Proper Documentation

The downside of being in a program where we have lessons or training rides 3x a week is that it becomes impossible to document thoroughly. It would become a task of gargantuan proportions that I wouldn’t be able to keep up with and I think pretty much no one would be interested in reading.

That is the only downside. Well ok and the cost. But like… best money I’ve spent in a long time so no ragrets.

But I’m still navigating how exactly to summarize everything here on the blog. I suppose it could be a clinical day by day with general notes about what we did. Or I could just hit whatever highlights there may have been. Do the people have a preference for what they want to hear about? This is a problem I’ve never had before when even in the very best of times I was getting a lesson a week. But it feels pretty redundant to just be like “this is awesome I love it, Presto feels amazing” without more detail than that.

It’s also a bit more challenging because lesson video or media is not happening very often… it’s just not possible to have someone with me randomly at 2pm on a Tuesday or 9am on a Thursday very often. We work lessons and rides around my erratic schedule so it’s different every week. And I hate writing tons of word vomit with no photos to accompany.

speaking of which, I have no lesson media this week but here’s a corgi pic that should count for double

So basically, what do y’all want to hear? It’s unlikely that I have time to update here more than once a week, so what’s the best way to cram it in here without being a) overwhelming, or b) not enough detail?

For instance, last week Ellie flatted him and jumped him and then I jumped him and flatted him. Her flat ride was his first real work day back after Rocking Horse (he mostly hacked and did stretchy flat rides, with a pole day) and he’s never quite as enthusiastic about dressage after he’s just run XC. He thinks the Runny Jompies should be a way of life and can be slightly feral about being a well-trained, obedient boy for his first proper dressage ride back. He was pretty good though, aside from one slight protest about the counter canter.

Then she jumped him, again targeting the rideability and reminding him that he still has to listen and does not indeed know everything (he disagrees). She jumped him into a line, leg yielded out of the line, turned around and jumped into the line the other way, leg yielded out, etc etc. Once he was being consistently soft to the base and leg yielding away without tightening his topline, she let him jump down the whole line. It was a pretty short and to the point ride – they usually are with his training rides.

naturally he pulled a shoe and I had to chase my farrier down to Florida Horse Park so he could put it back on ASAP

We came back the next day and I jumped him, working on the same exercise. It definitely helps me get a feel for exactly what she’s doing and what we’re going for, to follow up directly after. Again we didn’t do a whole lot, just the same leg yielding exercise, then we jumped down the line. Since he was good for that we added a one stride and a bending line too, focusing on maintaining that rideability. He was superb.

Sunday we did a dressage lesson, working on elements from a new test. Particularly this series: leg yield from the rail to the centerline, turn, canter, lengthen the canter on a half 20m circle, back to working canter, 10m half circle back to the rail, trot. This series probably would have turned him into a bit of a pogo stick a few months ago, but he was actually quite good for a first effort. Before we started that we did a lot of shoulder fore on a circle (to make sure he was in the outside rein), and then shoulder out down the long sides (as a prep feeling for coming off the rail to leg yield to center line). It was fun to work on some new stuff.

Presto also got a new sheet because he ripped every single piece of hardware off the front of his LeMieux. Bow Horse to the rescue!

As for Rubes, he’s getting rides when and how I can. We’re almost at the end of retail season, which will open up my schedule tremendously. Until then I’ve just been maintaining him where he’s at, and working a little more on bending and stretching. Once I have more flexibility with my time and can get him back on a 5-6 days a week schedule, we can resume with building on to his education.

Ruby Boiiiiiii

He’s such a happy boy though, and loves to work. Anytime he sees me coming he’s like “ARE YOU COMING FOR ME? HERE I AM.” and presents himself to his gate whether I’m actually out there to get him or not. I feel bad when I’m not. Sometimes he just gets scritches and a “Sorry buddy, tomorrow, I promise!”. He’s getting used to having a less predictable schedule/routine though, which honestly I think is good for him. He struggled so hard with that in the beginning.

he loooooves his MagnaWave

Oh, btw, we were selected as one of the pairs to be featured on the OTTB on Tap podcast for the road to the RRP Makeover, so make sure you’re subscribed to that! It’s a great podcast, so even if you don’t want to hear from me (who would blame you) you should listen anyway.

