Happy Horseversary, Henry!

One year ago yesterday marks the day that Henry officially became mine. One year ago today marks the day that I actually met him for the first time. In celebration of this little milestone I figured it would be fun to take a look back and summarize how our year went.

December 2013 –

On the morning of December 14th I made a really low offer on a cute potential jumper project horse I’d found on facebook. By mid-morning the money was sent via Paypal, by noon he had a coggins, and by mid-afternoon a horse named Jerry – a 2007 16.1h plain bay TB gelding with the registered name Hesalmostsweet – was loaded into a friend’s trailer, headed from Arkansas to her farm in North Texas.

The next morning I arrived (in a borrowed-last-minute truck and trailer) to pick him up from his layover location and bring him the rest of the way home. This was the first time I ever met him. This was also when I decided he was definitely a Henry, not a Jerry.

On that first day we got home after dark, but I pulled his blanket off anyway to at least get a look at what I had underneath. Answer: adorable, but really fat and really out of shape.

He got a makeover, and I slowly started riding him again (he’d pretty much just been in the pasture for a year). I also discovered that he had a hilariously derpy personality.

xmas4

January 2014

By January he was more into a regular program and we started taking lessons. At this point he was very very fussy about his mouth and wanted to go nose-to-chest at any contact. He was also oversensitive to leg. Getting the right lead was a crapshoot. But I did discover that he was really honest, really tried hard to please, had a cute jump and easy lead changes. I spent a lot of time playing around with bits, trying to find something he didn’t totally object to.

February 14 –

The bit dilemma was temporarily helped by putting him in a hackamore. We still had a definite nose-to-chest tendency, but at least I didn’t lose him completely. Obviously this was going to be a long work in progress.

And he went to his first ever jumper show. We just did the 2’3″ and 2’6″ jumpers and we were pretty much the slowest pair there. My goal was simply to get him in the ring, let him jump around quietly, and get some miles. In our first class we had a grand total of 11 time faults. You can only get better from there! But all-in-all he was great at the show. He stayed very sane and rideable, and while he definitely had some green moments, he showed that he was going to be a pretty cool horse with a little time and a little confidence.

2’6″ jumper SA Charity show from amanda chance on Vimeo.

March 2014 – 

In March I took him to a Thoroughbred benefit show in Ft Worth. Again we entered the little jumper classes. This venue was quite visually imposing… a big coliseum with lots of atmosphere. Definitely intimidating for a green horse. I felt this was the show where he really began to blossom though. On the first day he walked into the ring as a pretty wide-eyed greenie that needed his hand held, and by the second day he actually started to “lock in” on the fences, look for his line, and he came out of the ring feeling like a confident horse. Everything seemed to really click for him here, for the first time. We still kept it simple with generous turns and nothing ambitious but I was able to ask him for more pace and he felt comfortable going more forward. He also got a second place TIP ribbon!

IMG 3192 from amanda chance on Vimeo.

April 2014 –

With the regular mechanical hackamore becoming a little too much bit, I decided to step him down to a plain sidepull hackamore for a while. I was occasionally playing around with him in a plain french link loose ring but all bits still seemed to immediately make him tense and worried and chompy. And I was still struggling with his nose-to-chest problem. We continued to have it in the hackamore, but it definitely wasn’t as bad.

We went to another jumper show and did the 2’6″-2’9″ and 2’9″-3′ jumper divisions. He was really really good here, even stepping up a couple times to save my butt, taking some tighter turns, etc. We were able to be competitive, and signs of maturity were really starting to emerge. I also learned that optimum time classes are our true forte.

photo by Lauren Mauldin

May 2014 – 

In May I started playing around with riding him bridleless.

At the end of the month we went back to another show in San Antonio. This time I was really too ambitious with what I was asking him to do, rode him badly, overfaced him a bit, and had a pretty bad show. Mostly bad because I felt like I’d made poor decisions and let my horse down, but also something just didn’t feel right with him there. He wasn’t himself.

photo by Lauren Mauldin

June 2014 –

Over the next couple weeks it became apparent that it wasn’t my imagination – he really wasn’t himself. He was having a hard time coping with the heat and humidity, his respiratory rate would go through the roof and he’d become pretty uncomfortable, but he was still sweating normally. I had the vet out to look at him and run blood work but the only thing we really came up with is that he seems to have some summer allergies that make it tough for him to get enough air when he’s working. It was causing him to have a very high respiratory rate and poor recovery time when I rode him. In retrospect I realized that he’d been acting pretty wiped out and uncomfortable at the show too, which happened to be the first really humid/hot weekend we had. At least now I had an answer. I started riding him in the cooler parts of the day and hosing him off a lot, and while it never really got better it was manageable.

I also decided that it was time to quit avoiding the issue and have a month of serious flatwork bootcamp, in a real bit. We worked on accepting hand and leg, moving out in front of my leg, and lateral movements. This is also when I started to truly learn a lot about how Henry’s brain works, exactly how much pressure I could put on him and exactly when I should quit. I knew when I bought him that the reason he’d been turned out for almost a year was because he’d gotten a bit mentally fried, so it was important for me to figure out what program worked for him without pushing him too hard.

