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[personal profile] dancinghorse
Filling in the blanks before I head to Columbus for the Lipizzan Convergence--a long weekend of association meetings, Spanish Riding School performances, receptions, clinics, lectures, and much much schmooze. I'm really sorry to miss WFC this year, but I'll be in Austin next year, oh yes. Got my membership already.

Favorite flist tyop today: NoNoWriMo. My sentiments exactly, whenever the deadlines start to tighten. I have to finish a book by year's end, so I'm writing daily No Matter What.

Except I don't plan to do any writing over the weekend. I need a mental-health break. So, no computer, and no daily pages. I'll concentrate on the equine half of the equation.

Which equine half is doing well. Tia took about three days to figure out the routine and stop melting down every time something changed, which is very fast considering how huge the changes were in her young life. Keed went from murderous to protective in a day and a half, which helped considerably. She's still separated from the herd as socialization of a baby who has never been in a herd is a slow process, and I didn't want to lay it on the farmsitter. She's quite happy to have her stall and run, with lots of room to run and play, and horses on all sides all the time, with whom she interacts regularly. Next week I'll start introducing her to the herd in small doses.

She's a delightful personality--very much her own person. And a definite My Lipizzan. She loves hugs and scritchies, lines up for the evening treat dispensary, makes her opinions clearly but politely known, and generally acts like a happy baby. The routine here suits her. She'll like it better when she's in the full herd, but meanwhile she's quite content.

Pook is back to work. He's not ready for prime time--we had a lesson yesterday and he got all wound up about the additional person in the mix--but one on one he's making rapid progress. He's got the steering thing down and the wither-lift thing is coming. The trot thing has gone from not really sure he wanted to do it (and forgetting to breathe) to nice basic-level forward gait. He's straighter and more balanced and is more accepting of my balancing aids, and that's a very good thing. He's a lot more under control in general.

Pandora is getting regular work as well. Pretty much the same parameters, with more relaxation and acceptance. She's got a fantastic trot, huge and free, though when she really gets into it she does the ribcage-expanding thing and I feel like a Thelwell kid: legs straight out, three feet above the very round pony's back. She doesn't throw me out of the saddle actually, she's very good about sucking me into her back, but the getting-wider trick is...interesting. She's getting bendier and softer, and little by little she's getting stronger. People who have ridden a draft horse or a large Warmblood know the size I'm dealing with, but she's as light to ride as any other Lipizzan--which puts her past even Arabian on the lightness scale. It's a rather amazing combination.

Keed has been enjoying his Teacher Torture immensely. She has him working in collection for increasing periods--he's actually at the point of being able to sit down and raise his front end. He's lost his lengthenings temporarily because he now wants to collect and turn them into mediums but he's not strong enough. That will come. His lateral work is good--he thinks it's fun--and his gaits are getting lighter, more rhythmic, and more suspended. He looks lovely when he's working.

Capria has been chief lesson pony lately. Thanks to her new saddle she no longer has the constant tension behind the withers, and she no longer rushes or goes llama. Some of that, Teacher says, is my having improved in use of seat and aids, but the saddle has a lot to do with it. We're on one of our back-to-basics kicks, this time riding perfect figures--circles, diagonals, serpentines--keeping her straight and balanced and through to the aids regardless of how many changes of bend or direction she goes through. It's challenging work, requiring a lot of coordination of aids, rhythm and tempo, balance, and precision. If she gets resistant or fussy, it's my fault; I need to recalibrate the aids. If the aids are correct, she can go on and on.

She used to be a very hard horse to ride, but lately she's been challenging but, well, all things considered, she's not hard to ride--as long as I keep all those juggly balls in the air.

So we're working on precision and coordination of the aids, and learning to maintain balance and straightness, and just sort of incidentally moving toward collected work (which is the bedrock of the advanced movements). She's happy and sound, and gets annoyed if she doesn't get her turn.

Camilla is trying her hoof at a new career: driving. No cart yet, but we're getting the ground-driving part down. She likes it a lot. For a strong-willed, not-forward horse like her, it's very good work toward eventually getting back to work under saddle.

