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gone.

>> Friday, July 15, 2011

She lost the baby.

We go next week for another vet visit, but our chances this year are pretty well gone. (And for you country fans, that's gone for good.)

This blog will be pretty quiet for a while.. I've been having medical problems in addition to preparing for college. Nothing too serious, fingers crossed, but this seems to be the kicker for a year already plagued with bad health. Horse is still chilling out in the field, waiting for me to take her and Miss Manners up to the chiropractor.

Doctors, doctors, everywhere.

When we all get well, what will we do with ourselves? If Miss Manners were aligned, Horse didn't have a lumpy rump, Baby Mama would raise her baby, I stopped having to go to the doctor every month.. I might actually be able to make long-term goals! :)

It's too hard to write about riding now.
When a path starts to form out of this mess, I'll let you guys know.

-- Girl, Horse, and fellow sick animals.

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PREGNANT.

>> Saturday, July 2, 2011

Yes, she is.
How exciting!

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OH MY GOSH.

>> Thursday, June 23, 2011

This is me realizing that this blog is officially over a year old!

On May 11, 2010, Somewhere Down the Centerline began.. And it's been an interesting ride. Now, I'm not the most reliable blogger.. But I promise to keep trying my best to get my thoughts on here. And finish the Saber-toothed Tale. Soon.

So how about a complete update? I usually write these in back stories, so you all don't get a real time feel for what's going on. Plus, some stories just haven't been typed out yet due to me being.. Well, me.

GIRL: After a year of hard work in the barn and in school, Girl is officially worn out. She thought she'd spend her summer by a pool or staring at the ceiling or anything that involved doing nothing... But y'all knew that wasn't going to happen! She is currently teaching a handful of Littles, trying to get pumped up about riding again (after a slight deflation), and doing themed babysitting when needed. She's pretty happy, minus the fact that she's getting up at 6 almost every morning.

HORSE: Well.. Horse is just chilling. Because of her sacrum, she will continue to chill until about August.

BARBIE: The beautiful brainless broad is currently in training to be a racehorse mama after a less than stellar 60 second ride that included a metal wall and a mounting block. Don't worry; she and Girl were fine. But after much thought and discussion with other horse people, Girl decided Barbie would be happiest in the low stress lifestyle of a broodmare.

BABY MAMA: Bred.. We learn if she is officially with baby on MONDAY. YAY.

Not quite the way I imagined the year going, but that's the thing with horses:
You can plan for the future, but you can't dictate it.

A year ago, I had huge plans for Horse and myself. Now, we're just waiting it out until she feels better. A year ago, I had no plans to have another foal. Now, I'm impatiently waiting for an ultrasound. A year ago, I was breaking the sprayer in my shower and trying not to get sick of turkey and cheese. Now, I'm taking ungodly long showers (15.. 20 minutes!!) and.. Okay. I still eat turkey and cheese more than any normal person should.

Here's to another year, Somewhere Down the Centerline.
Here's to more adventures.

-- Girl.

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Is dinner ready yet?

>> Sunday, May 15, 2011

I come from a microwave generation.

If I want entertainment, I press a button and the the television turns on.
If I want food, I type in a number, wait several seconds, and bam! Dinner.
If I want to go somewhere, I can google it and come up with a million deals on airline tickets and hotel rooms.

We live in an instant gratification society, and though the baby boomers started it, my generation can't imagine a world without it. I've never thought twice about using the microwave that my mother considered another "fad" decades ago. I can't even comprehend life without a cell phone or where you didn't have a personal car.

That being said, there's no microwave for horses. Wouldn't it be nice? You could jam your bucking, biting, rearing, crazy, worthless, no good, hopeless green horse into a box and he'd come out the other end sweeter than cotton candy and more flexible than an underaged Chinese gymnast.

So, that's what I've decided to do with my life. I have invented a microwave for horses.

Check it out:


CLICK.

What do you think?
--Girl

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Miss Manners Thinks I'm Running the Glue Factory and Baby Mama Non-drama.

>> Friday, May 13, 2011

I was all ready to write yesterday.
Practically stuffed full with ideas, but then Blogger decided to go down by the time I got to the computer.
ugh.

Anyway, Miss Manners is having to have a little boot camp on manners. Ironic?

You see, for years I've been convinced that our barn looks like this. Happy, sunny.. But apparently for the past six or seven (or has it been eight??) years, I've been living in denial because, according to Miss Manners after a couple months chilling in the pasture, this is how the barn really looks like:

Did I mention she has two swirls??


So, currently on Day Three. And I have yet to sit on her back.


I have a theory. It's crazy, really. I mean, any modern horseperson will tell you that they make chains, planes, and automobiles that can speed things along.. But maybe, if you take it slow and train your horse from the ground first and build your trust, your horse will be a lot better for it.


Call it what you like; I call it common sense.


Step One: Coax cranky, schedule-driven chestnut mare to get in the barn when asked politely and the first time..



Also, dragging the Baby Mama for a pre-breeding exam tomorrow. Squeal!!
Wish me luck,
Girl



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Girl and the Sabertoothed Pony Shadow, part one

>> Sunday, May 8, 2011

If you've read this blog before, you might be aware that I have a tendency to act first, ask later. (Think later too, if you ask my mother.) This is not always a bad thing.. Most of the world's innovations were created by such people; some by complete accident.

Such is the tale of the sabertoothed pony shadow..

I'm not sure if you know this, but at fourteen, I knew everything. I kid you not. Absolutely everything. Now, I know that's not true. At fourteen, you only think you have mastered the secrets of the universe. You're sneaking wine coolers from your mom's meager supply of liquor, and you're riding your pony like you stole him. You can converse with the adults like a "grown up", maybe even convince a few that you're a hop skip away from eighteen, but when you're alone, you still pretend your Cow has suddenly transformed into fire-breathing racehorse prancing up to the Derby.

Maybe that last one was just me..

Anyway, I decided to stop riding when I was thirteen. I was starting to dance for our school's dance team and also playing basketball and volley ball. Trading my boots for pom poms seemed like a decent idea. Not that I wouldn't trail ride or play with the old Cow some.. I just didn't want the pressure.

Around this time, one of our boarders purchased a mutt of a horse. He was dappled gray, fat and sassy, and horribly cute. "You have to come meet Ungodly-Redneck-Name!" My mom coaxed.

About a month after they brought him home, I finally did. He and Hamlet met me at the gate, a lethal combination of pony syndrome. I offered my hand out to him, and he peered back at me, an inquistive intelligence that I'd never encountered before. He had long white lashes, and he batted them innocently as he sniffed my hand.

Then he nipped me.

"Son of a-!" I jerked away from the fence, glaring at the pony who still seemed quite intrigued. It was then I saw the whorl, running half-way up his neck. Back then I had standards that may seem a bit strange.

1. No whorls running up the neck. (I've leased/owned four since.)
2. No double whorls on the forehead. (Miss Manners is a full on double whorled girl.)

Are you confused yet? Good.

So, a quick explanation. In some cultures, a whorl running up the neck is considered a sign of bad luck (along with having a white sock on the right front leg). In fact, in the Bedouin culture, this marking was referred to as "the shredded collar". There was a custom to rip one's shirt collars off while mourning.. See the connection? A horse with two swirls on his face is thought to be more emotional and over-reactive.. Not my cup of tea at all. Granted, every horse I've ever liked has been just this side of normal. The crazy side, that is.

Now, please note that these are all superstition. They aren't fact, so don't get your feathers ruffled or your panties in a bunch just because I said your horse was bad luck or nuts.

Ungodly-Redneck-Name had the biggest swirl I'd ever seen running up his throat. I spun and made my way back to the barn. "That horse is trouble," I told my mom later. "And he's bad luck."

I bet you're thinking this is one of those sweet stories where I turned out to be wrong. But it's not. Ungodly-Redneck-Name was way too smart for his own good, and we lived in fear that he'd evolve to have opposable thumbs. He tore apart gates. He broke fences. He behaved like he was scared to walk through the barn, and heaven forbid you try to put him on a trailer.

It was all a game though. He'd play the "I'm so scared!" act with his owner and then placidly plod through the barn when I took the lead. If he were human, I imagined he'd be a smooth-talking Eddie from Leave It To Beaver, greasing the parents and then doing whatever he wanted.

Finally, his owner decided he was too much. She was going to take him to the sale barn, where he would bounce around from owner to owner before subsequently ending up in a can. She offered him to me.

I took the bait, and at fourteen, I bought my first pony. He was dirt cheap, but the check bounced by 20 cents. I asked for her to sign a bill of sale. In our drawers, we have the check with the byline of "Ungodly-Redneck-Name" and my overly-cutesy handwritten bill of sale.

After about two weeks of referring to him as the Alpo Pony, we shortened it to just Pony.

Pony was and is one of the strangest horse personalities I've encountered. He'd groom me one day, nip me the next. He'd be perfect and then perfectly horrid (while no one watched and while everyone watched, of course.). I loved him, from his dapples to his sporadic episodes, because he was mine.