July 2014 –

In July we moved to a new barn. I just felt like it was time for a change of perspective with a different trainer, and I was looking for a place that a) was closer to my house and b) had better footing. Henry is crooked legged and while it’s never caused a problem, I feel like I have to be even more mindful of his shoeing and the footing I ride him on than most people would be. We settled in at the new place, started lessons with the new trainer (who pinpointed A LOT of my own issues right off the bat) and got to work.

August 2014 –

Summers are generally our off season, being that it gets so hot here. We mostly just continued to plug away at lessons, jumping a little bigger and harder stuff, and kept working particularly on my position. I switched him to my beloved Nathe bit (which I had tried on him originally in January but it didn’t work for him then) and felt like he went better in it.

This also marked the first time I strapped on a safety vest and decided to go play around over the little XC jumps in the field at the barn. That little event ignited a spark…

September 2014 –

In September the eventing trainer at the barn asked me if I would be interested in going XC schooling. I had to think about that for .00001 seconds before saying absolutely YES. So away we went to see what Henry thought about XC. He was a little nervous when we got there, wide-eyed in the field taking everything in, but once we started jumping he was pretty much a machine. A little looky at one scary Novice train jump, and some confusion at the down bank, but otherwise he was a rockstar. And what’s more… he seemed to LOVE it. By the end he was clocking right over anything and everything I pointed him at, and he basically strutted back to the barn like he’d just finished Rolex. It gave him a lot of confidence and was the first time I ever really felt him be 100% engaged in what we were doing. He’s always been super willing and kind, but he never felt enthusiastic before. I started thinking maybe this was his niche?

Henry XC School @ MCP Sept 14 2014 from amanda chance on Vimeo.

At the end of September there was a very small show benefiting a local TB rescue. My original plan was to do the hunter derby and some jumper classes, but after XC schooling I got the hair-brained idea of trying the eventing derby instead. So we entered the Beginner Novice derby, with the hunter derby as a back-up plan in case I totally died. To be honest I had no clue how he would be. He’d never had to go to a show and jump things without getting to school over them first, he’d never done a dressage test, and he’d XC schooled only one time. But I figured if we were going to crash and burn, better to do it at a little show with fewer witnesses. He went in the dressage and was super obedient (albiet not very dressagey, we had a grand total of one dressage lesson beforehand) then marched right around the stadium and XC like he’d been doing it forever.

photo by Lauren Mauldin

October 2014 –

Time to seriously re-evaluate what this horse wants to do with his life. Sure, he’s perfectly capable of plodding around the lower local level jumpers his whole life and getting okay ribbons. But he does not have a ton of jump for big fences, and I don’t have a ton of money for rated h/j shows. And honestly… it’s pretty hard to ignore his joy for XC. So we switched to the eventing trainer, went on another XC school, and changed our goals.

HenryPineHill from amanda chance on Vimeo.

November 2014 –

The biggest goal change was to try to qualify Henry for AEC’s in 2015. That of course meant that we had to enter recognized events (at least they’re way cheaper than rated h/j shows). Feeling only slightly doomed and terrified, I sent in my entry for an event the weekend before Thanksgiving. We went on one more XC school to prepare…

crammed in as many dressage lessons as we could (giving us now a grand total of four) and off we went. My big goal was to not get eliminated, and despite awful weather conditions my little horse stepped up to the plate in a big way and showed that this is really what he’s meant to do.

December 2014 –

Here we find ourselves now, a year later.

Henry has far exceeded even my wildest dreams for him already. I had no intention of finding my way back to eventing again, but here I am and I’m loving it. I have a nice horse who tries his heart out for me every day and continues to prove that you just can’t beat a good thoroughbred. He’s positively the strangest horse I’ve ever known… he’s ridiculously goofy, he’s sensitive, and he’s particular, but he is so incredibly kind and would turn himself inside out to do what you ask. He makes me laugh every single day with his antics. I hope that this is only the beginning of our journey, and that he continues to develop into the horse I think he can someday be. I will keep doing my best to listen to him and stay out of his way, because after all – the world does completely revolve around him, just ask him. Happy one year, Henrypants… here’s to many more.

Review: PS of Sweden quarter sheet

When I first found PS of Sweden‘s website and began perusing all the cool stuff, their quarter sheet was one of the things that really caught my eye. It hit all my favorite criteria: it was fancy, it was navy, and it was unique.

QSleft

Alas, when I made my first purchase from PS my budget was tight so I resisted adding it to my cart. Instead I just stared at it a time or two a week on their website and thought “one of these days”. Then, as if by fate, a couple months later they put it on sale for a few days – into the cart it went and I had it in my grubby little hands a week later (hats off for fast shipping).

I have had many a quarter sheet before. I will forewarn: I’m very very picky about them. I hate fleece and refuse to put it on a horse in any form. I only do wool – and not cheap acrylics, but real wool. And since I live in a climate where it’s rarely cold enough to need a quarter sheet for the whole ride, I need one that is easy to take on and off. That nixes the ones that go under the saddle, and the ones that either go under the flap or over the rider’s leg. They bug me when it’s over my leg and they’re hard to take off when they’re under the flap. So the fact that the PS quarter sheet had an attachment method that I had never seen before is really what drew me to it the most.

