Lower Legs & Lesson Horses

Awareness of the outside world. Reminder for US residents. Today. “Both tests are scheduled to begin at approximately 2:20 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Oct. 4.” Note to self, 1:20 CT. FEMA: FEMA and FCC Plan Nationwide Emergency Alert Test for Oct. 4, 2023. [Small Steps]

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Photo by Ten Toes Outdoors. [Show Media]

Saddle seat versus other English disciplines (hunter/jumper/eventing/dressage). Same same in different dress or alien entities? An ongoing question.

Different

At my last lesson, we discussed pushing my heels away from the horse. If you ever see a head-on photo of a winning saddle seat equitation rider, their lower legs are stuck out to the side like pontoons on a boat.

Wedging one’s feet out helps drive the knees into the saddle. In saddle seat, this is desirable. In other English, one is specifically told NOT to pinch with the knees.

I also found that pushing my lower legs to the side got me to slide back in the saddle and sit up. In saddle seat, one sits way back on the cantle; in other English, middle of the saddle. Everyone – from your first grade teacher on – wants you to sit up.

I found this tip to be a particularly helpful reminder, as I am inclined to bring my feet in and ride off my lower leg, as I am doing in the photo from the show, above.

Not So Different

I tried this at home.

In addition to bringing the heels out, the lesson covered rotating my feet so that my heels were – ideally – farther from the horse than my toes. At the very least one’s feet should point straight ahead.

This is true for both styles of riding.

I realized this was not the case. See photo.

In bringing my lower leg into contact with the horse, I was rolling my leg, as one does. Knees sticking out like chicken wings rather than straight ahead. It wasn’t too bad. The back seams of my tall boots were still off the horse. But I could feel my entire leg in a better position along Rodney’s side with my heels rotated out.

But not, of course, with my knees digging in.

Lesson Note The First

Much like Sam, Optimus went much better when I finally sat up and rode what he perceived as correctly.

Unlike Sam, Optimus would wander around and ignore me if I chose to give incorrect signals. Sam used to get annoyed, ‘Excuse me, do I look like a hunter? If you care to ride me like a saddlebred, I will continue to go like a saddlebred.’ [Show Report: Dixie Cup, Conyers GA] 2013

“I sat too far back, lifted my hands to my eyebrows, and started trying to fix it like a saddle seat rider. Sam is never happy with my ersatz hunter moves.” [Team Awesome] 2016

This is not new, even with Optimus. [Saddlebred Steadiness] 2022

Lesson Note The Second

Minor panic attack. I sat up and rode. Optimus got just the tiniest bit bright. I started getting urgent messages over the comm.

Engine room: She gonna blow!
Bridge: No. That’s why I am riding a school horse.

This is not new either. [That Moment When You Remember You Are On A School Horse]

Onwards!
Katherine

Moon Break

Recovering from unspecified crud over the weekend. So, one from the reserve pile.

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Photo Note

3 am from my front door while waiting for the dog to finish. Not bad for a phone camera.

Personal Note

I’m hoping this weekend was actually a good thing. Been low-grade tired for a while lately. On Friday, I ran about for several hours doing my finest human Border Collie impression. Wiped. Me. Out. By Friday night, coughing and achey. Not Covid. I’ll spare you the details, but not Covid symptoms. Just one of the multitudinous other things that are still out there.

Perhaps I had been fighting off something? When I got tired, it had a chance to stage a full-on assault? Now I am out the other side and all will be sunshine and rainbows? Please?

Blog Note

Monday posts are done on Friday. That’s why yesterday’s post looks coherent.

… and I did this on Sunday, which says I was even less together than I thought I was, given that it made a brief appearance yesterday morning. Sigh. Time for another nap.

Onwards!
Katherine

Watching The Water Buckets Accumulate

Awareness of the outside world. Bleh. October means horror movies, which are avoidable. October means advertisements for horror movies, which are not avoidable.

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We now have eight buckets for two horses.

It made sense at the time.

Buckets #1 & 2. Two buckets in a stall is standard operating procedure.

Buckets #3 & 4. Setting up the run-in to be Rodney’s stall during Milton’s rehab, so two more buckets. [The Stall Rest Chronicles Begin]

2 stall + 2 run-in/stall = 4 buckets

[Photos from the Vet Clinic, Nothing Gory I Promise, Patient Report #1.1]

Bucket #5. At the vet clinic, the water bucket was hung only a few feet off the floor, on the wall near the corner where hay was served. I would have said it was too low, but a) vet clinic & b) Milton LOVED it. Used it to dunk his hay. Okay, we want his innards well-hydrated, so if he wants water down by his knees, he gets water down by his knees. In addition to the regular two.

