Saturday, February 20, 2016
Yankee Update
I am so exhausted I can't even person right now, and I wasn't even there with him like Jackie was. I will explain more later, but he pulled through surgery. It was long and complicated. Recovery is long and everything is up in the air right now, not really sure of a plan moving forward except he will stay at the hospital for 2 more weeks. Communication is slow, but I am forever grateful to the University of Missouri emergency vet team working until 2AM to save my horse.
Friday, February 19, 2016
Temperature Changes
Quick little update since I have nothing new in regards to riding to talk about...
Mr. Yankee is currently battling what seems to be impaction colic, second time in 2 years.
I feel helpless, since he's 4 states away, and I can't do jack shit but sit here and try to mitigate panic. Luckily, he has Jackie and the vet team there, but I'm still feeling all the feelings right now.
I'm beginning to think that in his "old" age, he's getting more and more sensitive to rapid temperature changes. Last spring he was with me, when it went from 15* to 60* in about 3 days, boom, colic. This time, it's about the same situation. It's been cold, and all of a sudden, 70*.
It's crazy to me that a simple change in temperature can impact a horses' system. Supposedly. I know there's many other factors at work, but this is too often to be coincidence.
Anyways, keep him in your thoughts today. I'm worried about my OG
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Superstar Shredder
I don't know about any of you, but I haven't ridden since last week because of the cold, and then homework. Slow news day, haha. I *tried* to ride Tuesday, but Bacardi managed to snap my bridle in half....
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| B, WYD |
He was actually quite the gentlemen while I was lunging him before our ride and I was rather impressed, considering he had been stuck inside due to blizzard and cold for almost a week.
As I was putting away the lunge line (rolling it up) he somehow managed to break my bridle. I'm thinking what happened was, he went in for the face run on the shoulder (bad pony!) and caught his bit on the lunge line hooks then freaked out and pulled back. I only knew this was happening because I had the reins looped around my arm, my back was turned and got yanked back. As I whipped around to see what's wrong, I see Bacardi standing there looking mortified with the bit hanging down and my bridle in peices. Cool.
His gums were tender so I opted to not even switch bridles and continue.
This horse, man.
He is seriously the most destructive animal I've ever known. And not just to bridles, halters and blankets.
His own face he destroys on the reg. I mean really tears it up. If he doesn't stop he's going to have one ugly mug when he gets older.
My special snowflake comes in with a new cut on his face EVERY. DAY. Not exaggerating.
I count 11 separate cuts and scrapes. There's one on the bridge of his nose that was particularly deep, but now healed. We debated calling the vet out again for MORE stitches on his pretty face (see last post for face gash), but it actually closed up nicely on its own.
Incredibly frustrating though to see all these marks on his face. It looks like I beat him! Some of them aren't healing well either and scar up or don't grow hair back, even with Vit E oil treatments. I'm hoping come summer maybe they'll blend in, but right now he looks like Frankenstein. I'm terrified he will gouge an eye out someday!
Do any of you have horses that are superstars at something? Shredding blankets (hey B), breaking bridles (what's up B) or injuring themselves (lookin at you B)?
He's going to give me an aneurysm someday, I swear.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
What Do Wednesday; Trailering
Another week, another Wednesday, another blogpost asking my
readers What Do?
Recently, a few fellow bloggers have acquired something
wonderful; their own horse trailer.
I was incredibly lucky to have my POS (literally awful)
stock trailer throughout my teenage and college years as a younger equestrian.
Having grown up in the BF of nowhere OH, I think my parental units got overwhelmingly
exhausted driving my brother and I all over creation for track, football,
scouts, 4-H, school and horse shows. Essentially, the second I turned 15, my
father bought a rig and taught me how to drive it. Many hours were spent in
parking lots, learning trailering essentials like backing and stopping
distances. Then, as soon as I obtained my license at 16, I was on my own. It was
terrifying, but also liberating.
I always kind of felt like the equivalent of an equestrian
peasant, because I didn’t have a super fancy featherlite, but I was mobile and
I could go anywhere, and did. I even trailered my horses to MO with me when I
went to college, and back when I came home after. I got really used to driving
the trailer and it became second nature, loading up the beasts and hauling out.