Exercise rug in wool
photo from PS of Sweden website

Of course I love how it looks – who doesn’t love a fancy braided hip ornament? It’s just as pretty in person as it is in pictures and I love the double cord piping. But the best part about it, IMO, is how easy it is to get on and off. On cold days I usually warm up with the sheet on and then reach down and simply unbuckle both sides (which is very very easy to do from the saddle with one hand – no contortionist skills required) and pull it off. I’ve also put it back on for the cool down and found it pretty easy to do from the saddle as well. Not quite as easy as taking it off, but pretty easy. It stays in place well while you’re riding, and the buckle is far enough back to not interfere with your leg.

Weight wise I would call it a lighter to mid weight wool. For my climate it’s plenty warm. It seems well made, I’ve used it many times now and there are no signs of premature wear or anything like that. I know some people don’t like the big branded logo on the side but I personally don’t mind it, so that’s more of an individual preference thing. I struggle to find anything negative to say about it really… I guess maybe if you have a fully clipped horse in a really cold climate it might not be thick enough? Or if you have a super giant elephant horse (like blanket size 84+) it might not be big enough.

I’ve searched for a nice wool quarter sheet for a reasonable price for years and never found one. Regular price is around $100, which IMO is a good deal. Similar quality wool quarter sheets run from around $75-200 so that puts it solidly on the lower end of that range, and none of them have this kind of (IMO ingenious) attachment design.

Bottom line? Two thumbs up. I gave my old wool quarter sheet away, and good riddance. This one has now taken up residence in my “winter riding staples” collection.

TOA Blog Hop: History of the Horse

Good news first: guess who’s going to Belgium?

Moving on…

Beka of The Owls Approve has started a cool new blog hop series centered around our ponies. I can’t resist that, because there’s nothing I like talking about more than my ponies. My non-horse friends and SO are painfully aware of this given that I struggle to come up with more than 5 words to say about anything non-horse related.

Before you met, where was your horse?  Who bred him/her?  What do you know about his sire and his dam?  What do you know where he came from?  Tell me about the time before he had a trainer.

I guess I’ll answer for both of my horses…

Sadie: I bred her. I leased her dam, picked the stallion, paid for the semen, had it shipped in from Canada, paid the vet, waited a year, and voila – baby horse. I knew her dam very well and felt like I had a good sense of the stallion from his owner and some friends of mine that knew him (Westporte). I was the first person to put my hands on her and there is zero mystery for me to Sadie, which is really nice. I know her as well as anyone could possibly know a horse… everything she’s ever done and everything that’s ever happened to her. There is no “before me” time.

Just a few hours old

so her head grew a little…

 

My favorite “grown-up” Sadie picture that everyone’s already seen a million times and will probably see a million more. Get used to it.

 

Henry is obviously more of a mystery but I still know quite a bit about him compared to most of the other horses I’ve bought. He’s a 2007 Arkansas born and bred TB by the stallion Skeet out of a mare named Lona Thump. I have never been able to find anything on Skeet other than the farm he used to stand at and some old racing photos. Not a clue where he is now, and I don’t know anything about his dam. I was able to trace Henry back to his breeder though, found her phone number online and called her. She was a very nice older lady who just had him and one other young horse at the time, and she remembered him but didn’t seem that interested in staying updated on him so I haven’t called her back. She bred him and owned him until he was 4 but never raced him… she said he was always more interested in eating than running. “The only thing he ran to was the feed bucket”, exact quote.

Henry’s sire Skeet. Do these facial expressions look familiar?

Her vet found him a non-racing home, although I’m not totally sure who it was with – this is the only gap in his timeline that I wasn’t able to fill. From there he went to an eventing/jumper trainer who showed him in the hunters a couple times and had him for sale (for quite a bit more than what I ended up paying), then started doing some other stuff with him. She said he got kinda fried so she turned him out to decompress, and almost a year later I bought him out of the field sight unseen.

Jerry1
Because it’s totally normal to buy a horse off of a picture this awesome

 

Fat, hairy, and fresh off the trailer

Hard to believe it’s been almost a year now!

Photo shoot outtakes. So much derp.

This past weekend I had a little photo shoot in an attempt to get some good pics of Henry’s PS of Sweden bridle and quarter sheet for upcoming review posts. Because we all know the outtakes are the best part anyway, I will waste no more words and leave you with only captions.

outtakecomebackhere
Come back here with that crinkly thing! #arabshowpose
outtakederpinsohard
I’m derpin’ so hard right now y’all
outtakedonkey
What?!?
outtakelick
Because using human slobber…
outtakelickwipe
to wipe off horse slobber is a totally valid life choice.
outtakenosepoke
STAY!
outtakeskeptical
DON’T WANNA
outtakestahp
Me :”Hold still while I wipe the dirt off…” Henry: “STAAAAAHHHPPP”

We’re special.