All mine.

At the time, I had a friend who also rode a pony, and we'd hop on bareback and ride for hours. There's a big creek that runs near our farm, and we'd splash in it and ride until we found an opening. We'd steer our ponies out of the bank, zipping through the fields with a youthfulness only found on the back of a horse and away from parental vision.

"Are we allowed in here?"
"Do you see anybody?"
"... No."
"Then yes. We are."
(Sorry, Mom.)

Because of this, we'd end up miles from home. For my friend, this was nothing.. Her pony was well-behaved and somewhere between 11.3 and 12.2 hands. For me, each ride was a game of "Can I Keep My Butt on the Pony?", mixed in with a little prayer. Pony is 14.2 hands and not easy to scramble on to. Plus you never want to fall off miles from home.

And if you get off, you want to make damn sure your horse doesn't leave you to walk through the overgrown grass up the world's steepest hill in soggy tall boots. But that's another story.

It was on one of these days that we'd taken off, zipping through pastures like hellions. We'd dare each other to ride across new pastures, flicking nervous glances at the houses on the property. While in one field, a giant Hummer had pulled into the driveway. We scattered like cockroaches when you turn on the light. Splashing into the creek, my friend turned to me. "Where do you think we are?"

I shrugged. I had no clue. In typical teenaged fashion, she shrugged also, and before we could get too concerned, we were pulling our legs up our ponies' back to avoid being soaked by deeper water. We'd been riding for about an hour, trying to escape farther and farther from the fenced-in fields of home.

We finally hopped out into a field we'd meandered through earlier. I gave Pony a long rein. He plugged along like the world's best trail horse. My friend did the same, and her tiny mount stretched and snorted. With the summer sun beaming down and the sway of our horses' walks and the untouched field with no modern convience in sight, it felt like everything was perfect.

I kept one hand on the rein and turned to face my friend. We chatted as I leaned on Pony's amble behind. Then he saw the manhole.

Manholes, you see, are evil. They eat ponies. Especially the gray ones. Those are super tasty.

He jumped and wheeled, and it was one of those moments where you're thanking God that the grass is thick.

Now, most bad ponies would have headed for the hills by the time you were bouncing off the ground (when you're old, you just splat.), but Pony just stopped and started grazing a yard or two away from where he dumped me. I rolled up on my side, pleased to see him nibbling and not making a mad dash away. I crawled to my knees and realized with horror that he was standing on - not one - but both sides of his reins.

On each side of his face, he had about three inches of slack before the reins went under his hooves.

I knew what was going to happen. It felt like slow motion. "No, Pony, no," I soothed. "Don't move."

As I stepped forward, he jerked his head up, popping the leather apart with an anguished cry. (Oh, wait.. The cry was me.) I grabbed him before he could break anything else. It's okay, I thought. Surely he just broke his reins. Maybe I didn't have the cheekpieces really fastened.

I was wrong. He'd broken the metal buckles of each cheekpiece, stranding us an hour from home without a cell phone or twine or any feasible way to reassemble the bridle. I fiddled with the bit, trying to concoct some way to stabilize it in his mouth without the cheekpieces. It looked like one Girl would be leading a now fidgeting Pony all the way home.

As he fidgeted, he brushed my hand with his bad luck swirl. Then he stepped on me.

Maybe, I thought, the Bedouins had it right.

(part 2 coming soon.)

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Economics and English and Statistics, oh my!

>> Thursday, April 28, 2011

Where has Girl been?

Struggling.

I decided to cram everything I didn't want to take at Difficult Liberal Arts College into one semester. Taking these classes at Small Community College SEEMED like a good idea in December, when I was bored out of my skull. I mean, they'd be easier than at DLAC, right?

Well, yeah.. They were/are. But when you stuff your schedule full of them...

Damn this teenage reasoning.

So for the past week and a half, I have written 2000 words worth of guided journal entries, a final grammar exercise, a paper on China's economic boom, a paper on central banking, two article reviews on China's credit card monopoly and what banks can learn from Apple, and an article summary on teenaged drinking in Ireland. I have taken a Trig test and a Statistics test.

And I would like to say, I'm fried.

Two more papers to go (8 pages on teen drinking and 3 pages on the difference in the 2001 or 2002 recession and the current one with reference to government interference), four finals to take*.

On top of that, my finals schedule worked out with my final 8 page paper and three tests... All on Monday. Two of them at 1215. Luckily, I can move the hard one to Tuesday.

Deep breaths, deep breaths.

If I don't spontaneously combust, you will have a hilarious story of innovation, manholes, and one nutcase of a pony next week.

Until then,
Girl**

*currently in Statistics, Trigonometry, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, and English Composition II.
** lacking in basic planning skills.

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Horse Did What?

>> Friday, April 8, 2011

Horse will be off until this fall due to messing up her sacrum in the great suicide attempt of 2010. She should have a full recovery.

After I came home, I started working with her again. I longed for several days, and she was very well behaved on the ground and on the line. After the third day, I got on for about fifteen minutes. I walked her around, working on suppling her.. Easy stuff. She was a little fussy, but I chalked it up to being off for several months.

Any horse is bound to be a little cranky after "early retirement".

The next day, I put her on the line. Still good. I climbed on.. And she did not feel like any Horse I'd been on earlier. She refused to go forward and, within fifteen minutes, resorted to rearing. Except, she didn't have the strength to hold both of us up in a rear, and before you could say "I think she's gonna.." and before I could bail off, we went sprawling on the grass.

I bounced up as my baby scrambled to her feet. We were both shaking, and she walked to me, quivering but quiet. She put her head on the full length of my body, blowing nervous air on my hip as I scratched her head and neck. She was terrified, and I felt sick.

Something was wrong.

Well, remember when people were telling me she was just being bad? They were wrong. I should have had her looked at sooner, but I'll admit, there was a part of me that thought maybe they had a point.

On the day the barn stood still last summer, Horse damaged her sacrum on her left side, which caused the flip in December. My biggest regret is not listening to her sooner and thinking her misbehavior was just bad manners.

How many "bad" horses would there be if we would slow down and listen? How many dangerous habits have we fostered because we didn't step back and see the signs?

Granted, there are some bad apples in the bunch.. Ponies too far gone or genetically wrong. But I can't help but think that Horse would have become one of those if we'd pushed her.

-- Girl

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Haiku's First Haiku

>> Tuesday, April 5, 2011

It's a crazy plan
Of playing genetics with
A man in a can.

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What up, readers?

>> Monday, April 4, 2011

Today, I looked at my blog's stats just for fun. 841 views in February!

I was all happy about this and relayed my excitement back to my mom.
"Yeah, at least half of those were your parents.."

At least a fourth of them were probably myself, editing or trying to find some inspiration. Or egotistically reading my own work... :)

But for that elusive 25% of you, this is a thank you for reading. For those of you that comment or email me or remind me in class or mention it at the Backyard Barn.. It's awesome to know someone's reading about my teenaged reasoning and ill-behaving horses.

Yes, I am a bad blogger.. Somewhere Down the Centerline's level of activity is a bit like a roller coaster. But roller coasters are fun, right? Right?

Oh, and make sure to send me your own blogs. As you all know, I'm a procrastinator to the max, and blogs are the perfect way to pass the time.. :)

Later! -- Girl

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Cantzing and Other Exciting News

1 hour 21 minutes ago, a big day ended.

Now, to horsemen and women of many years, whoop de freaking do. Canter isn't that exciting. For a seven year old.. Totally different story.

"And if you ride really balanced for me today..."
"I get to cantz." She whispered, as if afraid to say it any louder. As if any loud noise might change my mind.
"Canter, and yes."

Cantzing before today has been a mystical, magical thing that the "big people" do. Despite her excitement, she has her reserves.

"On the longe line?"
"Yes."

And with that satisfaction, she goes to buckling her girth.

Later, I hoist her up in the saddle, noting that she's growing. Again. You don't realize how much munchkins grow until you throw them up into a saddle every week. Granted, her legs still don't go past the saddle flaps. I notice this as I adjust her stirrups, feeling slightly queasy.

She's ready, she's ready, she's ready. I breathe out. Am I?

I wonder if this itching fear goes away in time. There's a precarious balance with kids and ponies, and there's a huge responsibility when you have someone else's baby on an 800 pound animal with a mind of his own. Now, I know they're going to fall. That's inevitable. (The first and last time this Little fell, she bounced back up to my arms, clinging monkey style and sobbing.)

Even then, you want each first time to be the best time and to build from solid basics. When you introduce something new, you get a definite feel for how secure that foundation is.

I hope her foundation is unshakeable.

We start doing stretches and no stirrups. Trotting in airplane, hands to the sky, hands on her hips. She trots stirrup-less, no hands. We both swallow our concerns.

And she canters a step, nerves ricocheting in every directions. I think some of them might be mine. "Tell you what? We can play games if you promise me you'll canter at the end of your lesson."
She nods, mouth in a solemn line.