I soon learned that it WAS expensive, but rewarding and liberating. I also soon
learned that literally everyone was begging for rides, but I was always happy
to oblige since my POS had room for 3! I remember one time hauling my friends
half-perch, my OTTB and then a small Quarab to a show…my poor rig was groaning
haha.
Then, the wonderful day came, two and a half years ago that I
was able to trade in my POS truck (RIP Big Sexy) and POS trailer for my super
hot and powerful SUV and lightweight straightload. Love at first sight. I still
love my rig…
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| my BA vehicle |
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| my pimpin trailer |
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| Yankee approved |
…but now that I’ve been driving a trailer for almost ten years,
I’m pretty much over it and I am no longer excited about it. Coupled with a
horse that literally hates to load more than anything else in the world, its an
exhausting experience and no longer stimulates joy in my brain. I actually
dread hauling and all it entails. Checking tires, brakes, connections,
emergency equipment, ball & chain safety, maintenance, rust removal, tire
replacement, hooking up, etc etc. it is not a freedom I enjoy as much as I
should, because I know a lot of people struggle to have mobility.
![]() |
| Moving to OH from MO |
These days, I tend to make decisions on trailering out and
show/schooling opportunities based off the ease of said trailering. I don’t
have the time like I did back in “the day” to spend hours maintaining my rig
and preparing for an adventure does take time. Especially because my trailer
lives outside, and I don’t go places often, each trip requires extensive
checking. For me, this usually occurs after work, at night, perhaps battling
cold or rain. Not fun. Also keeping in mind, until recently, Bacardi was an ass
pain to load. Like actually took literal hours sometimes or huge fights leaving
both of us exhausted. It hasn’t been easy by any means lately.
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| Example A, bashing face on said trailer |
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| Example B, 1.5 hours later and dripping sweat |
God I miss Yankee more than usual sometimes, and his self loading self
Now coupled with the discovery that Bacardi easily loads into my
trainers trailer, I’ve been using her to haul him everywhere, happy to pay the
fee to not deal with any of it.
I know, I am the worst type of person.
So now, most of my decisions are based off “is my trainer
going?” instead of “do I feel like going?”, which is huge and weird for me.
For example, I had fully intended to attend the last
Lochmoor Snowflake Series schooling show of the year this weekend…but based off
the fact that Supertrainer is heading to FL the day before, she will not be
taking a trailerful of students to a show here in OH. Therefore, I most likely
will not be going. I can ride without her, I’m not one of those people that
NEED their trainer to be there at all times, but I have been using her as a
crutch to haul. In addition, no one else from the barn will be going, since Supertrainer
wont be going, and I LOATHE going to shows 100% alone, now that I’ve
experienced the other side (I used to go alone always) .. Especially in the
dead of winter, with a semi- fractious horse who doesn’t load well. Not a
recipe for success.
So anyways, “luckily” that’s the last show offered until she
get back, so I don’t have to worry about transporting until then. But what I
want to know is what everyone else does. Do you have your own rig? If so, what
is it (I LOVE hearing about trailers) and do you love or hate it? If you don’t
how do you find rides? Friends? Trainer? Tell me dear readers, what do?
Monday, February 15, 2016
Shopping & Crafting
This weekend was super eventful. I spent the majority of it crafting, binge watching Vikings on Hulu, chugging coffee and shopping on ETT. Oops.
In the last week really, I have newly acquired a schooling quality standing marginal, FITS breeches, white full seat breeches for dressage, colored rein stops, and Equilibrium Stretch/Flex boots. Each item was LESS than $50 each too. YES. FITS Breeches for less than $50. I couldn't believe it either. And the Equilibirums I got for $40. FORTY. 2 items I could never afford full price and there they were on ETT for a steal. What is life. I follow Aimee's standard for shopping, if its super cheap, buy it, even if you don't need it. I needed everything but the Equlibriums though. And the FITS. Okay okay.. In other news, I might have found a saddle, like to purchase. More on that later. Sidetone if anyone knows anyone that needs a size 16 saddle, let me know.
So what else did I do this weekend besides not ride because it was -10* windchill and blizzarding the whole fucking weekend? CRAFTED.
Yes, crafting. I haven't done much in the ways of creativity lately, unless you count sketching a little here and there...
