Thursday, 16 December 2010
winter blues, whites, browns
Monday, 22 November 2010
wet winter, scruffy beasts, playtime
the usual: F & J up front pestering, Luke looking on longinglyI was staying over this last weekend to horse sit, so when I got up to breakfast them on Sunday morning and it wasn't raining or sub zero temperatures and the field was still half wallow, I thought it might be nice to let them have a nekkid roll in the sand school. They all agreed - Jack twice, Luke only on one side, and Frankie fatly - and Frankie in particular showed off, bucking and kicking and flinging and snorting and prancing. Thinking back, I should probably have spent some time playing with him as they won't want to run around much on slippery ground, and he just gets this wicked look in his eye where he wants you to watch him show off his athleticism and his stops, slides and turns - he'd be great at running patterns - and to chase him a little bit, so he was seemingly disappointed when I just put Jack and Luke out with him, for him to chase and snarl at, before grooming, re-rugging and letting them head out to the field. They went quietly, almost keenly, but he was still in such a faffy mood that he 'forgot' where the gate was and ran up and down the fence line snorting, because he could see them in the field but couldn't get to them as fast as he wanted. Calling him didn't work, he didn't want to be caught, so I *had* to bribe him with some feed which of course calmed him instantly and he followed me to the field and indignantly found himself a pile of hay. I'm going up on Weds/Thurs this week, so i think i'll give him a bit of a loose school before he goes out on Thursday morning and he can have a roll and a mess around. I'll try for some pictures. It can't be fun to be in a rainy, muddy field, but nor is it fun to be stuck in a stable, even with hay in either situation. fingers crossed for a move to a warmer climes soon...
Friday, 17 September 2010
Slimmer ponies, cooler weather
We spend the early afternoon, Mum and I, picking ragwort and other blown debris from the road - I hate litterbugs - off of the field as the boys graze around us.
After lunch, we try our new western saddle on Frankie with the bosal, but the seat is rather small - I think it may be a kids or breaking saddle? - for my seat, so I swap to my eventing saddle and a bridle with a bit - nathe dutch gag on middle ring - as I decide to head out for an explore. In my mind, I've had an idea that if the fields up by the village are still stubbled, we might go for a canter...I don't tell Mum this, but I say we're going up to see the cows/sheep etc. She tells me to watch out for the geese. Wise advice, as a flock take off out of the field next to the road and Frankie stops still, quivering, to watch these odd flying things appear from nowhere. He whinnies loud and high pitched as we head down the road, and he wants to turn back, yet he is fascinated by just about everything. As we get to the junction to head off to the field, a large tractor is rumbling towards us. I trust Frankie, but he's up on his toes anyway, so we turn around and go sit on the verge on the other side of the road until the tractor passes. The driver says thanks and we head on. In a couple of strides, he notices the green plastic-wrapped silage in a field. This elicits another fit of snorting and dancing. I pretty much talk nonstop to him, so i talk him through this and we finally get past, without me ending up in a ditch. result. We head past some cows and more geese and I can see the stubble field round the corner.
Being sensible, we walk in to scope out the ground and associated beasties. We startle three pheasants and two hares and spot no rabbit holes, which is GOOD. When we reach the top of the tractor track, I nudge him into a trot and we loop some circles on each rein, then we do the same in canter. He's pretty tense, but I want him a little warmed-up. I bring him back to walk, head to the start of the track and tell him: go on then! he needs no further encouragement so I crouch low over his neck, listening to the hoofbeats and trying to use his flying half-mane as a windbreak, which is buffeting my face hard. We pull up gently, and walk back to do it all again. There's a golden tinge to the sky and a light rain, despite the sun, which has brewed a large rainbow to the east. The cattle are rucking to be fed in the field next door as we bounce down the track and once we've gone far enough, I let Frankie turn and run hard for home again. I can see his white feet kicking up dirt with each stride and I can feel him stretching to go as fast as he can for me, and for his own enjoyment. It's over all too soon, but i'm not going to push it. We brake gradually and wobble to a jog. Frankie is mouthing the bit, striding out, going up into his bridle and right up on his toes. We show-walk most of the way back to the main road, not even noticing the scary horse-eating silage bales and I admire our shadow as we head back, remembering when we did this for show. It takes most of the way back for him to chill out and accept the loose rein. I love this horse. Adore him. He just wants his rain sheet on, his night time hay and to relax with his buddies. I can't stop smiling, even when Mum asks mock sternly where we've been.
