The Weekly Neep, and Various
Feb. 26th, 2006 08:17 pmCapria is now in Teal, and healing extremely well. I'll change her bandage tomorrow, and based on Friday's progress, she may be all or mostly healed. I don't think we'll have to do two weeks' worth of bandages. Hock swelling is 'way down tonight, and that is good.
Dog and goat are rallying--dog is back to her usual self, goat has been eating steadily all weekend. It started Friday when I offered apple peels from the dessert I'd baked, and she woke up and ate them eagerly. She graduated to carrots, then this evening ate half a cup of oats, two carrots, and a small handful of alfalfa. She's back up, and is alert and has her evil look back, which is good to see.
So it seems she'll be with us for a while longer.
Today we ended up with a mini-clinic.
casacorona came over to kibitz, my neighbor offered her wonderful little horse to take Capria's place as lesson pony, plus Teacher and I did the usual. I rode Pandora in what has become the customary Sunday-morning gale. Some excitement over that, but she settled quickly and we did a lot of trot work. Word for the week was, Don't let her throw you high in the rising trot, get the posting low and horizontal and barely clear the saddle. That was hard for her at first as it meant she had to tuck her butt and really use it instead of dropping her back and paddlewheeling out behind, but once she settled into it she was much more balanced and secure. Also of importance: keep that outside rein in gear, and if she loses her balance to the inside (which she was doing to the left since her weak hind is on that side), keep elbow down but lift inside rein and ask inside hind to step up with seatbone. And that worked very well.
Then our camper had her lesson--a first for her and it went very well. She learned how to sit and how to ride the walk and trot. The trot was disconcerting--and the horse was giving her his sweetest, kindest little jog, but I admit, it can be a shock if you've never experienced it before. She then appreciated my experience with Pandora-the-Slingshot a bit more, I think.
After a quick lunch, Teacher rode keed, to the amazement and accolades of the spectators. Keed has become a fine dressage pony indeed. And then I dressed up a very willing and eager Camilla (she took her bit like a pro) and she was lovely for her in-hand work with Teacher. I did a little as well--not nearly as easily as Teacher; for one thing Camilla is a lot bigger on me than she is on Teacher. But Camilla was patient and we had a most enjoyable time playing with my center of gravity and keeping that outside rein and not directing my energy into her. If I do that, she bulldozes. If I direct it where I want her to go, she turns to silk.
Once we'd had that bit of interaction, Teacher told me to get on and ride. This was me steering and trying to apply the gas, but Camilla needed a security blanket so wanted to follow Teacher. She did figure out the Go command (the one with the softball under my navel) and she got a bit about the Turn Here thang, and she had a beautiful halt at the end. I had to work on quiet torso, following but not rocking hips (a challenge because she is a huge mover with baby balance and a spine like a Slinky), and dealing with her brief panic attack at the beginning (my heart started to pound like crazy, then she got over it and was simply uncertain). She was more comfortable under me than she's ever been, and the in-hand work has made her quite at ease with the bit, plus it's taught her to relax and go with the flow. I am ever so glad I asked Torture Lady From England to teach us this. She'll be back in May--we can't wait.
At any rate, we asked a lot of Camilla today and she was all soft and happy at the end--and that for her is a big, big thing. The MillaMobile is ready to rumble.
Dog and goat are rallying--dog is back to her usual self, goat has been eating steadily all weekend. It started Friday when I offered apple peels from the dessert I'd baked, and she woke up and ate them eagerly. She graduated to carrots, then this evening ate half a cup of oats, two carrots, and a small handful of alfalfa. She's back up, and is alert and has her evil look back, which is good to see.
So it seems she'll be with us for a while longer.
Today we ended up with a mini-clinic.
Then our camper had her lesson--a first for her and it went very well. She learned how to sit and how to ride the walk and trot. The trot was disconcerting--and the horse was giving her his sweetest, kindest little jog, but I admit, it can be a shock if you've never experienced it before. She then appreciated my experience with Pandora-the-Slingshot a bit more, I think.
After a quick lunch, Teacher rode keed, to the amazement and accolades of the spectators. Keed has become a fine dressage pony indeed. And then I dressed up a very willing and eager Camilla (she took her bit like a pro) and she was lovely for her in-hand work with Teacher. I did a little as well--not nearly as easily as Teacher; for one thing Camilla is a lot bigger on me than she is on Teacher. But Camilla was patient and we had a most enjoyable time playing with my center of gravity and keeping that outside rein and not directing my energy into her. If I do that, she bulldozes. If I direct it where I want her to go, she turns to silk.
Once we'd had that bit of interaction, Teacher told me to get on and ride. This was me steering and trying to apply the gas, but Camilla needed a security blanket so wanted to follow Teacher. She did figure out the Go command (the one with the softball under my navel) and she got a bit about the Turn Here thang, and she had a beautiful halt at the end. I had to work on quiet torso, following but not rocking hips (a challenge because she is a huge mover with baby balance and a spine like a Slinky), and dealing with her brief panic attack at the beginning (my heart started to pound like crazy, then she got over it and was simply uncertain). She was more comfortable under me than she's ever been, and the in-hand work has made her quite at ease with the bit, plus it's taught her to relax and go with the flow. I am ever so glad I asked Torture Lady From England to teach us this. She'll be back in May--we can't wait.
At any rate, we asked a lot of Camilla today and she was all soft and happy at the end--and that for her is a big, big thing. The MillaMobile is ready to rumble.
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Date: 2006-03-01 11:18 am (UTC)I sing Kim Richey's _Let the Sun Fall Down_ often - it seems to have the right tempo to calm us all down. _Twinkle Twinkle Little Star _also comes into rotation. I use _Row Row Row Your Boat_ occasionally, though I have to remember NOT to use the alternate lyrics from my childhood - "Tip your teacher overboard and listen to her scream" - as I fear the power of suggestion ;).
The most memorable instance was singing Oh Canada all through the first class in a show, because they opened the day with said anthem. *hee*
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Date: 2006-03-01 11:36 am (UTC)8)
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Date: 2006-03-01 11:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 11:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-01 11:54 am (UTC)I was so proud - last weekend he went up a bank jump without blinking while we were on walkies. The seasoned jumper who was on walkies with us completely boffed it and banged his knees when he did up it. My greenie did something better than an experienced horse!