Thursday, January 17, 2013

The mushroom, of course!

I've decided to put Dee on Mushrooms for a month or two.  She hasn't been bad, per se, under saddle.  But she has been incredibly distracted and tense.  I've ordered a month's worth of ECP to see if it can help get her focused again.  It's like, as soon as we get going, she just starts finding things to worry about.  She doesn't do anything about it, but she just can't seem to take a deep breath and relax.  Even when she does relax for a second, it's as if she'll suddenly go "OH!  WAIT!  I can't be RELAXED!  I must be alert!  And worry!"  Part of it might be the crazy weather that we've been having, which swings from chilly to deliciously spring-like, but who knows.  I've liked the ECP i the past, so I'm hoping it can help to let her chill a bit.  It would be nice to be able to really ride her again.  Right now, I  can really only push on her a little before she starts to melt down, and most of the ride is just me trying to be as soft as possible and encourage her to just relax and stretch.  I'd like to get to the point where I can actually pick her up again and push her to really work.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

New Year, New Places to Hack

Dee is officially back in work.  Of course, she doesn't believe me when I tell her she was on vacation.  She apparently thought she was retired, and has expressed her extreme displeasure at the fact that she is not a retiree.  She did some light work on Saturday and Sunday, and was, for the most part, a good girl.  Monday was a different story.  I don't entirely blame her, because as soon as we started, these two girls started wandering around the ring, in and out of her line of sight, and being a complete distraction.  Considering she's been on vacation for three weeks, I understand being easily distracted.  That said, once they disappeared, she was just out of the game.  No amount of leg, transitions, circles, changes of direction, leg yielding or anything else could get her to pay attention.  She was just going around with her head in the air, looking in every direction.  She wasn't being naughty, but she was completely out to lunch.  So once I got two trot circles where she took a breath and stretched, I stopped and decided to take her for a walk instead.  I would have loved to take her out in the big field behind the ring, which I think takes you out to a road at the college that winds around the perimeter (not sure about that, it's possible we would have gotten lost forever if I had done that), but we have been getting tons and tons of rain, and knowing what a mess her pasture is, I figured it was a bad idea to go hacking through the hay field.  I don't want to piss anyone off by ripping up the grass, and I think that even walking would have done that.  So instead, I took her up the dirt road that goes between her pasture and her neighbors' pasture.  That leads out to what I think is the main road in the college's campus.  We didn't go too far, but she was definitely a happy camper.  She was unsure, and a few times she would sort of hesitate while walking, as if to say "are you sure mom?  I don't know where we are!"  But, she marched along on a loose rein, looking around and seeming to enjoy the view.  My favorite part was when a car passed us, and it cast a shadow at her feet.  I don't think she understood the dark blob on the road coming towards her, so she kind of hopped over it.  Adorable.  Once it's dry, I think there are loads of places I can take her, but for now I guess we're stuck on the tar and gravel roads when we want to get out.