Last night was interesting and perhaps a glimpse into what the future holds for myself and my two girls.
Unusually I was late leaving work and missed my normal bus home, so was later getting to the barn than usual which could be a nuisance now that I have two to manage but on this occasion worked out quite well as it was relatively quiet so less distractions & chatting out of me. So I was able to roll up my sleeves and get down to work.
I started by popping Kika in the walker while I cleaned her stable, then L helped me as we introduced Nancy to the concept of the walker. We tried the walker last night and I mean WE - I walked around with her
on the leadrope. 3 turns and out we came, went from there to walk around
another arena that she hadn't been in yet to calm down after the
excitement and introduce her to yet another place of work. Kika had been on the walker as well as one other horse, so
she wasn't alone.
I think plan is to try again this evening and see if
she takes to it any better - maybe leave her off for a circuit or two on
her lonesome, we'll see how she handles the idea this evening.
I rode Kika for roughly 20 minutes, long enough for walk/trot/canter, some
circles and serpentines, then finished up as she was going so well
and I didn't want to do too much after vaccines earlier in the week.
Put her away and fed her, leaving Nancy's stuff prepared outside her
stable, I then brought N back out for a loose lunge in the arena nearest
her stable. Mostly walk and trot work to get her listening to voice
commands and responding - she's good. Very reluctant to canter but I
can't blame her there, lots of spooky noises going on and she wasn't
really sure what I wanted from her - so I think we'll stick to working on
the lunge in the bigger arenas to balance the canter. I was working
under the assumption she may have found cantering easier without the
pressure/pull of the lunge and the ability to make her own sized circle -
but she had difficulty maintaining it around a bend so we'll work on
all that to help her understand. I think confusion was overriding last
night as she wasn't entirely sure what I wanted from her.
Shall implement the mantra of baby steps while we suss each other out and figure out what we can and can't do.
I need to do plenty of work with her about having her feet
picked out she's ok to do the front ones but not at all happy for the
back ones to be done. I had words with her last night for one side and
she was much better then to have the other side done - we shall see what
happens this evening. It's nice to have little things to work on as
hopefully through grooming we can build up a relationship and hopefully
she might start to trust me.
It has been such a dramatic change for her
this week I am trying to keep things simple yet I don't want her to
think life here will be all easy hand walking to get used to arenas and
walkers - will take things easy though until the penny drops and she
settles a bit more. It is all still so new for her, I don't want to rush
things and make mistakes as they could take a whole lot longer to undo!
Managed to get both girls done, stables cleaned and fed before the 10pm lights out at the barn - the fact I finished at 9.55pm is beside the point!
A place where I record the adventures of myself and my Irish Sport Horse mare, Kika. Who I purchased as an un-backed 3yr old in 2007. This blog follows the trials and tribulations of first-time horse ownership since moving from Ireland to Luxembourg in 2010. UPDATE: as of 2013, Kika is being joined by Nancy a Friesan X ISH mare bred by my family who I had my eye on since she was a foal and have been lucky enough to buy and add to my equine family.
Balancing 2 is hard, but I do think it will improve your riding faster as you'll have double the practice :D
ReplyDeleteLet's hope it does!
ReplyDeleteHere's hoping I can do right by both of them!
Fingers crossed!
Sounds cool that you have 2! Although I can't imagine! I bet L is right though- double the practice!!
ReplyDeleteYay for rriding Kiki. Good work with Nancy. She sounds like she will be a great horse after you've trained her.
ReplyDelete