...but Jackie (aka BFF Extraordinaire and Yankeepants second momma) requested a stall plate and I was like, UM YES ABSOLUTELY I want one too, lets get crafty. To Michael's!
The most expensive shit was the wood stain and chain, otherwise, the wood itself wasn't too pricey. (SPEND ALL THE MONEY!!)
I will tell you this, staining wood, in the garage, when its -10 outside is less than wonderful and the stain itself wasn't really drying. SO, I brought the whole operation inside and covered my tables with paper bags and was so so so careful. So. Careful.
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| Before and after, 3 coats |
Staining wood is insanely fun for some reason, and I was like, what else can I stain? STAIN EVERYTHING.
After the stain was dry (I did 3 coats, about 45 minutes in-between each coat, I cleaned/watched TV while they were drying, questioned life and my sanity) I then got to work painting the names. Yes, I used stencils, because I didnt want to spend four hours with a shaky hands (too much coffee) painting letters.
I painted 3 coats on the letters after the original stenciling was done, which was horrible because my hand was shaking, but I got it done. Then, I painted around the outside because reasons. Afterwards, I glued on the wooden crowns, because OTTBs, that I bought for $.99 and felt super accomplished for the day.
The whole process took almost all day simply because of dry time, and I'm still not quite done because I need to find a way to attach the chains so they can hang and be portable for shows!
I might start selling these for anyone who wants one, as I can do ANY color, any stain and any design, painted or glued.
I made these with the intention to be portable & I think they turned out pretty baller. Despite no riding, the house is clean, I am fully stocked on tack and clothes and my DIY crafting was a success! Yay weekend.
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Complete Hypocrisy
I have not had the best week in regards to mounted activities. February in general is one of the worst months IMO. Looking back, I should have just taken the next 2 weeks off for reasons, mostly the ridiculous cold that has set in (it was ‐2 this morning, without windchill). It is a known fact that Bacardi is a wild thing the colder it gets, and I should have accepted it and let it be & taken the hit on my riding schedule/goals. But I’m feeling a ton of pressure with recent success to keep it going, show season coming up, etc etc
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| Searching for my sanity |
Both times I’ve ridden this week have been flat sessions, and due to the cold snap, I *wanted* to keep it
simple with halts, lateral movements and W/T transitions. That’s it.
Bacardi had other ideas and schemes though.
The first session he was lit about leg yields. The second day he lost his damn mind because the door was open. Holy Christ, his world was ending.
Bacardi had other ideas and schemes though.
The first session he was lit about leg yields. The second day he lost his damn mind because the door was open. Holy Christ, his world was ending.
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| Bacardi |
There is something about leg yields that he cannot wrap his brain around. I mean he literally crumbles in
front of me when I ask for any type of sideways movement while mounted. Unmounted, its better, but
he is still wildly offended regardless.
I’ve ruled out physical issues and tack fit because I’ve seen him do perfect leg yields in the field and I’ve even asked for them bareback, with no tack. He just literally cannot under saddle.
The best way I can describe it is that he gets “stuck”. Like he will freak out (no one can grasp how badly unless you see it in real life), tense up, toss his head repeatedly, prance, and hold his head high in the sky and then just jig in place. Or sideways. Or backwards. Continuously. As in, won’t stop for minutes at a time. I’ll just be sitting there while my horse is half rearing, running left or backwards and shaking my head. Once he finally stops moving, he flips his head up and down and side to side, and prances in place. Its literally like he short circuiting.
While this meltdown is occurring, GOD FORBID I touch him with any limb on my body. If I try and pet his neck to calm him down, that’s grounds for a full blown rear. Which is the opposite of what I wanted. If I try and combat the rapid sideways running with a closed outside leg, he explodes up or forward.
There is no stopping or assuaging the meltdown. And it happens every.single.time., 60% of the time I ask for even just 2 steps sideways.
Other days, he will leg yield across the entire arena brilliantly.
It is most perplexing, as I change nothing about the way I am asking or tack used. Special, special OTTB.
Then theres the separate issue of the terrifying, horse eating open arena door.
For real, this is the special of the most special horse quirks.
