Truck.
I need a truck.
A truck is the rate-limiting step for all activities with Milton.
Suck it up and buy the d*mn truck.
Truck.
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott
Horses & Other Interests
Truck.
I need a truck.
A truck is the rate-limiting step for all activities with Milton.
Suck it up and buy the d*mn truck.
Truck.
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott
So this happened.

I have been riding sitting on Rodney bareback. One, to keep pressure off his back injury/scar, which is under the right-hand point of the saddle. Two, I like the idea of being able to slid off at the first sign of adversity. In a saddle, I tend to hang on until I’m in too deep rather than execute a timely emergency dismount. Three, bareback is more relaxing, right?
For a while now, my perceptive groundcrew has been after me to try using a saddle. I didn’t even consider the idea long enough to dismiss it. This is bareback. What horse doesn’t like bareback? Well, Rodney apparently. He thinks it’s weird. Rodney doesn’t do weird.
While I am more secure, Rodney is even more so. I’m not sensing the nervous vibe from him that I was getting before. Of course, the tension could have been originating from me, but I don’t think so. I think Rodney and I reverse the usual pattern. I pick up his nervousness, which my inner screaming monkeys turn into Sky-Is-Falling messages, which he then receives, amplifies and returns, and so on, and so on. Regardless of who starts the cycle, it’s on me to fix it.
“No matter what the problem is, whether it’s your fault or the horse’s fault, the solution is the same; ride better.”
Brain Training for Riders by Waldo (Trafalgar 2016)
[Reading Assignment]
So, we are still only walking and halting, but maybe, possibly, with a shade more ridability? The ultimate goals & underlying thesis remain the same.
Stratospheric dressage scores, smooth hunter rounds, scorching jump-offs, Finish on Dressage Score/Led From Dressage events.
[Haven’t I Been Here Before?]
Rodney has the talent to compete at introductory-level anything in his sleep. So, if we can get Rodney happy, he will be happy to work. That’s the theory.
[Stating the Obvious]
But seriously folks. Hacking in the backyard, maybe jumping a few fences. That would keep me content. For a while.
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott
New project.
Last year’s Letter Art [2016] saw me scrambling for horse-related ideas on the trickier letters, i.e. Q, X, Z, etc. [Zoonoses]. However, I want to stay with lettering on Sunday. I know it is not everyone’s fav, but it amuses me & provides an artistic outlet. Neither are things at which to be sneezed.
This year, my alphabet will be 26 horse books. The selection criteria is highly arbitrary. I’m going with what amuses me. (You may sense a theme.) Old books. New books. Books from my childhood. Books from my stint as a book reviewer. I like stories. Therefore, most of the books will be fiction or nonfiction narrative.
In an ideal world, each letter would reflect the content of the book, as with Penguin Drop Caps. Alas, I am not sufficiently artistic. I will be happy if I come up with any design at all. There will inevitably be weeks when I throw a standard computer font over the cover & call it a letter.
Process note: I did not consciously steal copy sincerely flatter this idea. OTOH, Jessica Hische is one of my design heroes [Swashes]. Her book, In Progress, lives in my inspiration pile. I may have read about the project, forgotten it, & then “come up” with the idea on my own. The mind is a weird place. At least mine is.
Open to recommendations for all letters. Open in particular to recommendations for those tricky letters. I plan to (re)read all of the books. I really don’t want to have to read Xenophon cover to cover.
Which books would you choose?
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott
What limited ponderment I have to offer, I gave on the blogiversary [Five Years, clicksaver: it keeps me amused]. On to statistics.
By The Numbers
Post number – 1810
Posts this year – 366
Daily since – August 25, 2014 [Meet Milton]
timeanddate.com calculates 860 days, therefore 860 posts, from then to now.
Near daily since first post – Dec 22, 2011 [We Begin, Again]
timeanddate.com calculates 1837 days. Therefore, I missed 27 posts in 3 breaks over 5 years. (2015 recap has break details.)
Top Posts 2016
Per WordPress, as of yesterday.
Threads Make Feathers, Guest Post
Fever Rings
More Mental Mess
Fotography Friday: Texture
USDF Interview: Sabine Schleese, Schleese Saddlery
USDF Interview: Heidi Zorn, Premier Equestrian
USDF Interview: Susan J. Stickle, Equine Photographer
Rodney After Dark
Not My Horses, Not My Barn
Show Report, Sorta, NRHA 2016
Top Posts 2016, written in 2016
The only difference is that Texture comes off & Postcrossing makes the cut.
Threads Make Feathers, Guest Post
Fever Rings
More Mental Mess
USDF Interview: Sabine Schleese, Schleese Saddlery
USDF Interview: Heidi Zorn, Premier Equestrian
USDF Interview: Susan J. Stickle, Equine Photographer
Rodney After Dark
Not My Horses, Not My Barn
Show Report, Sorta, NRHA 2016
Postcrossing
Top Posts All time
Only one 2016 post, Threads Make Feathers, on list.
Watching the Tevis 2013
Fotography Friday: Texture 2012
Why I Ride by Katie Wood 2015
Fever Rings 2013
Help Me Name My Horse, Prize Offered 2012
Show Report: Mid-South Spring Premiere, Rainsville, AL 2013
A Short Tribute to Amy Tryon 2012
What Happens at a Model Horse Show? 2015
Threads Make Feathers, Guest Post 2016
Meet Milton 2014
Past Posts
2015 [Looking Back at 2015]
2014 Did I skip this recap? Hard to believe.
2013 [2013 In Review]
2012 [End of the Month Commentary – By the Numbers]
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott










Horses of BrickFair
Water Trough
Dash
Accidental Art, Horse & Cart
Sam Shadow Selfie
Frankenhorse
Stepping Stone Farm Photo Safari
Lyricc
Teenage Wasteland
Weaving With Light
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott
We continue the 2016 trend of having a stellar year with other people’s horses [SSF], while our own imitate doorstops [Rodney & Milton].
Saddle Seat
Both of us took lessons and showed, when available. Me more than him. Some people don’t feel the need to show at every possible opportunity. Imagine that.

Because I have no agenda for driving, I fail to get in my own way. I do it for fun. At this point, I show in a cart better than I do in a saddle. Seriously. The peanut gallery has repeated sent me into the ring with the exhortation to ride like I drive.

I drove in 8 shows; Greg in 5. Three big shows; two for Greg. In that time, I encountered one non-Stepping Stone competitor. I don’t understand why more people don’t drive. It’s a hoot, the horses love it, & most Saddlebreds are taught to drive, at least a little, as part of their training.
One of my milestones for the year was learning to properly drive an ASB in the show ring. [Pro-Am, MSSP]
Combined Driving
In 2015, we piddled with the idea [Show Report]. In 2016, Combined Driving took off for us.
Greg took his first lesson.
[Combined Driving Lesson]
Greg competed twice.
[25 Years in the Making]
[Show Report: MTCC 2016]
[Show Report: MTCC Driving Derby 2016 in Photo and Video]
We created the Combined Saddlebred Driving Pleasure division.
Figure 8 [Show Report]
Course [Show Report]
Obstacle [Alvin’s Big Green, Show Report]
We did so much driving that I instituted Driving Thursdays on the blog.
Go Team Walcott!

Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott

Thus endeth the year. Waiting for the announcement at the last class of the last show of the season. Miss Courtney, Iggy, & me at Nationals [Show Report]. Purchased from Sandra Hall Photography.
I love how I look here. Calm. Confident. At ease on the horse. OTOH, there is not a trace of equitation diva in evidence. Weirdly for me, although I can see the flaws, I still like the photo.
By The Numbers
Shows – 13
Big shows – 8. Really 7, there was a 2-in-1 weekend [Show Reports & Addendum]. I overshot my goal of 5 big shows [Revised Show Plan], but not by too much. I even missed a few shows, but mostly due to conflicts with Greg’s driving. More on that tomorrow.
Shows where I won all my classes – 3. All big shows. All with at least 3 classes (5, 4, & 3). One included driving. Never get tired of this. [Pro-Am, NE GA, NRHA]
Riding Classes – 41
Riding Wins – 15
Driving Classes – 9
Driving Wins – 5. Classes of one or two entries, usually me & Greg. We split the wins. He won when steering was required. I won when we had to drive fast & look snappy, mostly thanks to Alvin’s willingness to do same.
Winning Percentage for Riding Classes – 37%; Adult-Only classes, 38%. One-third is a great percentage in baseball; sucks in school. Not sure where showing falls in that spectrum.
I tended to win the second class of my division, 7 times, versus the first class, 3 times. I ride better after being in the ring once? Judges need to take a second look at me? Who knows. The only times I won the first classes or the championship classes were those golden days when I swept the board.

Lessons – numerous
Lesson Horses & Lesson Horse Owners – Generous
Having a Barn Home – Priceless
Past Posts
2015 It Was a Very Good Year
2014 On the 7th Day of Christmas: Seven Horses Showing
2013 On the Twelfth Day of Christmas: 12 Lovely Horses
Process note: Since the show year runs from December to December, it does not exactly match the calendar year. The difference is one Winter Tournament schooling show. Close enough.
Thank you for reading,
Katherine Walcott