At the end of her lesson, the barn is crowded. Another rider came to play in some of our games; more wandered out to watch. Five or six people, eyes trained for her first real canter. But after an hour of silly games, she and her pony are relaxed and ready.

I clip on the longe line, reminding her about her heels. Fussing with her stirrups.
And she canters and she canters.
Until I say, "Time for free time!"
"Can I canter more?"
"Uh, no? You already cantered."

The whole barn high-fives her as I thank the big Man upstairs for another quiet beginning.

Cantz? Check.

-- Girl

ps, Baby Mama just came today to be bred.. If you didn't know, the baby daddy is Sir Sinclair from Iron Spring Farm. The baby will be born in the H year and will be named Haiku. (That's Baby Mama's name backwards. Horse's name is her mother's name in Old German.) Everybody think pink!

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The Reason Why

>> Saturday, April 2, 2011

Tiny girl, tiny pony,
Round and round they go.
Tiny girl, tiny pony,
Too fast and then too slow.
She says whoa, and he speeds up,
A kick and he slows down.
Keeps going straight when asked to turn.
When coaxed forward, he turns around.
She begs for right, and he turns left;
She pulls left, and he tugs right.
If she gets him on a circle,
He counterbends just in spite.
A plastic bag becomes a ghost,
But whips have no incentive.
He can only stand a fly at most;
Flailing kids ain't so momentous.

And in the middle of the ring,
Holding her breath and feeling heady,
Is a Girl with a whip in hand,
Tilted back and at the ready.
She stares at uplifted heels
And powerful prancing pony,
Slumping shoulders, open fingers,
Bending elbows, still so bony.
And she worries, and she fusses,
Fixing stirrups countless times.
Tries to signal to the pony
To be supple, sweet, and kind.

Tiny girl, tiny pony,
Round and round they go.
Tiny girl, tiny pony,
Too fast and then too slow.
And then one moment cuts in time,
Where they stop and walk and trot,
Sublime.
And in the moment, love is found.
A breath expelled.
A truth, profound.

Thelwell again. Go look him up.

I need to stop procrastinating papers. But until then.. :)
-- Girl

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How the French and the Fire Ants Stole Saturday

>> Saturday, March 12, 2011

I considered telling this story earlier, but thought it to be slightly tactless. After writing about the stick-on bra fiasco of 2011, I figured to hell with tact. It was never really that fun anyway.

It was a Friday.

I had gotten off work early and decided to drive up where the Baby Mama (remember the big bay mare I was breeding to Sir Sinclair, the super stud? That one.) was living. As you all know, baby mamas get fairly upset when you don't see them often, and since my little bundle of joy's well-being(and price tag. ahem.) depends on a good personality, I figured any time convincing Baby Mama that I was awesome was time well spent.

So, I took the hour drive, music blaring and windows down. I enjoyed the sun; I enjoyed the peace. I turned the music up so loud that I couldn't hear the tiny alarms going off inside my head..

Now, if you've ever had anything horrible happen, you know that sometimes there's this voice in the back of your mind going, "Hey, you up there! Remember this? Hey! Seriously, man, you missed the turn!"

(I do not have this voice for directions. Not in the least. You can ask my father, who will promptly tell you that he tracks me for a reason.)

And in the back of my mind that day was that itch..

At one point in my life, I had something clipped out of a magazine that read: My mound of dirty clothes will never grow higher than the average garden gnome. That day, I had not only beaten the average garden gnome by several feet but had also grown my pile large enough that it would not have fit in the largest person's fattest fat pants.

I needed to wash laundry. Bad.

I don't think I had in about three weeks, and I'm 90% sure my dirty clothes pile had become a clubhouse for every creepy crawly critter in a thirty foot radius. Which for those of you living in clean suburban houses isn't so bad, but for those of us who - oh, I don't know - live in a CAMPER next to a BARN, a thirty foot radius includes at least a trillion species of multiple-legged foreign delicacies.

Yum.

Now, if you've been reading, you know that the barn dogs suckered their way into Clark. Well, the dogs took to the giant laundry pile like fish to water: wallowing around, sighing contentedly, enjoying the aroma of sweat-soaked socks and dirty shirts. They'd get particularly miffed when I'd break out the Febreze in an attempt to avoid going to the laundromat.

Desperate times call for desperate measures.

But despite the looming mound of laundry, I was enjoying myself in perfect weather on a perfect Friday afternoon. And then I sat down.

I sat for a second before I felt the first sting. I brushed my hand over the spot.

Then I felt the second sting. "What the-?"

I jumped up with the third sting, and I think the sudden movement made them all decide to grab hold. All 1,945,321 fire ants. (Just a rough estimate of the bites that ranged from my ankles to my lower back..)

I have never dashed for a hose so fast. I turned it up as high as it would go and began spraying those suckers like the last scene in a gangster movie. I would have done the mobster laugh, but unfortunately, I'd been reduced to a flailing, squealing mass.

"What.. Are.. You doing??" Baby Mama's owner stepped from the barn to find me, dancing around while spraying water at a breakneck speed down my shorts.

In the midst of pained squeaks, I managed feebly. "Fire ants.."

She turned inside to get some paste to take the sting out. (Which is a lie. None of those things work. None.) By the time she got back, I had washed away my little red buddies and had finally reduced myself to just twitching when I thought I felt the quiver of six legs dashing up my thigh.

Now, I'm pretty tough. Broke my elbow, no tears. Been trampled, kicked, stepped on, bitten. I'm scarred, permanently bruised, and I have nerve damage in various body parts. I'm here to tell you:

1 hour + a gazillion fire ant bites + driving home = Not fun.

On every bump, dip, and turn, the bites would scrape across Kent's all-of-a-sudden bristle sharp seat. The bugs had transformed my driving into that of a ninety year old woman. I think I got honked at twice, and not because I looked pretty.

At home, I toddled into my camper, swallowed some medicine, passed the laundry pile (I swear something croaked hello at me..), and collapsed into my bed. From ankles to back, I was swollen fatter than a well-fed tick.

The mass amounts of allergy meds helped me slip into a slightly uncomfortable slumber. I think I dreamed the creatures in my laundry mutated into giant mega-flamethrowing ants, but I can't be certain.

I woke up in a cold sweat.

Now, I did the morning feeding every Saturday, so I pulled myself from bed. I downed more medicine and rubbed myself down with more itch-calming ointment. (It really does reduce the itching.. You're so busy trying to figure out how to scrape it out of your now stinging wounds that you really don't have time to scratch.)

Then I did what every liberated woman this side of the Mason-Dixon line would do. I found a giant pair of basketball shorts stolen from my 5'11 brother years earlier (You know I love you if I have at least one article of your clothing), and I pulled them on with a giant t-shirt and one of the aforementioned holy bras. (stolen from someone else.. The shirt, that is... Not the bra.) That's right. No panties. Judge if you want to, but I know that:
Fire ant bites + panties = not a smart idea.

It was not a fun feeding. It wasn't horrible, or else I would be able to remember it with a cringe and a cuss word. But I doubt it was good.. You try feeding 20 something horses with a smile on your face as your bug bites compare notes.

"Yeah, I'm really annoying her! Life rocks!"
"No, no, no, dude. I'm the more annoying one. Getting in her joints was a gnarly idea!"
"Listen, bros... She can't sit down without thinking about me."
"Hells yeah, man. That's rad."

So, yeah. Not a happy camper. I finished feeding and crawled back into Clark, wondering if it were ethical to take Nyquil at 9 in the morning. Can't be miserably bug-bit when you're in a cough syrup dream.. Kidding!
Kind of.

Well, my morals (and I promise they're in there, deep down) got to me, so instead of drifting into a nice sleep, I lay there trying to ignore the bug bites and the little voice reminding me I needed to get my laundry done. Around noon, I got sick of being completely pathetic and not having anyone to whine to (teenaged, obviously), so I wandered back up to the barn, trying to look as pitiful as possible.

I blame my dad for this. He LOVED taking care of my brother and I when we were/are sick.. Soup, medicines, playing video games... I swear, the man knows more about medication than your local pharmacy, and with the help of Google, he's practically a doctor. So naturally, my brother and I both play up that sick card like Munchausen patients and expect someone to lovingly dote on us.

It only took one bout of stomach sickness to clear up that being sick away from home SUCKED royally, and having half my body ravaged by little poison factories was no different.

The Boss Mare was riding the Princess, a lovely 4 year old by Contucci, and boarders were popping in and out to watch. I grabbed a chair and gingerly eased myself into it. "Girl, you want to try her?"

Um, YES. Without a second thought to my nasty bites, I sprung from the chair and quickly made my way back to the camper to change. I found a pair of clean riding tights, a not-so-giant shirt (OCD about how I look in the mirrors.. I like my lines to be perfect, and my shirts tucked in.), but as I began to change, I realized I needed one thing.
Underwear.