As for Henry, well. He’s been struggling on and off with a foot bruise for the past month or so. As soon as it’s almost better he decides to act like he’s 2 instead of 18 and takes himself for a gallop around his field and then is like “oh dang, my footie is kinda owwie now”. Yeah, bro…. what a mystery. He’s always been super prone to bruises this time of year so it’s nothing too surprising. I did get on him one of the days he looked sound and he spent the whole time pretending he was an actual dolphin. Perhaps he’s taken the retirement thing a bit too far.

he thinks he’s funny

I’d love it if his feet would get on board and he was reliably rideable again, because I find myself really wanting to go home and work on the things Presto and I do in lessons. Rubes just isn’t that far along yet, but Henry has the buttons. If I could ride him some and work more on myself and building the muscle memory more, that would be great. Someone tell him to stop being a dingbat about his footie.

In the meantime, Presto and I did enter another show, and now I’m obsessively trying to make sure he doesn’t do something dumb and hurt himself before then. Ya know… my life’s work.

Also, he’ll be 8 in a few days, can you freakin believe that. EIGHT! WHAT THE F

Show Recap: Rocking Horse 3, Part 2

I had a nice 35 minute gap between SJ and XC, so after my jumping round we went back to the trailer to put all of our XC stuff on. Studs and XC boots for Presto, and my cross country vest. We both took the chance to have some water (it was hot by this point in the day) and then I got back on and headed over to XC warmup.

Walking the course the day before, I felt like the course itself was pretty straightforward.

I only had 2 points of concern – the trakehner and the half coffin. The trakehner because, much like the one at Ocala a few weeks ago, it was in the middle of a field off of a long gallop, with lots of distraction in the distance, and it had a footing change right in front of it. I thought it might be a little spooky. As for the half coffin…. ha. So. It was utilizing the exact ditch that Presto had his massive meltdown about at that schooling day in 2023 before we figured out the ulcers. Like that exact ditch. Of all the ditches on this property and all the various ones they use at the level, I really just didn’t want that one to be on the course. Therefore, naturally, it was. And that half coffin was tricky in that you went through this little patch of trees, hung a sharp left, and it was only a few strides to the ramp at A. Superrrrrrb. Cool cool.

But ya know – it is what it is. I didn’t lose any sleep over it, I just didn’t love it. The rest of the course gave me zero pause.

XC was running a little late so we ended up walking around warmup for a while, which kinda worked out. Alex made it down there on his Modified horse and was able to give me a few last minute tips, mainly about revving the engine and keeping Presto up and in front of my leg. I was able to combine that with a couple things Ellie had told me to do in warmup, then headed over to the box and away we went!

whee

The first 4 jumps essentially circled around warmup, so I knew I really needed to send him out with purpose and get his mind on the job at hand. Plus I was determined to go faster this time so I wanted to set the stage right from the start. We jumped 1 and I took the most direct, ground-saving route I could to 2, only getting straight for a few strides before it.

wheeee
there’s that hind end again, even on XC

That one came up great out of stride, so we were off and running again to the next, which was the first big, wide table on course. This one went directly past and then turned away from all the trailer parking, so I made sure to keep him extra focused on me and not all the other horses and goings-on. We made the turn to the table and he jumped it great.

sorry random person that got captured in my picture

Then we had the steeplechase at 4, which I saw a long one to but Presto was like “ma that’s maybe a little too long, haven’t we been working on finding the base?” and he put another stride in. Smart boy, really. After that was the first combo at 5AB, which was a rolltop on top of a mound, then down the mound and 5 slightly bending strides to a skinny brush. He was absolutely spot-on there and made very easy work of it. Then we had the tan table (my brain called it the Naked Table, since it has no colored stain or paint) to the XXX table (it has three X’s on the front, that one isn’t my fault).

he jumped it great

The Tiki hut combo rode great too. He was just really on it and I soon as I put my eye on anything and closed my leg he was like YUP GOT IT. Easy peasy, picking them off.

