um how cute is he? |
Let's back up.
Friday and Saturday marked the horse show I was working hard to help organize. Saturday was also the day of an 8.30pm homegame (to which I had tickets) for my local sportsball team and BECAUSE Sunday was derby day, I still had to ride before the show.
sharing is caring |
So Sunday.
Courage continued his streak of pretending that he never had a loading problem and we were off to the show! He unloaded great, hung out at the trailer fine, and when I tacked up and headed to warm up, I had my normal, rideable horse and not the fire breathing monster I'd schooled in the dark Saturday morning. (Thank. God.)
waiting |
I will say that walk is not Courage's strongest gait, and there is a lot of walking. Anyways. I was happy with my test, not thrilled with my score. Life goes on.
Courage had a nice, long break at the trailer with hay. He did remarkably well. I mean, now he has to be tied on his own side on account of trying to breed Bacon last time he was at a show with her. Oops.
ground poles buddies ftw |
SIDEWAYS TROTTING IS BEST TROTTING |
Grass sharks are the worst, y'all. They're invisible, so you never know where they'll be next.
the XC boots make us badass |
Courage remained extremely suspicious of the far edge of the field (which we had to go by 3 times) and the whole ride was about settling him instead of worrying about high options or being competitive. But hey. We had no jumping faults and I'm really happy with how I rode, considering that just a few months ago, I simply could not do it.
BOOM |
HIGH OPTION.
It happened again. Last obstacle towards home.
Not gonna lie--I'm pretty proud of us. :-) I sort of doubt we're going to move up or actually event or do anything at all with this. I mean, the xc phobia is real and it makes the whole process not fun for me.
That said. I am really happy with the improvements in my riding and how it translates to my horse. I was able to salvage something that would have completely overwhelmed me in the spring. That is very cool.
Also very cool? Check out my ribbon collection from this year.
Blue and red, baby. (My inner realist must point out that there were never more than two in any derby division that we did, but the dressage ribbons are legit.)
Onwards and upwards.
Or rather:
TO THE SANDBOX!!
(where sideways trotting is encouraged instead of heavily penalized)
Woooo! I'm so proud of you!! Ya'll have come really, really far this year and that is something to celebrate :D
ReplyDeleteWoohoo! Overcoming fears is a big deal regardless of the height.
ReplyDeleteYES high options! :D
ReplyDeleteYou guys look AWESOME! You look like you are dressagin' even out on XC! Love you guys going for it on the high option :) #attackmode
ReplyDeleteSuper fancy looking! And love that you rode through it out there with the grass sharks. Those things are dangerous!
ReplyDeleteSo happy for you!
ReplyDeleteWay to go!
ReplyDeletethose ribbons are all so pretttttyyy!!!!
ReplyDeleteI seriously doubt we'll ever win this much again, so I'm trying to really enjoy them.
DeleteYeah girl! Proud of you. Tucker knows EXACTLY what you mean about grass sharks, they are super tricky. Glad Courage didn't let you get eaten by one. It's a bad way to go.
ReplyDeleteGrass sharks=worst kind of shark. THEY'RE EVERYWHERE.
DeleteCourage is so brave to trot through grass sharks. You probably owe him your life. Congrats on getting it done!
ReplyDeleteHe thanks you for pointing that out.
DeleteYou guys look great! Congrats on the ribbons. I see you're using my fabulous hang them from the blinds presentation method. So classy.
ReplyDeleteIsn't that what blinds are for?!
DeleteHere's a hint- everyone who events basically wants to die before xc, and you go "why the hell did I sign up for this???" I think we're just addicted to the adrenaline rush you get after. The THRILL of surviving ha. Very proud of you, he looks so that and handsome!
ReplyDeleteThat really doesn't sound fun to me. Really. I do very poorly under pressure.
DeleteWhen Val and I went XC schooling with our barn he thought there were field sharks too. Once he was familiar with an area we could gallop all over, but cantering into a new field was really scary he said.
ReplyDelete