I began digging through the camper for a clean pair, and after about five minutes, all I could find were a pair of frilly French panties. Now, the first time I saw these, I loved them. My best friend had just gotten home from Europe and had brought me chocolate from Belgium and my choice of real, authentic French underwear. No girl passes an opportunity up like that. The first time I held them up, I remember thinking how grown up I was, with my fancy and sophisticated underpants.

I stared at them, with their lace rear end and the pretty bow. The same sophistication didn't hit me. I didn't feel grown up or awesome or even mildly pleased with myself. I did, however, feel the sinking sensation that this was probably not going to be an absolutely pleasant experience.

For once in my life, I was right.

I made my way back to the barn, walking kind of funny in my tight riding pants and my lacy underthing. "Want to switch saddles?" I called to the Boss Mare.

"No, just ride in mine." I paid no mind to this. Frankly, I was too busy blocking the feeling of lace against my bug-bitten derriere. That tends to be distracting.

I got on the mounting block and swung up on to the Princess. The minute I hit the saddle, I realized..

I was in the Boss Mare's tiny saddle that hugged me in all the wrong places. My rear, thighs, and calves were all rubbing against the saddle. And worst of all, crammed in between the tiny saddle and my fire ant bites were a pair of lace panties that could only be compared to some kind of human flesh grater by this point.

Oh, wait. That's not all.. The horse is a four year old, 17.2 mare. Which, for you non-horsey people, means she's giant and still a "baby".

If you listened to the people watching, the ride went well. The horse settled nicely, connecting to the bit and working easily. I did not.. I tried posting; I tried sitting. I tried deep breathes, imagining unbitten skin and a world free of fire ants. A world where my comfiest granny panties were always available, itch creams actually worked, chocolate was calorie free, and I was no longer trapped in the French knickers of doom and despair.

In other words, heaven.

Later that day, I peeled off the tights and hell panties. (literally peeled. I think my bites tried to glue my clothing to my body...) With a groan, I flopped back into bed yet again, unable to sit at the kitchen table. Unwilling to dress up and go out.

As I lay there, I finally heard the little voice fussing about my rapidly growing insect metropolis, otherwise known as the laundry pile.. Still not washed.

The moral of this story is always do your laundry like you might sit in a fire ant hill, still want to ride, and desire not to be rubbed raw by the French torture panties of doom.

If you don't.. Listen to experience talking.
It's a hell of a ride.

-- Girl

(NOTE, cartoons coming soon.)
(SECOND NOTE, hyperbole is alive and well on this blog!)

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Five Second Update & Preview

>> Friday, March 4, 2011

Maybe I watched Lion King too much as a small child, but I strongly believe in the circle of life. Everything has a purpose.

Everything, that is, except for fire ants.

Now, I'm not sure about the rest of the world, but in our lovely Southern state, these little critters run rampant.

Stay tuned...
(I'm in my last week of college before SPRING BREAK!! and midterms are killing me.. So, very soon!)

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The Recipe for Making A Dressage Rider.

>> Friday, February 25, 2011

Take one part grit, two parts determination, and a cup of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. You MUST mix both sides to achieve suppleness and balance. Stir together and pour into a blender of soft legs and strong cores. Add a touch of "I can do that better" and often-bruised ego.

Mixture should begin to froth at the sight of a well-connected Warmblood.

If being served in the South, warm mixture until it's sweaty and miserable. If being served in the North, chill until flexibility is at a raw minimum.

In either case, serve in a pair of see-all white breeches on a leather saddle sure to leave your butt as black as coal.

Enjoy!

-- Girl

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Blame It On The Rain.

>> Thursday, February 24, 2011

If there's one thing I like more than attractive waiters or the perfect half-pass, it's rain.

I miss those working student days the most.. Raindrops drumming me awake, splashing against my legs as I fed. Brushing against my cheeks, getting caught in my eyelashes. I even liked riding in the rain, in an indoor or outside. Those days, I'd turn on soft classical music, and let the rumble of thunder add to the crescendo.

The Boss Mare rode to the droll sounds of National Public Radio. So one rainy morning, I tacked up her second horse and led him down to wait for her. I plopped into a chair near the arena entrance.

Stalled horses dozed in their stalls - some with their heads low in the corner, others sprawled out in their shavings. The sounds of rain and thunder mixed with the scratchy tones of liberal media.

It was a cocktail more potent than Nyquil. The gelding, not immune, drooped his nose into my lap. He cocked his hindfoot up to rest, closed his eyes.

I leaned back in the chair as I scratched his ears and neck, feeling woozy and heady from the drum of Mother Nature and some carefully twisted media. I yawned. My eyes began to blink shut. My limbs felt filled with lead....

And then with a start, I woke up. I jumped, and the gelding jerked away from me.

The Boss Mare stood alongside her first mount. Her hand rested on her hip, and her head tilted to one side. "Were you... Sleeping?"

"Uh. No?"

We traded horses as I wiped the drool from the side of my mouth.

I wish I could say that was the only time she found me drifting off in the chair... Maybe later I'll tell you about how I love hot summer afternoons with Wishbone Ash puffing from the speakers.

Until then,
Girl

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My Kingdom for a... Scrawny Greenbroke Foxtrotter?!?

>> Sunday, February 20, 2011


Before you read this, I suggest reading Little Abigail and the Beautiful Pony by Shel Silverstein. It may help you imagine how my mother behaved when getting our first pony. (It will also help you imagine how my poor mother felt after I found this poem at age 6 and read it to her almost every time we got in the car..)

However, my dearest dad did not tell her no, so don't worry, she did not die. Though I'm sure in hindsight, the funeral would have been a lot cheaper than what ensued..

From the earliest ages I can remember, I have always been fascinated by ponies. I blame this on my mom, who shared my fascination and became my biggest enabler. Stuffed ponies, plastic ponies, pony books galore. My Friend Flicka, Thunderhead, the Black Stallion.. I had them all, penned in corrals of my imagination and ink.

So at every major holiday, I asked for a pony. Even off holidays, I asked for a pony. Strong wills are as prominent in my family as our Italian noses, and I distinctly remember trying to reason with my mother that getting a pony would not be that expensive. (Which is why you NEVER listen to a six year old on financial matters....)

She tried to soothe my desire with more pony books, but that only added fuel to the fire. "Look at the Dutch Warmblood, mom! Look at the Haflinger! Look at the Thoroughbred!" (Little did I know that a decade later, all three would be right out my back door.)

She tried to fill my empty stalled heart with vast numbers of Breyer horses. I would sit for hours, consulting my trillion pony books to create the truest life I could for my machine-made friends. "This one's an Appaloosa; he'd be a wild Indian horse. This one looks like a quarter horse, so he's going on the ranch. She's a Thoroughbred.."

This even spilled over into my school life. At recess, I would assign breeds and colors to my friends, and we'd spend our time playing a "horse" jumping game.. I even had a sheet of paper designating everyone's name, color, breed, and whether they were wild or not.
I had it Bad. With a capital B.

The only one who had it worse than me was my mom. She'd married my father back in the dinosaur years with the promise that he'd go out and club her a nice pony if she'd move into his cave. She forever reminds me to "get the horse up front".

My mom is a wealth of knowledge.

But despite his promise, we were still horseless. My mom had become an aged cynic, believing she'd never own a horse, and I was just a mildly annoying seven year old who doodled misshapen ponies on anything I could get my hands on.

Until I became unable to make it through the day without Tylenol.

I was playing softball, and after years of being dragged to my brother's games, I was pretty pumped to be on the field. But after every game, I would require tons of pain killers and would be reduced to a limping mess. Soon it boiled over to day to day activities, and before you know it, BAM!

Children's Hospital.
Crying Mom, crying Girl, cheerful decor and all.

Turns out my well-meaning Mom and Pop didn't have the best genetics (proof that responsible breeding is the only way to go), and little Girl had severe hip dysplasia. My doctor was going to have to reconstruct my hip, a process that would include a six-week body cast and massive rehab.

I felt like my life had been ruined and proceeded to be overly melodramatic from that point forward. Considering my way with words, I'm sure my parents were bummed they hadn't created a mute Little instead of a lame Little.

But in one of my crying fits, I sniffled. "Momma, if I make it," Sniff, sniff. Choked sob. "Can I have a pony?" Sniff, sniff, glancing up with watery eyes.

"Of course! You can have whatever you want, sweetie." Cut to crying mother.

That's one thing about major medical issues. Your parents are putty in your hands.

I turned eight, and they manage to dodge the pony thing by sending me to Camp Hell Horse Camp. Little did I know that my dearest momma was using the time to our full advantage and had caught a hard case of horse fever.

After coming to the conclusion we could afford a horse habit (HAHAHAHA), she had decided we were getting a horse and enlisted an aging cowboy (who I'm sure thought we were crazy) to help her. He'd been out to buy a saddle from a guy and, wouldn't ya know? The man had a horse for sale.

