all day. She has a very fast walk and can trot while many horses canter.

Ellie prefers to be conditioning or competing and does not enjoy slow walking trail rides. She is currently shod and needs a good farrier to keep her hind feet correct as they grow lots of toe and little heel. She has endless energy and will occasionally prance. In energetic situations she sometimes has a hard time standing still but is respectful of your space. Never bucks, rears or bolts and is easy to control down the trail with other horses at any speed. Jumps in to any trailer and is a great camper. She gets nervous trailering alone and will come out sweaty. Owner did almost all of the last endurance ride alone and Ellie didn’t spook once or ever ask to slow down.

Owners are currently moving and would like to focus on training the babies they have raised. Ellie is looking for a fantastic forever home that believes in keeping horses when they are retired. This is a loved mare that will only sell to a home where she and the new owner will both be happy. Owner will require purchaser to keep her informed of any moves/potential sale as she would like to keep track of her through her life.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmITHLVbogY

**Aurora here– First outing since Whiskeytown for Ellie (4/19). Easy to catch, loads great. She does not trailer well alone. I had a fabulous 10 mile ride climbing Oroville dam twice , she’s a very rateable and responsive ride and seriously covers ground. Bridges, road crossings,bikers, hikers, deer, nothing phased her and she is not spooky! She is very high energy and needs reminders but is very responsive. Galloped around the pasture after the ride, not phased a bit!

$5,500

Contact Aurora Grohman via Facebook or auroragrohman@yahoo.com to meet Ellie!

Happy Birthday Sheza!

Happy happy birthday to my first home raised foal, Sheza Blaznhaat Xpres! She is the reason that I started this blog and she is 5 years old today. What a whole lot of life has packed into her brief years already; I eagerly await our further adventures.

 

Some highlights from today’s ride on my girl, plus a baby pic of course!

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Whiskeytown 2016: The Ride

Kenny and I pulled out Friday morning with an easy 2 hour drive to ride camp ahead of us, and rain forecast for ride day. Our buddy W and her stallion Aqua and co followed us up to ride camp where we got cozy in the limited parking quarters. Fortunately I was literally surrounded by friends on all sides and those I didn’t know were very friendly, too. Don’t let endurance Facebook forums scare you away if you’re new to the sport, there’s a lot of great people actually out doing it.

Whiskeytown Lake looking nice and full ❤

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cozy quarters in camp

12932705_925214031776_4115788171285248355_nKenny settled into camp nicely. Our months of endless mucking about with boots and tack before, during, and after rides and his non Arabian steady keel demeanor mean that he has Hang Around and Consume down pat, even with a trailer right up his rear end. Good pony!

After a great vet-in, lots of boot help for folks, a delicious steak and garlic bread (thanks W and fam!) and Kenny leg stretcher walks sprinkled in between, it was bed time in no time.

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Kenny continued to eat mash and hay, mostly drink at the troughs on walks, splash idly in his water bucket at the trailer, dot the landscape with poo (retrieved!), and pee his brains out–no really, our little camp was a urine festival by the end.  His one and only sin in this, his first camping and AERC event, was a tendency to call when his neighbors left for walks, or if I walked him by his old pasture mate, T’s mare, who was *very* happy to holler back. A pretty minor offense and he certainly wasn’t yelling endlessly.

but here he is whinnying in the morning 😉 

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Ride start was 6:30 AM and the 50s and LDs all started together due to single track scheduling farther down the line. T and I, having ridden a 19 mile training ride together a few weeks previously so comfortable in our horses’ pacing together, waited 15 minutes after ride start and strolled out of camp on loose reins at a walk–YES!!

Kenny proceeded to lead pretty well the first 8-9 miles at a steady trot, the friendly footing and coolish but humid morning encouraging us to make time, and a breeze, when the going was good. The trails were well marked, there were water crossings, a few mud bogs, and plenty of bridges of various shapes and sizes. Through it all Kenny bravely tromped!

T took the lead some as well, and in no time we were hand walking in to our 13 mile hold. Kenny pulsed in at 48 and all A’s!! Knock me over with a feather..I never mean to imply I thought he was unfit for this ride or I wouldn’t have done it, but I can’t say enough how impressed I was with this little fella and his demeanor and scores for his first event.

After the hold we headed back out for the main climbing portion of the LD which happened to be the  trail that I had tried Kenny out on before bringing him home. The humidity dropped to actual cool rain drops, mist mantled the reaching views, and flowers in various shades decorated the green that filled our eyes near and far. It was truly a glorious day!

Kenny had a moment or two where he seemed to flag, but it was inevitably tied to his need to stop and poo. I’ve ridden horses that poop and trot without hesitation, those that slow to the walk, and a few who need to stop and poo. They may learn to poop on the go or they may not, but I absolutely would rather stop and let the horse expel than allow momentum or anxiety carry them along. Better out than In, I always say!   for the Shrek lovers out there.

Kenny said No Thanks at the water trough before leaving the hold, but YES PLEASE to a volleyball sized puddle off the side of the trail heading back down after a climb. Ahh, the teaching moments of mileage!

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T and I did some downhill jogging on foot and were merrily cruising along when 2 riders behind us delivered a reality check, “There’s 20 minutes left to Finish!” Umm…errr…and at least 5 miles? The humans were flustered but the ponies seemed to get the memo and we were off and trotting in good form, until we honed in on and splashed into a water crossing, missing the sharp Left the trail took right before the water. We had a totally flipping glorious cavalry charge up the short hill after the water (the power in this pony–woah!!)–and reined up at the top to see no ribbons. Our return down the hill was slightly more sheepish than the summit, and we followed the correct course back over across the gravel and onto the really fun and fast footing of the Canal trail, ironically the same trail, just the reverse direction, that I had jammed over 5 years ago on Blaze trying to not be Overtime.

With zero leg applied, balance in my seat and very few Straighten Up reminders needed, Kenny flew behind T’s mare through those winding trails, picking up both leads of the canter of his own accord as we literally laughed out loud. We were nearly certain we were Overtime but we had so much horse left and it felt GOOD.

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Kenny took about a minute to pulse in on arrival then we cooled our jets as Overtimers til the vet had a moment to vet us out. Great scores again and a solid trot out with as much overstride and reach as he started with. BAM!

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and back to eating

I was disgruntled for maybe 5 minutes on trail with the revelation I was going to Overtime this LD again, but aside from that moment of ego I really just had a blast and was thrilled with the reserves Kenny managed, used, and had. He marched around on evening walks post ride even faster than pre ride, jumping into a trot if my pace quickened at all, and sometimes if it didn’t, coz Pony, ya know? I loved it.  The taste of a well ridden ride got even more delicious when some hold time discrepancies revealed that those finishing within 30 minutes of the declared finish would in fact get Completions–we rolled in 10  minutes late and little Kenny is on the books!

Professional photos by Lisa Chadwick

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Job truly well done ❤

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by Lisa Chadwick

Next Time:  Glue-on Boot Removal..