I wish there had been a photographer at the big MIM oxer before the water because we got there perfect and he jumped the absolute shit out of it. We landed, turned right, and made out way down the slope and through the trees to the water. I thought he might give it a little peek before he put his toes in since he hasn’t seen that particular water in a long time and it’s kinda dark/sus, but no, he was absolutely laser focused on the B from the moment we jumped the A, and he never wavered.

The A. Look at his ears. (also the oxer in the background on the left is the previous jump)
Still focused
jumping out over the B

After that we finally got to our long gallop stretches of the course, and I tried my best to keep coming forward and save as much ground as possible on the way to the next table. He jumped it fantastic.

Then, before you knew it, we were at the trakehner. I made sure that he was up in front of my leg and listening as we headed towards it, but I totally felt him do the same thing he did with the one at Ocala. He looked at it from a ways away, clocked it as just a log, and then put his eye past it to keep soaking up the sights further out in the field. We got there on the perfect distance but at the last second he went HOLY SHIT THERE’S A BIG DITCH UNDER THIS and popped in another tiny little step as he peeked down at it. Yes my love, I have been saying for the past 20 strides that you should maybe pay attention to what’s in front of you. Whatever. He jumped it, just like an awkward deer with surprised Pikachu face.

WHO COULD HAVE KNOWN

Then we had the next combo: a ramp, 5 bending strides to a corner, 5 bending strides to another ramp. This rode like it was the easiest little gymnastic exercise in the world. He couldn’t have been better. (This is also the point in the course where I run out of photos because all the photographers were in the first half.)

I sliced the approach to the brush table a little bit to save some distance, and again he jumped it super. Then the next steeplechase, no problem. Then we went into the trees, hung a sharp left, and were upon the half coffin. He definitely felt slightly surprised to see it there off the short turn, but I just closed my leg and clucked and he kept coming forward, no problem. Big big big “GOOD BOOOOOY!” after that, and a big pat. Guess I can stop being haunted by that ditch now.

After that was a pop over the log cabin, the next skinny mound combo (which again rode like a simple gymnastic, he was dead-on), the bench, and the last log box. I finished feeling like SURELY I made time, and walked over to ask the finish line volunteer what my time was (I don’t wear a watch, I want to prioritize good decisions over worrying about time, so I don’t see the point) and lord y’all. I was still 8 seconds slow. Apparently I am just a granny, because I really felt like I was flying and cutting off as much space as I could. Womp womp. Ultimately it didn’t matter, my 3 time penalties didn’t affect my placing this time, and we ended up 6th and the highest placed amateur. I’m just annoyed at being slow when I thought I was fast. It’s fine though, Ellie said we’d work on the speed/efficiency part some more.

ice boot cheesin’ with his ribbon

Ultimately I was really happy with the round. Aside from his surprised Pikachu at the trakehner (which he didn’t even think about stopping at, he just took a peek) it felt exceptionally easy. He was locked in and I felt like I made good decisions. I’m relieved to have gotten back out to Rocking Horse after such a long hiatus, relieved that it went well, and honestly I’m even relieved that the one stupid ditch was on our course, because now it doesn’t have to live rent-free in my head anymore. Plus Presto recovered and cooled down really quickly after XC and was not at all tired the next day. That’s about all you can ask for.

I have no idea what’s next on the docket for us as far as shows go… the March and April schedules get a bit weird for us so we’ll have to see how things pan out!

Show recap: Rocking Horse 3, Part 1

Hey hey hey, show season is in full swing (in Florida, at least) so it’s that time of year where we have lots of show recaps. I have plenty of pics from this one thanks to both Xpress Foto and my friend Michelle, therefore we’ve got another two-parter blog recap. Starting with dressage and SJ naturally, because those were the first two phases and also because what kind of blogger would I be if I didn’t give you a little cliffhanger drama by saving the best phase (XC of course) for part 2? It’s coming tomorrow though, don’t worry.

at least the horse was low-drama this time

If you’re thinking that it’s been a while since you heard anything about Rocking Horse, you’d be correct. We haven’t shown there since 2023. We always had good shows there, but then had a pretty disastrous schooling day later in 2023 where he wouldn’t go near a ditch and pretty much just spun like a top the whole time. It was before we figured out his ulcer issues (one of the catalyst events that made me go looking for the problem, actually) and it made me hesitant to return last season since we’d just finally gotten his stomach ironed out. I’m officially out of semi-legitimate excuses this year though, so it was time to rip off the bandaid. I had to branch out from constantly ping-ponging back and forth between Florida Horse Park and Majestic Oaks, and despite the fact that we’ve run what feels like eleventy thousand Modifieds by now, we hadn’t actually done one at Rocking Horse yet.