The Girlz carry on with being kids. Ephiny has had a little ground-driving and done nicely. She'll get more--she's three and a half, it's time. Mostly she works hard on enjoying life.

Book in progress: Shattered Dance, Luna (third book of the horse series). It's due December 31st. After this weekend, I shall disappear into the bunker and finish it.

And that's all the news that's fit to be tied. Trip report after the holy pilgrimage. Yes.

Date: 2005-11-02 03:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raithen.livejournal.com
*out of breath just reading this*

*gasp for air*

:D.

Hang in there and have FUN! this weekend. And you will be pleased to know that the 3 copies of _Unmaking_ that were supposed to be on the shelves at the local Chapters were ALL SOLD by the time I got there less than a week later.

I shall have to be content with my reworked Fairy Tale anthology for a few more days....

Date: 2005-11-02 03:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mizkit.livejournal.com
...okay, I've lost count. Just how many horses do you *have*?

Date: 2005-11-02 03:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shanmuir.livejournal.com
Glad to hear from you, and and that you are staying busy! Best of luck staying on top of it all!

Date: 2005-11-02 04:00 pm (UTC)
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (book book book)
From: [personal profile] larryhammer
<waves on the way out of town to WFC>

Just started King's Blood last night...

---L.

Date: 2005-11-02 04:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] galeni.livejournal.com
Wow. How marvelous to see the Spanish Riding School!

Glad things are going well.

Date: 2005-11-02 04:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] seachanges.livejournal.com
::waves in passing::

Good to hear from you, glad things are going well (if hectic), and I guess we'll see you again whenever you next resurface.

*HUGS*

Date: 2005-11-02 04:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cindershadow.livejournal.com
Just delurking to note how much I adore your posts. You write Horse (here and in your novels) better than anyone else I've read. (And now that I finally have an icon of my little Lipizzan, I had to show it to you . . . although your gorgeous guys make him look more like Mr. Little Grey Pony. But he has the floaty trot and the good mind, and he fits nicely under my arm, perfect for his career as Ground Work Horse for the Aging Schoolteacher.)

Date: 2005-11-02 04:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kristine-smith.livejournal.com
Favorite flist tyop today: NoNoWriMo. My sentiments exactly, whenever the deadlines start to tighten. I have to finish a book by year's end, so I'm writing daily No Matter What.

If that was mine, it was an on-purpose tyop, because I didn't get the writing done that I wanted to. No no write.

But, glad you liked it.

Have fun in Columbus! I'm currently in Madison, looking forward to the con--it's only my second WFC.

Date: 2005-11-03 03:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maryosmanski.livejournal.com
Bon voyage!

Date: 2005-11-03 09:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lynnesite.livejournal.com
Have a marvelous time in Lippi-Land. Hope the weather (and quality of light) is supportive! How're the sales for Unmaking going? I lent my copy to Tori.

Date: 2005-11-07 07:26 am (UTC)
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)
From: [personal profile] larryhammer
Reporting from the WFC dealer's room: saw King's Blood in several booths, the mass-market of Rite of Conquest at one, and I seem to have snagged the only copy of Song of Unmaking. But there weren't all that many Luna books in evidence, though Maria Snyder was doing very effective promotion of hers.

---L.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Thanks! On all counts. 8)

Luna has romance cooties. Fantasy sellers and buyers seem to shy off the books as a result.

And Maria is very, very good at promoting herself. I can only watch in awe. Self-promo is so not my forte.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Aww thanks. He is so pretty. I went to your lj (and friended you) and saw the pictures. Nothing wrong with him at all. They are -all- LGP's. ;>

Date: 2005-11-14 07:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
I wish you'd been there--it needed the right kind of paparazzi. You'd have loved it.

No word on sales. I presume it's the usual shtick: orders at previous sales numbers instead of previous order numbers, so with returns keeping the same percentage, the (literal) law of diminishing returns remains in force.

But don't mind me. I'm going through a thing.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Ah--just what the frazzled author wants to hear. Sales! 8)

Thank you.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
8 on the place. I own 7 of them: Capria and her kid (in icon), Pooka, Camilla, Ephiny, Gaudia, Pandora, Tia. Gaudia belongs to Teacher and the rest are mine.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Thenkyew thenkyew.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cindershadow.livejournal.com
Well, we missed each other's notes in passing!--so I went and posted the link to the pictures in my LJ over on your other entry.