I’ve ruled out physical issues and tack fit because I’ve seen him do perfect leg yields in the field and I’ve even asked for them bareback, with no tack. He just literally cannot under saddle.
The best way I can describe it is that he gets “stuck”. Like he will freak out (no one can grasp how badly unless you see it in real life), tense up, toss his head repeatedly, prance, and hold his head high in the sky and then just jig in place. Or sideways. Or backwards. Continuously. As in, won’t stop for minutes at a time. I’ll just be sitting there while my horse is half rearing, running left or backwards and shaking my head. Once he finally stops moving, he flips his head up and down and side to side, and prances in place. Its literally like he short circuiting.
While this meltdown is occurring, GOD FORBID I touch him with any limb on my body. If I try and pet his neck to calm him down, that’s grounds for a full blown rear. Which is the opposite of what I wanted. If I try and combat the rapid sideways running with a closed outside leg, he explodes up or forward.
There is no stopping or assuaging the meltdown. And it happens every.single.time., 60% of the time I ask for even just 2 steps sideways.
Other days, he will leg yield across the entire arena brilliantly.
It is most perplexing, as I change nothing about the way I am asking or tack used. Special, special OTTB.
Then theres the separate issue of the terrifying, horse eating open arena door.
For real, this is the special of the most special horse quirks.
![]() |
| B when I ask him to walk past the open arena door |
Essentially, this issue boils down to spooking (in the rafters, bolt sideways) at said open door, taking 3‐17 laps at
the other end to relax .5 levels, return to working semi‐normally and then go past it again just to repeat
and never.get.over.it.
I make a point to stay relaxed and unreactive with this horse, but I sometimes reach a boiling point
where I WANT to rip his face off with the bit because he is literally being the worst. Every movement,
aid, sound is an excuse to fling his head so high it about smacks me in the forehead and then bolt. This is
NOTHING to work with.
Generally, horses can “work through” issues with the rider asking them to move forward into contact.
Forward is the key.
However, when B is having a fit, I can’t touch him. Like, cannot. If I ask him to move into the contact he does one of two things; jigs in place or backwards, or runs with his head higher than I physically thought possible.
After 45 minutes of this spooking dance and incredible tenseness through his entire body, feeling overwhelmed and entirely defeated, I threw my leg over, stomped back to the tack room and grabbed the first standing martingale I could find.
Going against everything I stand for, I slapped that bad boy on him so fast and threw him on the lunge line of discovery.
It took 25 minutes of reacting over nothing, hitting the standing, halting in confusion and being pushed forward again for him to learn that extreme head tossing is NOT an acceptable form of evasion.
And within that time frame I kept my cool. Never yanked on him, only asked him to move forward. It
was a self‐correcting session & he learned QUICKLY that it is possible to move without ones head in the
rafters.
Then, what do you know, he was a perfect angel for all transitions, gaits and halts on the lunge. Perfect, insanely, wonderfully perfect and fluid.
I still feel bad I reached the end of my patience, but I figure when the behavior is downright dangerous, something has to be done immediately to curb the behavior or it will only continue and get worse. I haven’t had him act this horribly in quite some time, and I was reaching the end of my comfortability. In the future, I simply will not try and ride when the temp is this cold, but for that day, I NEEDED the success as kindly & as quickly as of possible teaching him that I am not the devil or the cause of his anxiety, but here to support and teach him. But when he is so reactive to anything I do to mitigate his actions, nothing is learned. The first day, I left it alone and just got off once I got frustrated. The second day, I really just wanted to end on a positive note of some sort.
Its like once I forcibly & hypocritically removed the evasion technique, he stopped worrying about things in general and settled into the simple freaking tasks I was asking of him (WTC on the lunge). No sidereins, no collection, no fancy shit, just GO FORWARD.
I am fully convinced that all brain activity halts when his head is higher than his withers. More research to come.
Not that I need to justify my actions with my own horse to anyone, I simply wanted to share and compare with others. What do you all do when a horse has reached his “brain limit”? Do you try and fix the issue and end positively, or do you leave it alone and hope its better the next day? Why?
Generally, horses can “work through” issues with the rider asking them to move forward into contact.
Forward is the key.
However, when B is having a fit, I can’t touch him. Like, cannot. If I ask him to move into the contact he does one of two things; jigs in place or backwards, or runs with his head higher than I physically thought possible.