1 dunk + 2 stall + 2 run-in/stall = 5 buckets

Bucket #6. Liberty! Free horses! Back to the pasture life! Back to the water trough! Ehhh, no so fast. They prefer the buckets in the barn to the water trough they have used for years. Please arrange to make this happen. We did. And added a third bucket. Kept the two in stall for when Rodney goes in for meals. [Hydration Measures]

2 stall + 3 run-in = 6 buckets .. because

Bucket #5, again. Relocated Milton’s dunk bucket to be near his meal spot.

We continued to carry warm water from the house well past any reasonable definition of cold weather. Bought a yellow bucket so we would know which one was for tea. [Winter Protocols, Tea Service Has Begun]

2 stall + 3 run-in + 1 in Milton’s corner = 6 buckets

Bucket #7. I bought a second yellow bucket for warm water so that Milton’s minion could swap out buckets rather than having to go to the barn to retrieve. Some how the second yellow got hung up in Milton’s corner. We are certainly not going to take away any chance at water. One personal bucket for dunking, one personal bucket for drinking, three public buckets.

2 stall + 3 run-in + 2 in Milton’s corner = 7 buckets

Bucket #8. Rodney needed to bulk up a bit. More time in stall. He was dropping the two he already had, so we added a third stall bucket. We did this right as the weather stopped being ridiculously hot, so we would have been okay with two in the stall. Probably. See above, not take away any chance at water.

3 stall + 3 run-in + 2 in Milton’s corner = 8 buckets

Water minions for the win!

Update. if you saw a second post, you did not hallucinate. There was posting error. Tomorrow was accidentally posted today. I’ll try again tomorrow.

Onwards!
Katherine

Riding The Camino de Santiago, Guest Post

I’m Grace, a priest in the Anglican Church of Canada. I live in Montreal and this summer I’ve had the privilege of being on a sabbatical – my first in 15 years of working in parishes. I took a 6-week trip through 5 European countries, but the most relevant part for this blog is the week I spent riding the final portion of the Camino de Santiago (the Portuguese section) on horseback!

There were 14 people total in our group, plus our guides, Lorena and Jesús. Three of them – Laurie, my roommate for the trip and a colleague from the Episcopal Diocese of Kentucky; Tamara, and her husband Nick – were already friends of mine. We were also the only English speakers in the group. We started our ride in Tui, just on the Spanish side of the border with Portugal, and gathered on the evening of August 3 for the first of many enormous Spanish meals.

On the morning of the 4th, we were driven from our hotel to the stable where the horses were waiting. (I confess I had had romantic and unrealistic visions of riding from one farm to the next and sleeping within sight of the paddocks … that’s not how it worked. Vans for the humans and trailers for the horses were an essential part of this operation.)

We had been asked about our preferences and riding experience beforehand, so a horse had been selected for each of us. One by one, we met our horses and mounted up.

Laurie on her mare, Malareina. (At least, that’s what we think her name was. We never saw it written out.)

I was one of the last to be paired off with a horse, and by the time it was my turn, the only horses left were several big-barreled greys and one dark bay way down at the end of the stable block. I confess that I much prefer skinnier horses and have a probably entirely irrational prejudice against greys, but I was bracing myself for being assigned to one of them. The groom couldn’t find my name in the list he had on his phone, so I looked over his shoulder and helped him find it. I was paired with a horse named “Ringo” … and lo and behold, Ringo was the dark bay!

We took a group photo in the paddock …

… and then we were off!

You’ll notice that not everyone is wearing helmets. I did, but there was no official policy from the trip leaders. As with many things, Europe tends to take a more hands-off approach than North America.

The trail was a mixture of woodland paths, dirt roads, and paved roads. At times we were on the same trail as the many pilgrims on foot, but at other times we diverged and took routes that made more sense for horses.

We were in the saddle for about six hours the first day. There was a coffee break in the late morning, and then “lunch” from about 2:15 to 4:45, then one more hour of riding before we arrived at our evening destination in Vigo.

Ringo during the lunch break.

Lunch (only one of the three courses!)

I hadn’t ridden at this point since about ten months prior, and as usual, I found that I had no problem with riding technique, only with stamina. We were all – even those who ride almost daily – grimacing and groaning when we dismounted! However, it was the schedule I found really hard to get used to. I’m a night owl, but I’m a homebody, introverted night owl, and not even starting dinner until 9:30 PM was really hard for me, even though we’d had a decent break beforehand. Eventually, the four of us (myself and three friends who had signed up for the trip together) asked to be taken home midway through dinner, and went straight to bed!

On the second day we were “only” in the saddle for five hours.

Our morning break was in the woods, where there were wild blackberries!

Periodically we would stop to water the horses at roadside fountains, some of which looked to be hundreds of years old. This could get somewhat chaotic.

From the top of the slope we could see down to the Bay of San Simón.