They offered a Thursday One-Day option for Open Modified at this show, so naturally I took it. Rocking Horse is like an hour and a half drive, so if I only have to haul the horse and trailer that far once, I’d much prefer it. But of course taking a weekday one-day option once again lands me in the division with all the pros. At least the shows are quieter on those days? It’s a worthwhile trade, all things considered.

a well-behaved noodle

My ride times were absolute perfection when it comes to a one day show. Dressage at 10:10, SJ at 12:30, XC at 1:10. I was able to feed all the horses in the daylight and get Presto on the trailer by 7:30. I’d gone over the afternoon before to pick up my packet and walk my courses, so I was able to get there, find a place to park, and take my time grooming and tacking up.

My ride times conflicted pretty perfectly with my coach’s ride rimes, so in my last couple of lessons leading up to the show she was pretty specific with me on what I should do in warmup and what kind of feeling we were aiming for. I greatly appreciated that, because whether I have eyes on the ground or not, it gives me so much confidence having a very clear plan in advance on exactly what we’re doing and why, and be able to just go execute it on my own. To me, being able to go and do things well without always having a helping hand is a very vital part of what I’m trying to get out of my riding education. I don’t always want or need someone standing there telling me what to do, I want to think and do for myself, and learn why I’m doing whatever it is. That’s actual education vs just following instructions, and that’s what I’m really after.

mmmk but can we all agree that the black and silver, while perhaps not colorful, is still sparkly and pleasing? I’m obsessed.

I followed the warmup instructions I’d gotten the day before, and whattya know, it all not only made sense, but it worked. Rocket science, y’all.

It wasn’t the most stand-out test we’ve ever had, in that parts of it just lacked a little bit of energy and crispness. My judge was Peter Gray, who you may remember I had a lesson with last year, but I haven’t ridden in front of him since then. I do know a few things about Peter though and what he likes to see, and made sure to fulfill those things as best I could. There were no real mistakes, and I had no complaints. Not our most pizazzy, top notch work, but it was good. Peter agreed, and we got a 28.3.

I kind of want to frame the harmony score and comment, thank you Peter for making my day

All of the places where I felt like I made small mistakes (like the haunches leading for a couple steps of one leg yield, a slightly early transition, a slightly late transition, losing his haunches a bit in one of the canter lengthenings, etc) perfectly matched up with the comments on the test. That’s always nice too. Nothing worse than thinking you did something great and the comment is the total opposite. It also makes me feel like I’m on the right track with the self-awareness and ability to know/feel when I make those mistakes. That’s step one to learning how not to make them in the first place and get better at test-riding in general.

After dressage Presto got untacked and got hosed off (it was already getting hot), and I got all my stuff ready for stadium. I was able to leave Presto with Michelle and her friend Jules (whoever babysits my horse is always the MVP of the show day, he requires adult supervision) and go watch some jumping rounds. I’d walked it quickly the afternoon before and wanted to see how the turns and lines rode.

6 strides from 3 to 4, 2 strides in 7AB, 8 strides from 8 to the one stride at 9AB

After watching some of the Intermediate and Prelim my two main questions were: should I jump fence 1 off the left lead or the right lead (I’d seen both but wasn’t sure that one seemed superior to the other) and was the line from 8 to 9AB better as 7 or 8 (again, I’d seen both work). So I tracked Ellie down when she finished her round and did a little quick fire questions – she said jump 1 off the right, and probably 8 in the last line but to make up my mind one way or the other depending on how we jumped in. Aye aye cap’n, can do (probably).

I’m obsessed with how cute he is in this pic. LOOK AT HIM.