After 45 minutes of this spooking dance and incredible tenseness through his entire body, feeling overwhelmed and entirely defeated, I threw my leg over, stomped back to the tack room and grabbed the first standing martingale I could find.
Going against everything I stand for, I slapped that bad boy on him so fast and threw him on the lunge line of discovery.
It took 25 minutes of reacting over nothing, hitting the standing, halting in confusion and being pushed forward again for him to learn that extreme head tossing is NOT an acceptable form of evasion.
![]() |
| Bacardi as JBeibs |
Then, what do you know, he was a perfect angel for all transitions, gaits and halts on the lunge. Perfect, insanely, wonderfully perfect and fluid.
I still feel bad I reached the end of my patience, but I figure when the behavior is downright dangerous, something has to be done immediately to curb the behavior or it will only continue and get worse. I haven’t had him act this horribly in quite some time, and I was reaching the end of my comfortability. In the future, I simply will not try and ride when the temp is this cold, but for that day, I NEEDED the success as kindly & as quickly as of possible teaching him that I am not the devil or the cause of his anxiety, but here to support and teach him. But when he is so reactive to anything I do to mitigate his actions, nothing is learned. The first day, I left it alone and just got off once I got frustrated. The second day, I really just wanted to end on a positive note of some sort.
Its like once I forcibly & hypocritically removed the evasion technique, he stopped worrying about things in general and settled into the simple freaking tasks I was asking of him (WTC on the lunge). No sidereins, no collection, no fancy shit, just GO FORWARD.
I am fully convinced that all brain activity halts when his head is higher than his withers. More research to come.
Not that I need to justify my actions with my own horse to anyone, I simply wanted to share and compare with others. What do you all do when a horse has reached his “brain limit”? Do you try and fix the issue and end positively, or do you leave it alone and hope its better the next day? Why?
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
What Do Wednesday: Bit Warmers
Another Wednesday, another day of me asking my readers What Do!
This will be an incredibly short post, since I apparently cannot human today. I had several ideas for other topics, but never got around to typing the posts, so this one will do.
For me, here in the "north", in Ohio, it can get pretttty cold. Like so cold. Not Canada cold, but still freeze your face, hurt your lungs, destroy your toes, cold. Last night the windchill was about 8*, but in the barn it was a balmy 23*. STILL COLD, but doable in the ways of riding. Even when I lived in MO, sometimes it got even colder, which is perplexing.
Be it that its the friggin arctic, I've constantly run into the problem of frozen bits.
And cold saddle. But thats another topic.
It has been a constant battle for me on how to warm the bit so it doesn't burn the shit out of my horses' mouths, but I had never really found a great way to do that until now.
I had tried everything. Putting the bridle in my jacket, setting it in warm water (if you can even find warm water), warming it up with my hands and breath (NO), and setting it on the tack room heater (the opposite of cold- BURNING hot), to name a few.
Nothing has really worked for me until I saw this handy little guy on Riding Warehouse over Christmas.
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| Sorry such shitty quality |
Essentially, it's a little pouch that wraps around your bit & is insulated.
I've used it a few times now and I've decided I REALLY like this guy. The catch is that you have to "power" it with hand warmers, and if you forget to open them about 15 minutes before you need to warm the bit, this product doesn't work.
However, I've taken to leaving the hand warmers in my car, opening them on my drive to the barn, and by the time I get there, its nice and toasty. Then, you just stick it in the Bitten pouch and velcro it around your bit. BOOM. Perfectly warm in ten minutes.
Then, I take the hand warmer out and put it in my hoodie pocket while I'm riding for emergency hand warming. It amazing.
Its like a two-in-one type deal and I'm in love. A few more steps/hassle than most people might like, but it gets the bit the PERFECT temp and then I use the hand warmer to keep my hands toasty during my ride/untacking. I'm sold.
So, this brings me to my question (for those of you that deal with it), how do you warm up your bits? What do?! Feed me your secrets, I must know.
Also sidenote, I got "bridle tags" (wine glass tags really) off etsy for my bridles and breastplates and for less than $5/tag, I think they're ADORABLE and perfect. Bonus deal.
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