Thanks so much for coming by to see him, not to mention the friending. I don't post often, as you saw, and I think I'm mainly going to post the birthday tributes to writers . . . mainly Buffy and Sentinel, so I won't be at all offended if at some point you decide to trim me from your list if that's of no interest to you. It won't stop me from reading yours and commenting, so no problem either way!

Date: 2005-11-14 07:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Hey, I like Buffy!

Like your pictures, too. He's lovely.

I think I know your boy's family. Who's his dad? His mom is related to Pook, I think.

Tia's a Neapolitano, too--N. Slatana II is her daddy. We're playing around with Neapolitano/Pluto matchings. Her mom is a Pluto/Neapolitano. Tia's N/P. Bred to Pook, she'll produce P/N's. Lots of nice classical Lipis with big round butts.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cindershadow.livejournal.com
Sire: N. IV Rexana (dam, obviously, Bonamora, whose sire was Pluto Bona II and dam was Balmora (317 Blossom)--whatever that means!) When I look five generations back, he's got quite a mix of just about every line: four Neapolitano line, two Favory, one Siglavy, three Plutos, four Conversanos . . . I don't know if this means a nice, solid, mixed gene pool or backyard breeding by catch as catch can! When I first looked into the breed, the breeder I spoke with was rather horrified that I didn't know the bloodlines, but since I knew I wanted a gelding (because I don't want to breed and don't have the skill for a stallion or mare), I figured that so long as I was happy with the particular horse in front of me, bloodlines weren't as critical.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Pluto Bona II was Pooka's ancestor--very illustrious. Was in at least one Vavra book. The breeding is pure Austrian, i.e. royal. All of those horses were bred for the Spanish Riding School, and the fact they bred on means they were stars of the school. They mix the lines that way to keep the gene pool diverse and avoid inbreeding and its resulting faults. Not backyard breeding. Oh no. That's one of the best and most draconian breeding programs in the world.

PB was born at Raflyn Farms in WA, which had a herd of 30 quality horses selected for the owner by Col. Podhajsky. All but 3 were lost in a terrible flood, but PB had been sold before that, I think. He was an incredible mover, which he passed on, and he was very nice conformationally though he tended to be lightly built (which breeding to Tempel mares was intended to fix--they tend to be tanks).

Balmora was bred at Tempel Farms in IL. It was and still is the largest Lipizzan operation in the US. She had a Lot of PB offspring, something like 11 or 12.

In short--your boy has excellent bloodlines. His dad is Tempel breeding, too, and has produced a number of good-quality offspring. His pedigree is quite braggable. 8)

Date: 2005-11-14 07:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinghorse.livejournal.com
Did you enjoy the con? I love WFC. Will definitely be in Austin next year.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kristine-smith.livejournal.com
The con was great. Met folks from LJ. Did more business than I have at any previous con. Bought a couple of Kinuko Craft prints. Good stuff all around.

Date: 2005-11-14 07:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cindershadow.livejournal.com
Wow! Thank you so much--it's fantastic to learn all this!

Yes, I've read a bit about Tempel Farms, and of course I know of Col. Podhajsky. This commentary about his breeding makes sense, because Nibs is rather lightly built, compared to others I've seen--though still with the round belly. Of course, as I tell people who think he's a fat little pony when just standing still, that round tummy is where he keeps those core muscles he uses to lift himself up into the air to defy gravity when he's moving!

I will now go and brag on his bloodlines--again, many, many thanks!

Date: 2005-11-15 01:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mizkit.livejournal.com
Ah! Okay. :) I'd managed to remember about five names and knew I was missing at least one, and suspected I was missing more. Wow, you really do have a herd!

Date: 2005-11-15 12:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raithen.livejournal.com
a thing in which you have a well-deserved headshake at the stupidity of the publishing and bookselling (I first typed "booksekking" and there may be something to that....;) industry? I can't POSSIBLY imagine why....

*grumble* on your behalf....

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