With the original ride times Alex’s Modified horse was supposed to be jumping like 15 minutes after me, so we were hoping he’d have time to at least watch me a jump a few before we went in. In reality though, XC had been running behind, so he was running behind getting to his Modified horse, therefore didn’t make it to warmup. No worries though, Michelle and Jules (MVP’s again) came in and set a couple jumps for me, and I warmed Presto up the way I’ve been taught over the past couple months. He was jumping great.

honestly where tf are his hind feet even

The thing about Rocking Horse that’s markedly different from other local venues is the size of the ring. It’s pretty small, especially with a full course in there. All the jumps end up being a few strides off the rail, turns come up quick. and there just isn’t much time to fool around. Honestly I much prefer it to a big huge ring. When your only option is to ride forward out of the turn, it makes it easier for me personally. I think we’ve always had good jump rounds at Rocking Horse. I can’t overthink anything or screw up my rhythm when the jumps just keep coming rapid fire.

who’s this professional noodle?

I was a bit deep to the first jump, but he jumped it great anyway and I landed, put my leg on, and made sure we got back on a forward rhythm quickly. After that, everything came up nicely. It’s been pointed out to me over the past few months that when Presto starts to get behind the leg and lose power, the first clue is that he gets a left drift. It’s his way of giving himself more space at the base so that he doesn’t actually have to rock back and power off the ground. SO, I’ve been working hard on being more aware of that particular “tell” and focusing on keeping him really straight. It’s why he’s all the sudden been jumping so much better through his entire body, but the hind end in particular. Amazing how straightness works, eh? Duh.

he jumps like this behind almost all the time now

Anyway, we had what I think was our best stadium round so far this year. I felt like I had a clear plan, knew what to do in any scenario, was focused, and executed said plan/reacted to things correctly. Competent, I guess would be the word? Perfect, no. But it felt genuinely competent. Modified is looking pretty small now too (I would hope so, good god), which is also nice.

Presto didn’t come anywhere near touching a pole, and we got to put a nice double clear in the books again.

is he finally a mature(ish) boy?

I really don’t think I can overstate how pleased I am with how much his jump has developed over the past few months. I know I say it all the time but like… the difference is nuts.

I saw Ellie in passing and she asked what I scored on the flat. I had no idea. I don’t look at that stuff before the show is over, it’s not my business. But I told her Presto jumped like a little (big) rockstar in stadium and she was really happy with that, and then off I went on my merry way back to my trailer to throw all of our XC stuff on.

Tomorrow: the runny jumpies!

Zappy Zaps

Guys, guess what came?!?!

So many accoutrements

I cannot even begin to tell you how excited I am to have a Magnawave machine of my own. I’ll do an actual review of it at some point soon after I use it more (have I already magnawaved 3 horses and myself? Yes.) but it feels like a gamechanger and I’m psyched.

I got the Semi 10, which is a small, very portable little machine. If you were doing a big barn full of horses every day or running a MW business you’d probably want a bigger model, but for in-barn use on a handful of horses the size of the Semi 10 is really convenient. It’s still plenty powerful, but easy to carry and store.

Brain zappies

I got a lot of attachments too, some of which I haven’t used yet. I think the butterfly loop and the XL Wave Wings will probably be the most-used attachments for the horses, but I sat on the MagEnergy Mat and did my back (I have scoliosis so my back is pretty much always tight/sore) and it was great. I haven’t used the MagEnergy Guard (the big black box that horses stand on to do their feet) or the large loop yet. Their time is coming.

I will say, I did feel glad for the 9000 videos and assessments I had to do for training to get my certification, because I was able to hit the ground running with no questions or fumbling around. Fun times. Zappy zaps for errybody.

Other than just that exciting arrival, things have been predictably busy. Presto had two training rides last week, flat and jump, and I had a dressage/poles lesson, a jump lesson, and yesterday we popped around a few XC things ahead of the show this week.