My mom thought she knew something about horses, considering she'd ridden bareback throughout the Stone Ages (dodging dinos is supposed to be awesome for your balance!) and had consumed almost every equine literature known to God. So, she loaded up to look at the aforementioned horse, a kind of scrawny four year old foxtrotting gelding. She rode him down the road and back and very logically told the man she would think about it.

Later that night, she called him and offered $900. Well, darned if he didn't have another offer, and more people coming out soon. She thanked him, logically, but stuck to her very reasonable offer for a greenbroke foxtrotter.


After hanging up the phone, she cried until my dad told her to "just buy the damn horse". She called the man back and offered to pay more than the other people, whatever would get her the scrappy pony.

She subscribed to John Lyons' Perfect Horse (...kind of a stretch, if you ask me) and ordered tack off Ebay. A couple weeks later, we picked up Hamlet. We rode every day, taking turns sitting on a bucket. I'd ride, she'd watch. She'd ride, I'd play in the dirt.
We were horsepeople, finally.

I'm not sure if you've realized, but I'm not a foxtrotting, trail riding Girl. How does a kid with a greenbroke pony in the middle of nowhere learn to dance down the centerline? Elementary, my dear readers.

I pestered. I bugged. In the trillion pony books, I owned many "Saddle Club" stories, and I became convinced that Pony Club was real. I begged my mom, who brushed Pony Club off as a fictional thing.

And then we got a local "horsepaper", and right there on the cover: PONY CLUB. Turns out, there was a real-life, honest to God, Pony Club just two hours away.

We bought a trailer to haul Hamlet the scraggly super-pony. (We even let my dad pick out the brand and write the check! Family bonding!) The DC of the Pony Club reminded my mom to not let Hamlet turn away from the trailer. Once we presented him, he had to get on.

It took us two hours to load him the first time.

I'm pretty sure our fellow Pony Clubbers didn't have much faith in our survival as horse people at first. We came in our truck that didn't have air conditioning going up hills and with our bridle put together wrong. Our pony had his mane cut by hand. Our Ebayed endurance saddle didn't fit either of us or Hamlet.


(I preferred bareback, but my mom would pay me a quarter a ride just to get me in the saddle.)

We had the hunger though. We both devoured any knowledge offered, and we both can still whoop some butt when it comes to horse management knowledge.

Twice a month, sometimes more, she'd load Hamlet and I up and drag us two hours for lessons or Pony Club activities. We found Dressage lessons with the Boss Mare when I was nine. We found Cow shortly after. We upgraded saddles, trucks, horses. It's been a constant push to evolve, to learn more.

It's now a decade later, and we are still learning. I've spend thousands of hours in the car, thousands more in the saddle. I've done flying lead changes; I've done flying dismounts (unplanned ejections is more like it). I've consumed ungodly amounts of horse hair.

Thank you, Mom, for making this happen and for watching every single one of my lessons.
Thank you, Dad, for footing the bill and feeding the horses with minimal cussing.
Without you guys, I probably would have ended up dying from normal causes instead of asphyxiation by horse hair.

How boring.
-- Girl

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Clark Kent had my heart from hello, and other sappy sentiments.

>> Friday, February 18, 2011

(Really, this post is just a post for the sake of a post. I will post something worth reading very soon. Promise.)
I have a problem, and that problem is my gas-guzzling truck.

For those of you who don't know me, I drive a Chevy Silverado that I bought because it reminded me of an uncle. He passed away in a motorcycle accident a month before I bought it, and in my fifteen year old mind, that was something. When we lose someone, even if we're not close, we try to find some link to bind us with that person. I like to think it's so we never forget.

Some people will tell you that's clinging to the past, but I've gotten plenty of mud on these tires (and running boards and sides and mirrors..).

Growing up, I wanted an old stick-shift Ford Mustang. I mean, I frothed at the mouth over these cars. (Maybe that explains why I'm single....) But that summer, driving home from our barn, I caught sight of Kent for the first time. He was solid, nothing fancy or head turning.

But I had to have him.

One loan and a ton of "I really just spent HOW MUCH??", and he was mine. I named him Kent because of Superman and swore to him that he would always be clean.. Nowadays you can't climb out of him without getting dusty or muddy.

Kent's seen a lot over the years. He's seen tears and happiness, love and hate. He's been the background and the foreground to most of my life. The savior when Clark the camper's air conditioner died. The closet when I used to get dressed on my way to work. (Back in my semi-nudity at the barn stage..)

He's been there for all the tickets I've cried my way out of and all the awkward hugs at the end of all the awkward dates. I can't count the times I've leaned my head against his steering wheel to conceal a smile or a sob.

But the fact of the matter is Kent is a gas guzzler.
And I am a broke college student.
The sensible thing to do would be to trade him in for something smaller, but I just can't. My reasoning isn't because he's paid off or I have to pull a trailer with him.

When I sit in my truck, I can remember tiny moments I'd forgotten, from dancing at stoplights when I was young to praying to let morning come an hour later when I was a working student. (God never made good on that, but seeing as he gave me back my cell phone in the Giant Pasture Incident, we have an understanding.) Selling him almost feels like I'm selling my memories.

Many riders face the temptation to give up their horses in exchange for something more economical, just as I have with Kent. But I've seen their glances in the rearview mirror, and the look they get when the memories come flooding back at the sight of a hoof pick or a halter.

As important as finances are, I think we don't place a high enough value on remembering where we came from or what made us happy. We make decisions based on the bottom line and overhead so much that we forget what a simple trail ride feels like or the joy from driving eighty with the windows down and fluffy pop music bursting from the speakers. We may even live tangled in our choices, forgetting day by day the hours we lived before.

My truck reminds me of everything from my youth, ridiculous and awesome, and my daily quest to stay humble. Trust me, you can't be High and Mighty strolling back to a muddy pick-up.. Unless you're a teenaged boy, of course.

It may sound ridiculous, but I'm keeping my truck. If the gas prices get too high, I can always use the walking..

-- Girl

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A Little Bit More About Horse and Girl

>> Wednesday, February 9, 2011

I found this nifty little survey on a horse website and, out of sheer boredom, filled it out.
Fill yours out and send us a link! We want to know about you and your Horse.

About You
Name:
Girl. My parents were very original, as you can tell.
Age: 18.
Hobbies/Interests: Riding and pretty much anything that improves it.. And writing.
Job: I herd small children onto ponies that may or may not be thrilled about the whole concept. Oh, and I say "heels down!" and "he's got to look around the circle too!" a lot.
Favorite books/magazines: Religious reader of Redbook (classy) and Cosmopolitan (trashy), in addition to a mass amount of horse magazines. Dean Koontz rocks too.
Favorite movies/TV shows: Music & Lyrics, Fox & the Hound, and Bandits for movies. How I Met Your Mother, Glee, 16 & Pregnant and its derivatives (yeah, I know. Shame on me.). TrueBlood sometimes.
Favorite music: Everything and anything not stupid or played to me against my will. (Read that again, Dad. I don't want to hear Son Volt when trapped in the car with you!)

About Your Horse
Name: Horse. Beautiful, yes?
Age: 4.
Sex: She's too young to be- Oh, ahem. Mare.
Breed: Thoroughbred/Dutch Warmblood.
Height: 15.3.
Color: Bay.
How did you get/how do you know the horse?: I got her via the man-in-the-can and our local friendly vet. I've known her since my mother stuck her first ultrasound picture on our fridge.
Barefoot or shod?: Barefoot.
Diet: Currently devouring round bales at rapid rates. Handful of SafeChoice day and night. The lack of grain has no effect. If the pony she lives with wasn't fat also, I'd assume she'd gone carnivore. I thought snow was supposed to help her burn more calories, not balloon to the size of a small whale....
Likes to: Chase small animals. Destroy blankets. Eat.

Your Horse Life
How often do you ride?:
Almost never because it keeps snowing and I currently have no indoor. (Dear Future but Currently Non-Existant Husband, I want the indoor instead of a honeymoon+anniversary presents for years and years. Our relationship has a better survival rate if I can ride than if we spend a couple nights on the beach.)
Do you show?: Not currently..
Where do you keep your horse/ride?: Right now, at the lovely Backyard Barn. Complete with chickens and cows, oh my.
Do you volunteer with horses?: No.
Do you have a horse-related job?: Yep.
Do you ride with friends?: Occasionally. I prefer riding alone most of the time though.. Clears my head.
Do you jump?: I haven't in a while, but I have.
Do you trail ride?: Yep.
Are you in 4-H or Pony Club?: I pony clubbed for.. Several years. (No ponies were hurt during the clubbing though. Wow, corny.)

Favorites!
Saddle:
Bates. (I'm a saddle snob. Don't get me started on all worthless purpose saddles..)
Bit: Loose ring snaffle.
Helmet: See photos. I've no clue, but I love it and it's cheap.
Boots: Mountain Horse.
Chaps/half-chaps: Barnstable or something like that.
Breeches or jeans: Kerrits.

