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

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