The dressage/poles lesson was really like 900 transitions on a circle, over poles at the trot and canter. After we warmed up we started out cantering around the circle, trotting before the poles, trotting over the poles, and then cantering again after. Then she spread the poles out and we trotted around the circle, cantered before the poles, cantered over the poles, and trotted again after. She made the poles in the middle raised, and it took us a hot minute to figure out all the feet…

We are beauty we are grace.

but it was a great exercise for working on the timing of the aids, response to the half halt, keeping consistent bend, staying uphill through all the transitions, etc etc. We’re getting down to the nitty gritty detail work and it’s so hard and I love it.

Not sure what that says about me, really.

Anyway, we’re headed back to Rocking Horse this week, where we haven’t been in like a year and a half. Last time we went there was for an open schooling day, right before we figured out Presto had those nasty ulcers on the roof of his stomach, and it was NOT a good or productive day. He wouldn’t go near a ditch or down bank. So… fingers crossed he’s not harboring any worries or resentment about that day. Only one way to find out. I do think he’s gonna be a bit spooky no matter what, since he hasn’t been there in a while. He schooled really well yesterday though and felt plenty confident, so fingers crossed we can carry the good vibes forward.

The changes in him are getting more and more evident, I think. He feels stronger and more mature. Granted, he’s still and probably always will be a very cheeky horse that loves to spook for sport, so I would never in my life say he’s predictable. Just more trained. Most days.

I also had some content shoots to do last week, particularly one for Riding Warehouse x LeMieux spring collection.

Hillary and Tully got roped in

Y’all know matchy matchy isn’t really my own personal style (unless it’s black) but we always manage to have fun with these shoots. Michelle is in town right now and took the pics for us, and she got some really cute ones for sure. I gotta admit, the pink grew on me a bit by the end, too. Not a pink girl in general, but it was working for Tully.

Cue intense flower sniffing

Presto’s outfit was Dusk and Mimosa, a color combo more typically in my wheelhouse. He slayed, I think.

Blue steel

I’m also doing some content/testing for Gatusos horse boots, a brand I hadn’t seen before but is REALLY interesting. I’ll have a review coming soon for those as well.

Pastrami really steals the show tho

On the nerdier side of things, I got the breeding data finished and sent over to the Aiken GrandPrix of Eventing Showcase for this weekend, so if anyone is watching the live stream hopefully the hosts will use their data sheets! It’s a little bit of a smaller field than usual but there’s a lot of quality and depth, and many of the horses are aiming for Kentucky in April so it’ll be a fun preview.

On a similar vein, this week Eventing Nation launched their very first podcast episode. It’s been a long time coming and there are some really cool plans on the horizon, so make sure you’re following! Sally did a great job on the first episode, co-hosting with Will Faudree.

When they were first planning this episode and posted publicly asking for questions for Will, I thought I was being funny by submitting a bunch of marginally unhinged questions about Mason (Mama’s Magic Way). Y’all know I stan Mason big time. But anyway she actually asked him all my insane questions and now I fear that I’m forever immortalized in EN history as a Supreme Stalker Deluxe. Will did say I could have Mason’s autograph tho.

Worth it.

I am Batman

Last week was a bit of a relaxed one around here, by our standards.

100% accurate

My trainer was out of town, so we had the week at home to ourselves with no lessons or training rides. I figured it was a good opportunity for a little mid-season semi-break-ish/refresh, so Presto did a lot of hacking and long and low stretchy flat days (and a dressage day and pole day just to remember we are indeed a semi-trained animal). I’m not sure how much Presto really enjoys staying home and not going on adventures, but it’s good for his stomach to have a little break from all the trailering he does all the time.

The break also happened to fall over the boys’ scheduled annual dental appointment, which worked out well. The dentist thought Henry looked fine to wait another 6 months (a win for a horse with previous dental issues), Presto got done and looked pretty routine with nothing remarkable, and Rubes… well… it was her first time seeing him and let’s just say I wish I’d had her come sooner. His mouth was a situation. Ramps and hooks galore, lesions all over the back of his mouth from his teeth, and his whole jaw was just completely locked.

can honestly say I’ve never seen molars do the wave before

I chose to tackle all his aftercare in the order that I did (stomach, feet, chiro, joints, massage, teeth) partly because all of my horses get their teeth done at the beginning of the year anyway and partly because he wasn’t showing any signs of a major mouth issue. He eats great, is an easy keeper, doesn’t drop food, and has shown no particular issue with the bit or had any overt sensitivity near his jaw/tmj. Like… sure he’s a tight and tense animal but he’s an OTTB and there’s a whole lot of potential reasons for that (including stuff all the other aftercare has addressed). So I prioritized things as I saw them and started knocking them off one by one. Naturally, though, horses specialize in making us second guess ourselves in hindsight. Should have started with his mouth.

