Queen Vashti's Adventures
The adventures of an alpha mare and her girl. Vashti is a chestnut mare born in 2004. She enjoys peppermints, carrots, grazing and attempting to convince her girl that she should be a retired horse and live the pampered pet life.
Monday, August 15, 2011
Scratched
The first aid crew is now on the scene.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
New Potential Career: Show Horse
Our barn is having a schooling show - no show clothes allowed, just fun. I am like a giddy 12 year old girl. We will have our moment in the ring! Of course, my mare has now decided to give up steering - Me: OK, pick up the trot, and circle to the left. Vashti: UGH, OK, we're trotting, you said right, right? Me: Left.... Vashti: lah, lah, lah Me: LEFT LEFT and I'm pulling on her head and mouth as she doggedly turns away from all the cues.
Stay tuned for the results - will we get a ribbon, any ribbon? Or will I be laughed at by 10 year olds...
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Clinics
It made me remember the 3 clinics I have ridden in - one each the last 3 years. Here was my response.
I think right now my favorite clinician to ride with is Julie Goodnight. I have ridden with her twice now. She makes everything so easy to understand and my horse and I have become so better since riding with her. She does English or Western and believes in having a firm foundation of ground work. Here are the main things I have learned/remember from her
1. Look where you want to go - so simple, but how many of us do this EVERY second of our ride? It keeps you and your horse focused.
2. YOU chose the speed, direction and intensity of your gait at all times. No letting your horse wander or choose which way to turn. Now, I thought I had this down - nope, I let my mare chose our speed and direction more than I would have thought. Working on this put the two of us on the same page - my mare doesn't have to worry that she is left in charge anymore.
3. Ride with your seat and legs. I learned the beginnings of bridle less with this - amazing to work on the subtle shifts with your horse.
4. Groundwork, groundwork, groundwork. Julie stresses this and again, I thought Vashti and I were pros at groundwork. The number of holes we had in our groundwork were outstanding. I was floored and more than a little discouraged that first clinic in 2010. Now, we start our ride from the moment I bring her in from the field and her responsiveness is amazing. In fact, I can always tell when I haven't been paying attention (read letting her make decisions/walk over me - Mom, Grass!) during grooming/tacking the second I step into the saddle - we have a worse ride and it takes us that much longer to get on the same page and work together.
My other favorite clinician is Mark Rashid. I own every one of his books and had the opportunity to ride with him in 2009 for three days. He focuses on softness. I attribute my ability to ride my mare to him. We were a wreck waiting to happen and in just a few minutes, Mark was able to soften my horse and then teach me that I was the problem (of course). My mare feeds off my energy and Mark was able to show me how to remain soft and in balance. Whenever I get nervous, I rewind my brain to that clinic. He is an amazing horseman and teacher.So who has inspired you?
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Payback
Demise of my ice cold coffee.
The culprit...
Why you should never leave a horse alone on the cross ties
Safari rescue
Yes this is a picture of a small stuffed Pumbaa on a jump standard.
The other picture is a buffalo on another standard.
Today we played Safari Rescue. We set up six such stuffed animals and rode around the course rescuing them as fast as we can. Rescuing involves grabbing an animal and stuffing it in a horn bag. Tons of fun and we were able to work these issues: transitions, speed control, steering. This gave us a purpose to our ride and we had to side pass, trot, walk, canter, back, etc.
I had a blast!
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Because painting horses is fun at any age
Even Vashti thinks being painted is fun. Mostly because it involves eating grass and studiously ignoring giggling.




