Wednesday, February 22 2012

I rode Glory again today. I learned something today also. Magic may not be the nicest horse when I am on the ground but he is a dream to ride. It is a challenge to me to work with Glory and get her where she steers like Magic. On a normal size horse a rider straddles the horse. On Glory it is more like I am perched up there. Her moves are so powerful that I seem to bounce around. I have a lot of improvement to make. Glory has shown me several specific things I need to improve. We will work on it.

Magic is better today. I was not able to identify any area of heat. Not as specific as yesterday. He limped a little when he came out of the stall this morning but the first few steps out of the stall are often irregular for many horses. I did not see any lameness tonight. He cantered from the gate into the barn.

Tuesday, February 21 2012

I rode Glory today. I learned something. When I was grooming, tacking up and doing ground work, all I could do was think “Wow, Glory is really nice.” Nice like considerate, kind. Glory is 2,000 pounds of nice. Kinda makes me think that the horse I have been hanging around for the past year has been taking advantage of my good nature. Yes Mr Magic, I am talking about you. Magic is very well behaved when I am on his back but on the ground he might think of me more as a target. I just rode Glory in the round pen. It has been a long time since I was on her. (I just checked this blog and it has been 7 months.) It seems like my legs would have to move a long way to change which end of Glory I am effecting. I expect that Glory and I will have more subtle cues than swinging my leg way back on her barrel. I enjoyed Glory and look forward to tomorrow.

I checked Magic for heat and swelling on all of his legs. The only thing I detected was heat on the off front (as expected). The heat was located high on the front of the hoof and possibly up into the pastern. At least it seemed to also be warm up at the coronary band and an inch or so above. The lameness was better today but still noticeable.

Monday, February 20 2012

I groomed and tacked up Magic this morning. We did ground work first and I thought I saw his head bob. When we started lunging I could see his head bob for sure. It is his off front. I did not ride. I can not see or feel any problems. Hood testers would be nice right now. My guess is that he bruised his sole. I did not notice anything while we were riding yesterday. It could have happened in the pasture. Tonight it was more noticeable when he first moved in the pasture but he might have been standing there for a while. Walking to and around the barn it did not seem worse. I will look more carefully in the morning.

Sunday, February 18 2012

Magic and I rode this morning. We lunged and used the ground poles. I propped the far end of the last pole up about 20 inches and made the distance from the set-up pole about 10 feet. Magic has the right attitude about “go forward”. He trotted over the set-up pole and was set to jump the little jump which he did and landed in a canter on the correct lead. Julian Westall suggests such a set-up in his book “Educating the Young Horse”. It seems to work. I have not cantered Magic much. He seems to have a nice canter but it has been difficult to get the correct lead on a counter clockwise circle. (the right lead) I expect that I am the problem in this situation. We will keep on working with lunging and ground poles. He seems to have learned to watch his feet and adjust his stride to match the ground poles. In the arena today he seemed more willing to pay attention and take the correct bend. We rode up to the spring on Pinnacle Mountain and a little past. It was a very enjoyable ride.

There are a lot of resources available today about how to train a horse. Right now I am utilizing methods from two sources and they seem very, very different. Julian Westall in his book “Educating the Young Horse” studies each minute step in great detail. His approach is to take your time and get it right. I am also watching Clinton Anderson’s videos about training his OTTB “Tricky”. Clinton progresses the training at a fast pace. One episode he has Tricky working in some elaborate obstacles. He is lunging and sending Tricky over half-round 2’6″ jumps, 4 of them in the circle. It looks awkward to me like the distance is exactly right to get Tricky in the wrong position, stride wise, to make the jump. Nevertheless, Tricky makes it around, several times. Clinton’s philosophy, I think, pushes the horse to go where he is pointed; make the effort; do it. I cannot follow either example exactly. If I did it Julian’s way, my horse would sour with the slow pace of progress and if I did it Clinton’s way, my horse would be overwhelmed and loose confidence. I am trying to learn which parts of each approach I can use with my horse at my speed. It is a great advantage to have so many resources to learn from.

Saturday, February 18 2012

Magic and I rode this morning. I put out some more ground poles. There are two in one group and 3 in the other. I positioned them so Magic can cross them working on the lunge line. They “radiate” out so they are close enough at the nearest point for walking and further out they are at the right distance for trotting. Magic does good with them. I have been working with the exercise Clinton Anderson calls the sending exercise. It seems to teach that when you point with the hand holding the lead, the horse is supposed to move forward. You send them back and fourth between you and something, maybe a fence or something they are wary of. We rode in the arena and the Oak pasture and up on Shirey. I am really enjoying riding Magic. He “acts up” and expresses a differing opinion now and then but I have no fear that he will explode or forcefully rebel. He is trustworthy. He has the right amount of go. It was a nice ride.