Basically the dentist described it as the mouth being the first in a line of dominos, and that when the mouth is locked in place like his was, the rest of the horse has a hard time moving as it should, too. That horses with mouths like his are often “a chiropractic nightmare”. She rattled off a laundry list of issues that can be caused by that, and it was like ticking boxes. Yup yup yup. Him to a T. She went on to say that he had zero anterior posterior movement of his mandible and that would have prevented him from being able to properly lift his back, and that he likely had headaches and sensitivity/pain in his TMJ pretty much constantly. Awesome. I feel terrible for not having done the teeth sooner.

lucky to have access to one of the best equine dentists in the country

She worked on him for quite a while, saying she’d do what she could all at once but that this was going to take time to fix entirely. She asked if I had any kind of PEMF (I was like “funny you should say that, my MagnaWave gets here next week!” She was DELIGHTED to hear that.) and suggested a few days off with bute, then riding him as long and low as I can get him to go for a while as he starts to loosen back up. She’ll come back in 6 months to keep working on it.

I got back on him for the first time yesterday and… yeah. He definitely feels better. The tension is notably reduced, his ability to properly bend left and right was immediately better, and he’s seeking the long and low more readily. His head doesn’t feel like he’s just sticking it in one place and holding it there, I have more options for moving him around. It will take time to totally iron everything out through his body but there is a significant noticeable change in how he feels under tack.

trying on his Batman mask (and waiting for his cob bridle to get here so he finally has one that fits)

So that was… an experience. An expensive experience, but a fruitful one. I’m going to have him chiro’d again soon, and when the Magnawave gets here he’s gonna be the PEMF king.

In other Rubes news, we officially got our acceptance to the 2025 RRP Makeover! I was waiting for the acceptance emails to go out before I launch his The Bleu Team initiative (more to come on that) so now I’ve got some work to do to get all that stuff ready to go. I’m hoping it’ll be something fun for all the Ruby Bleu fans.

Also – last week Henry turned 18. EIGHTEEN. CAN YOU BELIEVE IT?

eighteen cookies please

I’m so not ready to accept the fact that he’s a full fledged senior. Old enough to buy his own cigarettes, or vote (really could have used him in the last election tho tbh).

He had a fun birthday week though, getting to pony some of the coming 2yo’s around the farm. Aka wield his authority with no mercy, and exert his superiority over the youth. His absolute favorite things.

Andy is appropriately terrified of him, which Henry enjoys

It’s also hard to believe those kiddos are almost 2. Since we didn’t have any foals last year they’re our youngest currently on the farm. NOT FOR LONG, THO! As of tomorrow our first mare of 2025 will be at 320 days, which means we’re only a few weeks away from the kickoff of Foaling Season. I am equal parts super ready (because baby horses, duh) and definitely not at all ready (because foaling season is scary AF and no one gets any sleep).

We did get some WiFi cameras up and working in the barn though, thanks in large part to my brother. I am delighted to have the cameras in there, it should make foal watch much easier than it was last time.

mare and foal coming soon

We’ll also be able to give Patreon members access to the cameras so they can check in whenever they want, or help foal watch (there’s no such thing as too many eyes on the cameras). That’ll be a first!

I’ve chosen to keep the Baby Bets contest limited to Patreon this year as well, since it’s just a lot easier for me to keep track of things there vs when it’s public and I end up with DM’s on multiple platforms, emails, comments here, etc. There are seven (SEVEN!!!!!!!) foals coming this year and I’ve already got a lot on my plate, so it makes sense to at least try to set myself up for success by making it as simple as possible. The contest IS, however, open to all membership tiers, so if you’re a member, please check your dashboard!