Just after this picture was taken, those of us who were more confident riders on faster horses were able to have a glorious gallop along the top of the hill. Unfortunately, one rider came off, but no one was hurt. Ringo thoroughly enjoyed being able to shift into high gear but was very good about stopping to help the downed rider. Sadly, this was the last gallop we had (we’d had a shorter one the previous day) because on days three and four we were mostly either on the pilgrim trail with walkers and cyclists, or on “real” roads with cars.

In the evening, we were able to take a ramble around the city of Pontevedra.

A pilgrimage church.

The third day was our long day. At the end of it, I wrote this post to my Facebook account:

I’ve been keeping my phone in my saddlebag on airplane mode, both to save charge and because it really isn’t safe to try to pull it out, get my gloves off, open the phone, use the camera, and then do the whole process in reverse, on a fairly hot horse who’s moving with his herd and may break into a trot at any random time if I drop his reins. (One other member of our group in particular is VERY irresponsible in this regard and I’m frankly crossing my fingers we make it through our final full riding day tomorrow without her getting someone killed because she’s streaming to Instagram instead of riding her damn horse.)

So you have been spared a wearisome number of pictures of:
Picturesque old churches
Picturesque old towns
Picturesque narrow streets
Picturesque wayside crosses
Picturesque countryside vistas.

I do wish, however, that I could capture:
The grapevines, citrus groves, apple, peach, fig, and almond orchards
The flowering trees
The cactuses and palm trees
The little stone houses that Galicians have in their yards, apparently to store food
The tracks that have been there so long that the path runs between two banks of earth higher than a mounted person’s head
The small boys selling bottles of water, fruit, scallop shells, and suchlike snacks and trinkets beside the road
The various livestock, especially the horses in pastures who trot up to the fence and greet their new frens passing by
The people coming out of Mass as we rode through Caldas des Reis, who were clapping, taking video, and waving their babies’ hands at us as we clattered through the centre of town

I would need sound/video to capture:
The noise of sixty-four iron-shod hooves on asphalt under a highway overpass
The ALL-CONSUMING FURY of the many smol doggos of Galicia who have objected to the presence of sixteen large, loud, funny-smelling ungulates in the road in front of their houses (all of them, thankfully, from behind fences, except for one Chihuahua who managed to dart out into the road and do his level best to get trampled; the lorge doggos were generally more laid-back, though there were definitely exceptions)
The Galician folk band that was playing in Caldas des Reis, and the people in giant puppet heads that were dancing along.

There is no way to convey through the internet by any means:
The smell of a Spanish forest in August
Ditto a pasture full of wild mint after being trampled by horses
The taste of a wild blackberry grabbed from the saddle (and the impact of the thorns on the cane!)
The combined thrill and terror of a gallop up to the ridgeline
The way that it is possible to think, simultaneously, “This is the most amazing thing I’ve ever done” and “If we don’t stop for the day soon I am Literally Going to Die”.

We rode 41 kilometers today. We’re only 23km from Santiago now, so we’ll ride basically the whole rest of the way tomorrow except for actually arriving at the cathedral, then get up appallingly early on Tuesday to be in the plaza while horses are still allowed in.

Some of the photos I did take:

Lunch break

We saw the pilgrim markers constantly, of course, but couldn’t exactly get a selfie with one from the saddle!

“Torta de Santiago,” a dense almond cake

The flowerpot was on the windowsill at the stable where we (FINALLY) ended the day’s ride. Ringo was nosing it curiously. “Do not knock that down!” I said sternly. Two seconds later …

Day four was a short ride again, which was simultaneously a relief after day three’s seven-hour grind, and also a reminder that we were almost done. Before going to lunch, we left the horses stabled just a few kilometers from Santiago.

That night we stayed in the Gran Hotel de Abeto, a luxury hotel on the outskirts of Santiago, whose lobby contains this delightful mural.

On the morning of the last day, we got up, as anticipated, appallingly early (6:30 AM – it could have been worse!) and met up with the horses in a vacant lot outside Santiago as the sun was rising. (Spain is, of course, in a time zone that’s at least two hours later than makes sense for its geographic location – even in July the sun doesn’t rise until past seven.)

It was only a half hour or so ride to the cathedral plaza. Between Ringo’s ears:

All of us:

Me:

Farewell to my faithful mount:

At some point during the journey I calculated that I had spent as much time on Ringo’s back as I would have on one of my childhood lesson horses for six months of weekly lessons.

Laurie and I got a delightful surprise when the Rev. Anna Noon, newly appointed chaplain of the Anglican centre in Santiago, met us in the morning on the plaza. We had been in touch beforehand but hadn’t known she would actually be there for our grand arrival. Later that day, after a big celebratory breakfast back at our hotel, some touristing, and a much-needed nap, we collected our pilgrim certificates.

Then we met Anna at Santa Susana, the church where she welcomes pilgrims and conducts services.