Have You Ever?
Galloped?:
Heck yeah.
Ridden bareback?: Yes.
Jumped bareback?: When my mom wasn't watching.
Ridden double?: When my mom wasn't watching. (See a theme here?)
Ridden a draft horse?: I will if this weather ever clears up.
Ridden a pony?: Ponies gave me the patience to deal with Thoroughbreds...
Sat on a horse backwards?: I've ridden backwards. When my mom was watching. (Good parenting call, Mom...) However, she wasn't watching when my friend's pony started spinning. My friend couldn't figure out how to do an emergency dismount backwards, which led to the most hilarious, slow-motion fall I have ever seen. We both about died laughing, and then Mom banned riding backwards. (When she's watching, at least..)
Gotten a 1st place at a show?: Yes.
Seen a foal being born?: Horse. :D
Ridden without stirrups?: Without stirrups makes me happy. Masochistic, I know.
Had a longe lesson?: Lots.
Been yelled at by an instructor?: Yes. Not fun.
Spent the night at the barn?: I lived at a barn, hello..
Spent an entire day at the barn?: Lived at barn, so yes.
Longed a horse?: For more hours than you could ever imagine. Longing's like doing math. Or pulling teeth.
Fallen off?: I don't fall off. (hahahaha. right) I either a) get ejected against my will or b) do a very ungraceful dismount by my will.. Or at least that's what I keep telling myself.
Ridden a horse that bucked/reared/bolted?: There are horses that don't???
Ridden a horse that spooked?: See above.
Been seriously injured in a riding accident, or seen someone injured?: See above.

Even MORE Have You Evers...
Made your own jumps, treats, or other horse-related item?: My parents are engineers (mining and geological. Rocks, yipee! ...not.), and both seem to think this makes them modern-day MacGyvers. I'm serious. My mother uses hay string to fix almost everything, and my father has enough measuring devices to get from here to the sun. Needless to say, I might puke if I have to "may-sure" anything else, but we do have an awesome barn interior and jump standards. (As for the "may-sure" thing, my dad pronounces things funny just to irk my proper English self.. my correct grammar.. self. Eh, you get it.)
Ridden in a body of water?: Plus side of living near a creek.. All the time.
Blanketed a horse?: Unfortunately yes. (Damn you, Snow.)
Bathed a horse?: Yes.
Cleaned a horse's sheath?: This will probably be the only one but NO.
Pulled or braided a mane?: Ugh, yes.
Been on a carriage ride?: Yes.
Been on a tourist trail ride?: Yes.
Ridden at night?: Yes.. That ended well. (sarcasm. I ended up breaking my elbow.. More on that later..)
Been kicked?: Permanent bruises.
Been bitten?: See above.
Been stepped on?: SEE ABOVE. Seriously, my horses are abusive..
Made your dog jump fences or in some other way act like a horse?: ....Yes.
Mucked a stall?: *Stalls, you mean. And waay too many.
Been to a clinic?: Yeah.
Helped train a horse?: I've trained a horse. I never said well, but I trained one.
Ridden with a crop or spurs?: I grew up riding Cow. What do you think?
Been to horse camp?: Yes.
Ridden with gum, an iPod, etc.?: ... Yes...
Ridden without a helmet?: Barely. I HATE it.
Worked toward and achieved a riding goal?: Yes.
Kept a riding/lesson/show journal?: Dear Lord, yes.
Critiqued your riding videos?: All the time.
Collected model horses?: If by collect you mean: Buy them, play rough with them, and now use the ones with remaining legs to teach pony colors.. Then yes.
Cleaned tack?: I don't want to think of how much saddle soap I've probably eaten over the years....
Moved hay bales?: 200 in a hour or hour and a half. The Boss and I are BEASTS. (But very, very, very pretty Beasts, eligible bachelors.....)

story of my life..
thelwell rocks, go look him up!

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Ten Things You Need to Know About Your Chestnut Thoroughbred Mare

>> Sunday, February 6, 2011


When I was about thirteen, I remember telling my mom with absolute certainty that I would NEVER ever own a chestnut Thoroughbred mare again.

Uh.

Sorry, thirteen year old self.

I've owned three. (Two for the moment, though all three are still on the farm..)

And over time, I've figured out the ten rules for getting along with your chestnut Thoroughbred mare...

  1. You are only interesting when you come bearing treats, grain, hay, or some device to rub her with (curry combs, rub rags, long fingernails..)
  2. Ask nicely and don't mess up her schedule or be prepared to suffer through crankiness for any small thing you ask for afterward.
  3. NEVER under ANY circumstances forget what a beautiful, glorious creature she is and how incredibly lucky you are to be in her presence.
  4. If you do happen to break #3 (and you will), you will be bucked off, bitten, stepped on, run over, or otherwise maimed within the next week to remind you of who exactly wears the pants in your relationship (and God help you if you mention she looks fat in them..).
  5. Once a month, you might want to skip the riding. Unless, of course, you like the taste of dirt. Instead, I recommend massages with rub rags, bathes, and cookies. Lots of cookies.
  6. Your chestnut Thoroughbred mare wants you to learn and grow.. That's why she balks at the trailer or tests the walls of her stall. Not only will it broaden your inventiveness but also your vocabulary!
  7. She will paw, and no, it's not out of boredom. She's simply trying to remind you to be time savvy and hurry the hell up.
  8. When she's ready to go, she's ready to go. So stop screwing around and get to it before you make her even crankier.
  9. Her preferred pasture mates are other chestnut Thoroughbred mares, but if none are available, she will settle for doting geldings.
  10. She loves you. No, really, she does. And once in a blue moon, she will look at you with soft eyes and floppy eyes. She'll lick you shoulder or nuzzle your fingers, and you'll know.

Well, it's either love or she needs a new salt block.

-- Girl

from top to bottom: Girl, 11 or 12, and Cow. Girl, 16 or 17, on Chunky and ponying Miss Manners. Girl, 15, and Barbie. Girl, 11 or 12, and Cow.

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Snapshot of my Life.

>> Saturday, February 5, 2011

"And this is the..?"
"Cantle."

"And this is the..?"
"Pommel."

"And in between...?"
"The twist."

"And this is the...?"
"Skirt."

"And under the skirt?"
"The panties!"

"... Not exactly."


Maybe I should start teaching saddle parts more often.

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Things That Sag and Other Rider Woes

>> Thursday, February 3, 2011

Has it been a whole week? Wow..
How about we talk about something really important?

It takes a village to raise a child, and to raise a young horsewoman, it takes support. LOTS of support. It takes a trainer with passion to nurture and grow; it takes a mom and dad who are willing to sacrifice certain sanity and wealth. It takes a reliable equine partner (to make it.. to learn, all you need is something with four legs that isn't a total idiot.). It takes someone with determination.

And that's all the support you need.
Well, until about sixth grade.

Unfortunately, I was reminded of this fact just this past weekend. I had driven to a larger city with some friends on Friday for a concert. I had two choices: a black v-neck tee or a flowy pink halter top. Normally, I'd be all about a v-neck (especially black. Covers dirt and grime SO much easier), but I'd worn my paddock boots to college not one, not two, but three days in a row.

My paddock boots are not shiny, brand new, trendy footwear.
They are not the same as these:


They are not even like these:

(though, seriously. Who put the pumps on paddock boots, for crying out loud.)


My paddock boots have been rained on, stepped on, sweated in. They've been muddy, dusty, soggy, squishy, and just plain old gross. Needless to say, I don't have any cute guys in my classes. Or maybe they've just been repelled by the boots.

Granted, I was feeling a bit guilty about wearing them THREE days in a row.

So, at the end of the paddock-boot-fashion-fiasco week, I decided I needed to inject a little "girl" in my life. Meaning, halter top. Meaning.. What the hell does one wear under a halter top? I have no halter bras, slingshots, boulder holders.. Whatever you want to call them.

The bras I do have are a bit like a Southern Baptist preacher. They're old, holy, and not too keen on supporting this new-fangled rock 'n roll stuff. Don't get me wrong, I love them (and Southern Baptist preachers), but they just weren't going to cut it this time.

Entering at A, the stick-on bra.

I bought one, stuck it on, and had a blast at the concert, knowing my sparkly pink contraptions from 8th grade were back in Somewheresville. (awaiting my return and most certain slump back into t-shirts and riding tights, I'm sure.)

However, Saturday morning rolled in fast, and my stick-on bra and I began the drive home. Due to a forgetful friend, we ended up thirty minutes late. I was booking it to get back home in time to teach Little lessons. With no time to spare, I rolled up to the barn, stick-on bra and all, and got to teaching.

Teaching Littles is a physical activity. You're up moving around, demonstrating, making them smile. It's part of the job description. (The best part, after watching them learn.) I get PAID for helping little girls have fun and learn about how awesome horses are. I get PAID for making each ride fun and silly and educational. Isn't that crazy awesome?

My job rocks.

I do a lot of moving in my lessons. There are jumps to be set up; there are stirrups to adjust. There are silly games and stretches we do. And midway through my first lesson, I realized I was moving maybe a little more than usual..
My stick-on bra and I had met the first bump in our relationship.