Friday, February 17 2012

I rode Magic this morning. I brought some ground poles to the barnyard. We lunged over them. He had no problems with the poles. We rode some in the arena. Today it felt like we are making progress. A good feeling. We rode around the Oak pasture. A good ride.

Do they ring a bell at the race track? Like at the starting gate?

I was in the garage this morning and heard a horse running. Little More came flying through the yard, across the driveway, running hard all the way to the barn. Little More is a “warhorse”, a retired Thoroughbred that ran 54 races winning $120,000. I’ve had him 5 years. He is a wonderful horse. He is not sound, dropping his off hip at the trot. But he is always laid back, relaxed, taking care of himself. Some days, like today, he does not want to go to the pasture with the other horses and I just let him have the run of the place. He likes to graze in the Oak pasture through two open gates and the yard away from the barn. I could not figure out why he was running. He is healthy and often feels his oats but it looked like he ran too hard and too far just to be expressing exuberance. It looked like he was spooked but that is very unusual for him. And I saw nothing. Then I remembered that I had just rung a bell, an old school bell that I am fixing up as a door bell. It is a big bell. Maybe I should not install this “door bell” if it will upset my horses, I have several OTTB’s, every time somebody comes to the house and rings the bell. BTY, all is well, Little More did not injure himself.

Wednesday, February 8 2012

Today I did some measurements. I laid a board flat on the trailer floor and measured the distance to the ground where it extends out past the rear of the trailer. This measurement would be called the height of the trailer floor. I stopped by my distant cousin’s trailer sales lot yesterday. He volunteered that most trailers floor are 13 inches high. Parked in the same location where Magic has been loading so good, the height was 11 inches. The height was caused by the low spot for the trailer wheels. I moved it where it was parked last week when Magic did not like to load. The height was 19 inches. I found a more favorable position to park the trailer yet very near this bad position / location which resulted in a floor height of 14 inches. I got Magic out of his stall. He showed some reluctance to approach the trailer. He remembered what happened when we were there last week. This was what I was wanting, the old memory but now with a lower trailer height. Everything the same except the key factor I wanted to test. He walked up to the trailer, looked it over and said “John, this is cool. No problem.” then stepped up in the trailer. We did it again but I was convinced. The solution to this problem is to park the trailer in a favorable position (not always possible) or a ramp might work. In the future, after I build some obstacles like Clinton Anderson’s, Magic might load in a bob truck. But I need a right now solution.

I parked the rig on a level area and measured 18 inches. I made some 4″x6″ blocks that I could drive the rear wheels up on and drove up on them. It took 4 wheel drive and low range gears but it raised the rear wheels 4 inches. This lowered the step up to 16 inches. Not enough.

So I will build a loading ramp on the trailer. I have wanted to try a two horse trailer style stocks in this trailer for some time. It is a bumper pull trailer and this will best position the horse weight in the trailer. They will have to back out and I think a ramp will help with this. I went by Miller’s this afternoon and got the steel. This will give me a very large 2 horse trailer with tool and tack storage up front. In the 70’s I hauled 4 horses in this trailer. My horses are bigger today and not even one will fit in the back compartment.

Tuesday, February 7 2012

Magic walked into the trailer today like it was where he wanted to be. I will have to do some experimenting. I know one way that works and one way that does not.

Monday, February 6 2012

I groomed Magic and walked him to the trailer. I opened the door and he walked in. I paid attention to what I did. I left the whip out of sight leaning against the trailer. I did not cluck or coax. He obviously knew what was expected of him. I believe that when you train, especially with pressure, a horse or dog to do something and you fail to get him to do it, then you have trained him how not to do it. That was our situation Friday but Magic did not learn the wrong thing. I am happy to be wrong this time!

Magic is smarter than Mark Twain’s cat. The cat sat on a hot stove. He learned a lesson but it was the wrong one. The wisdom was not to sit on a hot stove but the cat learned not to sit down at all.

It must be something else, not just the height. Maybe he sees a “gaping black hole” under the trailer rather than just a step up. A loading ramp might work but will be a lot of time and expense just to test. It might work if I elevate the tongue somehow. I could easily solve the problem here at home by just always loading at the present location but I could then run into the problem when I am away and have no option to park favorably.

Sunday, February 5 2012

I groomed Magic, did two minutes work on the lunge (lead) line, went to the trailer and Magic loaded like he was eager to get into the trailer. He walked in without me clucking or anything. I stayed on the ground and threw the lead line across his back. It is like it is a different world. We loaded two more times. I just walked him up to the trailer, he would look down to check the footing, and then just walk in. The only difference between this pleasant experience and the two hours of hell we endured Friday is six inches. It is not like my trailer is real high. Lots of other horses have loaded with no noticeable problem. We will keep on doing this for several days.