The three of us, all women, all priests, celebrated the Eucharist together and shared the bread and wine.

To get thoroughly into the spiritual aspects of the pilgrimage for me would be a whole other, very long, post. But being an Anglican pilgrim, especially a female Anglican priest pilgrim, in a very Roman Catholic world can be a strange experience featuring a deeply divided consciousness, as you reckon with a religious establishment that simultaneously welcomes you and informs you that your fundamental identity is erroneous. Being able to worship together with Anna and Laurie at Santa Susana’s was a source of deep refreshment and gratitude.

And then we went out for dinner!

I had to have actual scallops at least once before leaving Santiago.

The next day, I boarded a bus back to Porto for the last ten days of my trip, already missing Ringo and being sad that just as I was getting used to spending five or more hours a day on horseback, I wasn’t doing that anymore!

If you’re interested in doing a portion of the Camino this way, I would strongly recommend booking directly with Caminos Galicia at caminodesantiagoacaballo.com (you can see their logo and website in some of my photos, on the sides of the trailers, and we also had a pilgrim shell sewn onto each of our saddle pads). Laurie, Tamara, Nick, and I had booked through a Scottish company called Walk the Camino, which was not a positive experience. Jesús, our guide, is the company owner of Caminos Galicia, and has been doing this for thirty years. Our trip was only five days but they will book much longer ones if you want to do the whole of the Camino Francés or one of the other routes.

Buen Camino, and happy riding!

Son of the Return To Beeswax Creek, Photography

Awareness of the outside world. Coosa Riverkeeper: Power Coal Plant

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Sally Branch Inlet
Coosa River
Beeswax Creek Park
Shelby County Alabama USA
September 2023

Coosa River looking upstream from Beeswax Creek Park. The smokestacks are the E. C. Gaston Steam Plant.

Coosa River looking downstream from Beeswax Creek Park.

Technical Details

Reflection. f/10.0, 1/125 sec., 50.0 mm, ISO 200. Manual & auto-focus.

Upstream. f/22.0, 1/125 sec., 56.0 mm, ISO 400. Manual & auto-focus.

Downstream. f/22.0, 1/125 sec., 140.0 mm, ISO 400. Manual & auto-focus.

Post production. Resize, border, and watermark. Reflection was cropped.

Weird processing moment. Loaded the photos from the card. Wait, where are the rest? Did they not register in the card? Found ’em! They were on the second card. For some reason the camera switched cards midstream.

Last time, I settled for photos of the creek instead of the river. Armed with fortitude, I returned and trekked out to river. Two-thirds of a mile one way. Almost two miles with the side trip to the restroom. I was not up for that last week. [Back To Beeswax Creek, Photography]

Onwards!
Katherine

Other Horses, Show Media & Thoughts

Awareness of the horse world. CBS42: 80 years ago, Alabama’s most famous horse was born, Taylor, 2022.

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Previous [Show Report ASHAA Summer Fun Series, September 2023]

Photos

Photos by Ten Toes Outdoors.

Heathermoor Farm Summer Fun Show 2023-09-09

Heathermoor Farm Summer Fun Show 2023-09-09

Heathermoor Farm Summer Fun Show 2023-09-09

Heathermoor Farm Summer Fun Show 2023-09-09

Heathermoor Farm Summer Fun Show 2023-09-09

Photos by Ten Toes Outdoors. Downloaded and posted with permission. Gallery, Ten 10 Toes Outdoors: 2023 Summer Fun Show, Heathermoor Farm.

I am also in the background of the header photo on the gallery page. Hard to miss the raspberry helmet. Did not post because of the faces in the foreground, including a kid in her first leadline class.

Thoughts

Heathermoor Farm Summer Fun Show 2023-09-09

I think I look great here. Which is weird because I usually hate the way I look in show photos. I look comfortable, balanced, keeping a soft contact with the horse.

However.

There is not a shred of saddle seat going on. I look like someone who has ridden in from another discipline. Amazing that after all these years, my saddle seat still evaporates like ice on a griddle.

I thought I was saddle seating. I wasn’t. This is not a new phenomenon.

You try to do the thing.
You think you are doing the thing, but you are not.
You finally do the thing, and you say, ‘Oh yeah, that’s how it is supposed to feel.’

Switching Gears

Although in this case, I never got past step 2. I erroneously thought I was doing the thing. In fact, the position didn’t even come back. I could feel myself sliding to the center of the saddle, which usually means the rest of the saddle seat is also slipping. I didn’t think the difference was noticeable. It was.

Video

Truth in advertising. I am posting this video for you. I have not watched it. I can’t bear to. No matter how much positive spin I put on, the fact remains that I lost big. [Seeing Silver Linings, Show Report]

Okay, I peeked at the driving. Optimus is such a good dude.

Onwards!
Katherine