I resort to not jogging anywhere in the arena or doing any of our wiggle exercises. We made it through the lesson fine. With just one more lesson to go, I figured we could stick through it. (Corny pun totally intended.)

Unfortunately, my lesson mare was/is/will always be a complete COW. Little squeezes; Cow stands there. Little kicks; Cow stands there. Little turns a pitiful face to me; Cow makes a bold attempt towards the gate.

"Okay, Cow." I said through gritted teeth, knowing full well Cow is perfectly capable of being wonderful. "We'll start on the lunge line to get you going forward."

Cow glared at me but was perfectly compliant on the lunge line. We played Simon Says, using stretches and transitions and other tools Littles need in their toolbox. Cow trotted around while the seven year old did no stirrups. She walked when asked to, stopped when asked to, went on when asked to. Perfectly wonderful.

I took the lunge line off. "Okay, let's start with diagonals! Which one are you gonna do first?"

"KXM." She replied matter-of-factly and, with a determined scrunch of her face, aimed Cow's nose in the right direction. She nudged her. Nothing. Kicked her. Nothing. Cow stood there as if her hooves had filled with lead. Really, one would think she had died if not for the look of determination in her eyes.

I stared her down, trying to telepath the image of dog food to her. Elmer's glue. I think she got it, but if anything, it only seemed to underline her decision. There was no way on God's green earth she was moving.

"Okay, kid.. Hop off." The Little looked dismayed. "It's okay.. I'm just going to get on and remind her of her job." I pulled on my helmet and took the reins of the old bag, who balked once she realized we were not headed for the gate.

You must be kidding. Her ears flicked back, and her face got the same cranky look my Italian grandma gets when you tell her not to tear the leaves off the cabbage at the grocery store.

No, I'm really not. Move it, fatty.

I stepped in the stirrup and swung up.. And realized with horror that my feminine curves were not locked and loaded. No, no. Instead, I was "free". Sorry, 1960s feminists. It's not all it's cracked up to be.

It's okay, I thought. Indian women rode. Lady Godiva rode. Both of them did it with ease and grace, or so I convinced myself. They'd probably be proud to have my modern (albeit fly-trap-esque) brassiere.

I was fine at the walk. Even the beginning of sitting trot wasn't the worst thing I've encountered. It was the fifth or sixth step in when I swear I saw the image of a girl dragging along her saggy buxom. Someone in the background said, "If only she'd supported and not tried to do sitting trot with them.... Such a shame. They were far too young."

Lucky for me, Cow decided Littles were more fun than me very fast.

I slid off, landing gently to reduce potential future saggage. Ten minutes of riding, and I was already terrified my feet weren't going to be the first things that hit the ground. At that moment, it occurred to me that riding Indian warriors were male and that Lady Godiva only went for a walk down the street.

The minute I got home, I pulled on a holy sports bra and a t-shirt.

It takes a lot of support to raise a horsewoman.

-- Girl

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Cowboys Bore Me, Boys Annoy Me

>> Wednesday, January 26, 2011

"What's the worst thing about your job?"
"The long hours, and it's really lonely."
"Oh, I know what you mean. When I did rodeo in high school, it was really lonely."
"Really."

He could not understand how hard it is to live alone, working 12 hour days, and only seeing your boss and the barn dogs for days. He could not drop the comparison to his rodeoing days. He didn't get that I was exhausted all the time.

So, I dropped it, and I dropped him.
I'd rather be lonely.

-- Girl

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Midnight in the Camper of Good and Evil

>> Tuesday, January 25, 2011


I should have been asleep.
I blame this on my father.
Of course, as he handed me the book, he reminded me.
"Don't start it unless you have time to finish it!"

To which I have to say, really? Does he think I live at Hogwarts, where I can turn back the clock? Where does this imaginary time come from? Between feeding, riding, sleeping, and the occasional drift into civilization, my time is booked. (<-- word plays like this amuse me now. I think that's a side effect of overexposure to horse manure.) I knew he was right though. I should have saved the book for a Saturday or Sunday, when I spend most of my time curled in bed. But because I am teenaged and willful, I started it anyway. What book, you ask? Relentless by the king of thrillers and my personal favorite Dean Koontz. (Sorry, Stephen King, but Dean makes me cry and laugh. You only make me confused and weirded out.) I read it in one go, delving into the layers of humor and fear like it was my last literary conquest. Now, I knew it was going to be creepy, but I wasn't too concerned.

I'd already hacked through Silence of the Lambs a couple nights earlier. Alone in my camper, I made it through without a single freakout, scream, or night of insomnia. I didn't even worry about my unlocked door. There was no way Koontz's book was going to be worse.

If you haven't figured it out by now:
I was wrong.

Koontz's supernaturals, demons, and ghosts terrify me. I've always read him late at night in my second story bedroom - scared, but content knowing that any evil thing would probably get my parents first. And hearing their screams, I would be able to use our "fire safety" plan. Yeah, Mom and Dad... When you taught me about getting on the roof, I didn't get the fire rescue thing.
I did, however, decide it would be a great way to escape from evil spirits.
You must be proud.

It was about eleven at night. Every creak, crack, and groan from Clark the camper seemed amplified. I had already turned so that I could have my back to a wall. Just in case, you know, some evil happened upon my kitchen. Between sentences, I'd glance up to check that nothing from the book had spilled over into reality. Every once in a while, I'd say something, anything, to break the silence.

(Usually hello, because Koontz instills this horrible fear that something will say hello back.. And I had crossed the horrible fear line chapters ago.)

As I finished a chapter, I realized I really needed to pee. But there was no way on God's green earth that I was going to leaving my camper safe-haven and venture out into the dark, soundless night.
Absolutely. Not. No-go.

A chapter later, I decided I was wrong, and I better find some way fast to venture out into the aforementioned night of doom. I called my dad, who answered in a groggy-dad voice. "What?"

"I need you to stay on the phone with me while I go to the bathroom." Okay, this sounds like a very strange request, but my bathroom is maybe a 3 or 4 minute walk (about a 1-2 minute dash) from my door. A lot can happen in 3 minutes. Just ask a Dean Koontz character.

"Huh?" He has received enough strange calls from his kids that he no longer chooses to form full words until he knows what the hell you're talking about. (Unless it sounds like you're about to do something reckless. Which in my mind, the bathroom run very well might have been. He did not have the same sentiments.)

The phrase "needed to pee like a racehorse" never made any sense to me until that night. I wanted nothing more than to dash for it and crawl back into my safe, warm home. With my dad on the line, I made my run. I'm not sure why talking to him was that comforting. It's not like his voice was going to stop evil in its track. However, the shadows looked quieter, and the silence felt smaller.

I made it!
Once I was tucked into bed again, he advised me to put the book down.

Let's take a poll.. What do you think I did? Did I put the book down like a sensible adult, remind myself that I had work in the morning and the words would still be there tomorrow?
Of course not. Teenager.. Hello.

A hundred pages later and into the last chapter, I was really glad I had taken that break.

I was vaguely aware of our barn cat meowing at my door. He does this almost EVERY night and will occasionally run his claws down the camper (no consequence is fast enough to convince him that this is NOT okay.). He hadn't visited me the last few nights, but apparently my noble dash to the outhouse reminded him of the finer living he was missing out on.

I was wrapped into the words. Hundreds of pages built to this moment. I clutched the book, hung on to the letters. A billion predictions bounced around in my head. I was almost th-

Something launched into my bedside window, propped open as an emergency "fire safety" plan. The screen clattered to the floor. I screamed, jumped, jerked. Oh dear God, I was going to die in this camper in the middle of nowhere! I dropped the book, twisted my sheets, cursed my dad for giving me the dastardly novel.

And then.
A pause.

I stopped and stared at the cat, who was hanging half-way in and half-way out of my window. He clung for a moment, a look of disappointment on his face. It was the same look Wylie Coyote had every time he ran off a cliff.

After a second, the cat slid back out the window with a pathetic meow.

When my heart started beating again, I laughed. When I could finally stop laughing, I breathed. When I finally caught my breath, I finished the book.

The cat ignored me for the next couple of days because, as you all know, if you witness a cat in a questionable position you should not exist. (And if he ignores you, then you don't. Wish cat logic worked on some people..)

He has not bothered the camper since.

-- Girl


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How To Mend the World

>> Sunday, January 23, 2011

A great friend on a great horse.

I need a track to feed this addiction
That makes everything blend like fact and fiction.
Stop for a second, here's my prediction.
I'd rather taste wind than feel soft, slow friction.

I need some ground to lay this dying heart,
Forget your quick fix, I need a jump start
To something forever, something apart
From it all. Oh, doll. This is a dying art.

I need to feel his rhythm, catch his beat,
Feel the cold world melt with his heat.
I know he's the only one that I'll ever meet
Who can match my heart with his pounding feet.