Friday, 16 July 2010
Great Yorkshire Show
Anyway, this year was the first year of a 'retrained racehorse' class. Immediately I thought of Luke! The examples of TB forward ranged from tiny ex flat horses aged 5 who went well and regularly showed as riding horses (and won) to 19 year old pros who did a bit of everything and went maturely, to horses who people had clearly just entered through the qualification criteria that their horse that they had probably never ridden in a ring full of other horses and had to hand gallop, had raced twice as a two year old, or whatever. There were so many joggers, half-rearers, those going round with their heads in the air, riders showing in half chaps, synthetic saddles, no continuity between tweed or black jackets. Basically, Luke wouldn't have been an embarrassment in there.
Unfortunately when I showed, these classes were very rare, otherwise i'd have been keen to have a go. Luke has lovely conformation and paces, although i have no idea how he'd react to the crowds. He'll be 21 next year, but this year's second place was 19...
The whole thing, combined with meeting old friends and hearing their stories made me miss living with horses even more acutely.
I'd love to start again, or at least get the boys fit, possibly have them front-shod, and just get back to riding regularly. I'd love to do some smaller shows with Jack, and maybe get Frankie out and about in veteran classes now he's 18, something I cannot quite believe.
It's something to look forward to anyway, with a bit of luck and hope.
Wednesday, 23 June 2010
I'm getting seasonal
The Jackal checking out his paparazzi.I skipped the gate and headed up the lane to check on Luke and Jack, who were too interested in nomgrassnom to come say hi, but Jack did look up for the crazy girl with a camera lurking in the bushes to be able to take a nice photo of him against the backdrop of orangey Luke and yellow oil seed rape. Good boy. Luke rarely lets himself be distracted by anything whilst eating, he's faaar too chilled for that.
Friday, 5 March 2010
spring! it's sprung!
Wednesday, 10 February 2010
I don't remember much in the spring of '99, I passed from school to the yard to bed and repeated it everyday, with just the yard on weekends.
It sounds callous, but it took losing Oliver for me to look at Frankie seriously, which now, shows how unimpressed I was by potential or breeding - like I knew a thing! - or things like that. Frankie is a 14.3hh Welsh section D, by the stallion Mabnesscliffe Survivor, who set the all time stallion sale record in 1988. He's bay. Frankie's dam was bay. Frankie is black. He bleaches ginger in the summer. He has 4 white socks, a wall eye, heaps of mane, tail, muscle and oozes curiosity. He became mine when he was 5 and he was 7 when he became my only pony.
In retrospect, my not having any expectations for him probably was for the best. He spent time with my mum hacking him out, with me building his topline and introducing him to cross country and the fun of galloping and flat schooling. He was a dream to train, after our intial scuffles and bucking arguments. He has a stunning extended trot that he likes to roll out whenever he can. Despite a long back, he will collect nicely. I never had to introduce the concept of being 'on the bit' or 'on the bridle', he did it naturally. It was like I put in years of toil with Ollie, for wonderful rewards, and Frankie, with his lack of baggage and mistreatment was just...a gift. Cheesy, huh?
I remember taking him for flat schooling with Ian and we'd get through so much work as we rarely needed to repeat a movement. I was learning things I'd only seen in books like pirouettes, travers and renvers then going onto shoulder in and half pass, extension and collection. It was incredible. I sound like I'm gushing, but my nostalgia here is not misplaced. He was a dream to jump as well. We never had a stop across country or show jumping, but then I never pushed him to the bigger tracks in these. With his inbetween height and my young age, I never wanted to get into eventing (too chicken), showjumping (too many other people doing it), dressage (fun at home, but not varied enough for me to specialise in). So, showing it was. I still did the other disciplines on the side, but I started to get serious when I realised Frankie was better than good.