I need to explain all my sins away,
I take this confession almost every day,
The wind takes my breath and all I could say,
And only his power and warmth can remain.

I need to feel everything else is fake,
That the only thing real is the pair we make.
The trees could splinter, and the earth could shake.
But only with him do I truly awake.

I know when he lays down, prepared to die,
Some think he won't gallop the fields in the sky,
But here's the truth, they don't look in his eye,
Cause the angel inside can already fly.

-- Girl.

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It's a bird, it's a plane, it's... Barbie?!?!

>> Tuesday, January 18, 2011

It was one of those hot summer days where our boarders would show up with coolers of beer and outfits best described as questionable.

We really hadn't been doing much working. The Boss Mare had ridden one or two, and I'd been playing swap-a-pony in our pastures. You know what I mean.. When you have to move one horse, but end up trading around five others to make the move "smoother".

He pulled up in a Tahoe that screamed trashy, a fact punctuated by the loud rap music spilling from his speakers. I felt like I had just stepped into Pretty Woman, if Julia Roberts were bare-chested, beer-bellied, and barefoot and the saleswomen were clad in Spandex pants, tall boots, and grime.

I think it might have been the giant cross tattoo on his chest or the faint aroma of cigarettes and weed that clung to his worn-out sweatpants, but he stuck out like a sore thumb.

"Are you guys missing a horse?"
"No, I don't think so." The Boss Mare chimed from her perch.
"Well, this horse with a mask and cape just came through my front yard."

Every head snapped to stare at me. I stood up. Barbie is allergic to fly bites and wears nose to tail protection almost all the time. "That would be mine."

So began the frantic search for Barbs. Tahoe Boy drove me around our neighborhood, searching for my disappearing horse. He explained that she had just strolled through his yard, past his faux pit bull (I say faux because this sucker was clearly some Mastiff/Boxer variation labeled "pit bull" to sound cool..).

The Boss Mare rang me up. "We found her! She's on the other side of our neighbor!"

In other words? A briar patch.

I thanked Tahoe Boy, climbed out of the SUV, and raced my way past a trailer. I picked my way across a field littered with beer cans, baby diapers, and used fireworks. Amid the remnants of a redneck Fourth of July, Barbie had left her thoughts of how the other side lived.

I have never been so thrilled to find a pile of poop.

Then I saw her, complete with "cape and mask". I started through the patch, stringing words together as fluently as a sailor. By the time I reached her, the blood had already reached my socks. She was bumping against the barbwire fence, and as I slung her halter on, she caught her hoof through the bottom strands.

Luckily, one of our boarders helped keep her calm on the other side of the fence. I got her sorry behind out unscathed, and then we began the real journey.

I'm not sure if the Boss Mare has really been around OTTBs much because when I mentioned bringing the trailer up, she promptly told me I could walk Barbie home. Let's do some math, shall we?

1 very hot Thoroughbred+ stress + more stress + being led away from the most direct route home + 1 faux pit bull + a narrow street + a meth house = GIANT bad idea.

Barbie is not fond of cars or dogs, in particular big ones who think she'd make a nice "natural" alternative. And we all know from the Giant Pasture incident that the idea of walking a horse back gives me chills, especially when we are on a public road.

We made it passed the dog, down the hill, around the meth house, and passed the field of foxtrotters. I have never been more thankful for a lack of cars or a chain across a pony's nose.

Finally home, I assessed the damage. Two little cuts, not a rip in her blanket. Of course, she's dripping in sweat and stress, but that's not long term.

"She must have gone over the back fence." The Boss Mare contemplated. ".....You weren't exagerrating."

Like I've said before, Barbie likes to pasture-hop.
Literally.

-- Girl

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The Masochist was Too Nice, So The Sadist Tried Dressage Instead.

"What do you want to work on?" I eyed her as I walked into the arena. She was sitting up but not supporting herself one lick, and her reins were a mile long. Her mare had a neck stretcher on.

"Jumping." She said absentmindedly. "Or maybe something else. I don't really know. I should probably work on Dressage." She walked a circle, and I watched with the same expression one finds in a horror film. Basic geometry massacred. Oh Lord. "Maybe something I don't usually do."

"Just ride for a few minutes and let me watch." Well, she did, and I did. Finally, I stopped her.

"What are your goals?" She wanted to show, to do a baby event, other reasonable things. As she talked, I unrigged the neck stretcher. "You realize what has to go if you want to show?" She pointed to the neck stretcher as I tossed it out of the ring. "Precisely."

Then off came the stirrups. And on came the lunge line. I could tell she was a bit off-put. Here she was, a worldly pre-teen undoubtly talented in the saddle, on the same line that the seven year old was on early. "Today, we are going to work on balance and using your seat to influence your horse."

Stare.

Forty minutes of no-stirrup Dressage work is good for the cocky pre-teen soul, and after hours of teaching my littles, I was frothing at the bit to get into some Dressage theory. We discussed being counterbent, balance, and sitting trot. The dynamics of the Dressage seat and how it applies to jumping. The elusive outside rein.

I was having a blast. Being a bit of a sadist (a must for working with young horses and children), I recognized her grimace as a sign of a lesson well taught. Of course, there were other signs too - improved balance, posture, movement - but let's face it. No pain, no gain. Somewhere between discussing stepping into the outside rein and core strength, I realized..

Oh, God.. Not possible.. I could not have..

But it's true, friends. I have become a Dressage nazi.

The sight of a counterbent horse makes my insides twist, and I fantasize about putting pins on the backs of saddles because cantles were not put there to sit on(my littles will tell you, giggling, "We don't sit back there because we pretend we'll get poked in the bottom and that's no fun.").

Circles are the essences of life, and dear God, make them round or I might have a coronary. The littles will also tell you the inside leg and outside rein say where to go and the inside rein says where to look. You know you've got a problem when you catch yourself teaching that to seven year olds.

At the end, she walked her mare out, a thoughtful expression on her face. "Maybe I need to start working more than just riding around if I want to show."

Epiphany. Shocking. "Maybe." I hesitated. "So did you have fun?"

"I'm sore." Not surprising, I'm sore always. I do not consider this a bad thing. "But I feel like I learned something new."

And that's the name of the game.

-- Girl
(note, obviously not written about my working student job.. jumping out of chronological order for post.)

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Barbie's Gone Royal and Redheaded!

>> Monday, January 17, 2011

Barbie, Barbie.

She's one long-legged, hip swinging broad. A daughter of Storm and a Half, a granddaughter of Jetting Along, she's got the bloodlines of a Thoroughbred princess.

15.3 hands, the color of a polished penny..

When she's in good weight and groomed, it's enough to make your heart swoon. You may make an offering to her loveliness, a peppermint or a bit of carrot, but don't hold your breath. She is convinced all people are trying to poison her. (Don't you dare forget her Highness's ancestors faced such possibilities.)

Expect to spend a week convincing her the carrot isn't not cyanide.

If her pasturemates are less than suitable, she will leave and look for more satisfying companionship. She prefers those who are also chestnut and Thoroughbred or pony geldings who actually appreciate her beauty. Like the pop princesses of our day, she will pasture-hop until finding a group that will dote on her accordingly.

Those lucky enough to ride her have to handle her at her worst to get her at her best. Her best is akin to Marilyn Monroe in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", light and airy with a vibrant edge. And her worst can make Ozzy Osbourne look like a saint. However, two steps into her swinging Mae West walk will send your head spinning and your heart lusting for more.

As I freewalked her around, one trainer stopped to stare. "She walks like a hooker!"

She is rather indifferent about her humans and could very well do without them unless they want to massage her or rub her down with a rag like a new Camaro.
In which case, she will stand for hours.
Isn't it nice when humans realize their real purpose in life?



-- Girl

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Burn Out Blues? No thank you.

>> Sunday, January 16, 2011

Sometimes, and I mean this politely as possible, you gotta give Dressage the finger.

Sometimes, you just have to get on a horse and say, "Baby, you want to go on your forehand, looking like a camel? Be my guest."

You need to gallop, to stretch, to ride backwards bareback. To do all the things your mother told you not to do because, "Don't you realize that's a 1000 pound animal!!" You have to breathe in the excitement of being run away with; the brazen ache that only rears its head when you don't know what's going to happen next.

You need to melt into the saddle, swing and flex. Enjoy a buck without trying to frantically glue it all back together. Relax into the end of a trail ride, the long flapping reins and the connection more clear than tempi's.

You've got to find your childhood. You've got to remember WHY you ride, or else it's not fun.

I love Dressage. God knows I spend enough time breathing in all I can about it, but I'm sick of it. I have pushed so hard, so much, so fast.
I want it, badly. I want it so much.
But what I need, HAVE to have, is a moment where I remember why I started riding.

So, I'm going to ride like a son-of-a-gun today. I'm going to bounce and laugh and get out from between those letters. It may not be pretty, but it's going to be hella fun.

I suggest you do the same.

-- Girl

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Girl, age 13. Horse, age.. A couple days?

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