Thursday, January 17, 2019

Super B - Super Mare Extraordinaire

I really need to stick her.  I thought she was 16.1-2 but I think she may be taller.  I can't see over her back.  Klein is 17 hands exactly, and I can't see over her back either.  I'm 5'7" for reference.

Super B continues to floor me almost on a daily basis.  I'm not even sure what else to say about her...just look at her.

#topshelf

#stunner

I have had her on the lunge line a couple times recently to let her stretch and she has just been on a completely different level with her balance and way of going.  I knew she was fancy but she showed off some passage for funsies the other day and some unreal canter.  She's going to take a little bit of time to get some strength built back up but when she does...look out.

For my fellow Pulp Fiction fans, I always tell her she's a race car in the red, and that it's f'n dangerous to have race car in the red.  She is pretty intense right from the start for anything.  So my biggest obstacle with her is to help her realize that we don't have be in the red all the time.  She's not neurotic or anything, and it's not that she's out of control.  She's not dangerous either, so my Pulp Fiction reference isn't completely accurate but I love that movie and it's what popped in my head for the times she has gotten all wound up about something.  I mean, I did get right on her after not riding her for three months.  I guess you could say she is very serious about work, and I appreciate that immensely about her.

She will stop on a dime for you though and stand silently, ground tied, waiting for her next instruction.  She can take it from 100 to 0 in a split second, which is pretty impressive.

Watch both videos.

It is a little hard to explain.  I think she's so used to being required to explode that it has been a little challenging for her to just slow her thought process down sometimes and realize that it's not always required anymore.  Thankfully, she does listen extremely well to half halts, so if I give her a half halt through my body she immediately responds and brings it down a notch.




She was just adjusted by the chiropractor and she feels amazing.  We have some work to do with her left hip that will improve with just that, work.  It was just a bit stiff and her pelvis was about bit out of line but she adjusted no problem and now that we're back in regular work, once she gains some strength and muscle that hip will be great.  The video above was prior to the chiro adjustment.

Though she has been off the track for a year now she hasn't been restarted under saddle for that entire year.  This is another place where seven years of training in a particular way will have to be somewhat undone, as in a different type of strength/balance.  A matter of months won't undo that.  Now that we are over the abscess and out of the rain forest, oh and she doesn't go feral anymore (that was a few weeks of down time too), this year should be pretty exciting and full of some serious progress.

Being adjusted.  I really like our new chiropractor too!  We had a great one in NJ and what a relief to find a great one in Las Vegas too.  He was GREAT with her and actually used to be an exercise rider so he is extremely familiar with OTTBs.

Today I sat with her for a minute before I got on and just held her head in my arms and told her how much I love and trust her.  She closes her eyes when I pet her face/ears.  The tough mare defense goes away in those times, she loves our little quiet times. 

Tough mare defense deactivated.

Monday, January 14, 2019

THE REUNION!

Klein and Zuli racing around in the New Mexico desert in 2010.

Klein, Zuli, and Zeb have reunited after 6.5 years of not seeing each other!  They lived together for a couple years in New Mexico and went on rides regularly together.  They always got along and we had a great time no matter where we went with Zuli or Zeb, and their mom.  She is one of the reasons I couldn't wait to get back to the desert.

Klein doing her best Chinchilla impression in New Mexico. Zuli was not impressed.

Zuli and Klein in New Mexico again.

Zuli and Klein reunited.

Back to enjoying each other's company on adventures.

We were so excited for them to see each other and as soon as Klein saw Zuli approaching in the distance she nickered to him.  She doesn't normally do that so I knew she recognized him.  They quietly sniffed noses almost like they were like "Is it really you?!" and we went off on our ride like 6.5 years had never passed since the last ride.


Yesterday Zeb and Klein reunited and enjoyed a ride around the desert just like they did 6.5 years ago.  Again it was like no time had passed.  Zuli was so happy to see Klein again and immediately said hi to her.  They sniffed noses some more and Zuli seemed to be saying "IT REALLY IS YOU!  You're really here!!!"  Zeb and Klein sniffed several times as well.  No squeals or stomps with either of the boys.  She was like "Hi guys, so, I'm back, how have you been for the past 6.5 years?!"  

Me on Zeb in 2011 or 2012.

Klein and Zeb 30 seconds after seeing each other for the first time in 6.5 years.  It really is like no time has passed at all.

Out exploring the desert just like we used to.

This is one of the coolest parts of this whole moving around the country life.  I am so happy to have one of my closest friends and her wonderful horses just down the road again.  We have soooo many adventures in our future! 

Klein, Zuli, Ruger, and Zeb.

More from our ride yesterday.

Conditioning heaven.  Unbelievable that this is just a walk down the road.


If you are able to zoom in, you can see The Strip in the distance, really cool view.

Walking back to the barn.

Hey, what's up?  Ah, nothing, just been touring the East Coast, doing horse things, eventing, dressaging, winning national awards, going to the beach, whatever.  Cool, wanna go ride in the desert like we used to?  Yeah!  Let's go!

Friday, January 11, 2019

Week One of Reconditioning in the Desert

Yes, we are IN Las Vegas.

So, what is the plan for the super mares?  The plan is still to gradually increase their work load back into full work.  This was another reason I am glad I brought them out 2.5 weeks early, that way when I got home they would be ready to go back to work, albeit not a normal work load but the only way to get to that point is to start back to work with a lighter workload and build back up.

Yeah, just not going to get tired of this view.

As much as I love conditioning, Klein has so many cool buttons on the flat now it is hard for me to stick to my plan because it's a lot of fun schooling different dressage movements on her.  I also can't wait to get her back over fences again, which is a reason I have been staying in my dressage tack right now, to take that temptation out.  I'll hop her over a couple things soon enough, but actual schooling and setting up grids, that is still weeks away. 

The plan for the both of them is still to do a lot of long walks on/off contact for the first couple weeks.  Then we will gradually add in some trot sets, then canter sets.  They will be on the lunge line once or twice a week.  The lunge line workouts will be on the flat at first then we will add some cavalletti into those.  They will come into our flat rides soon after. 

Already found out who owns this.





We have a ton of places to adventure for our long walks too, so that will keep it interesting for everyone.  I have taken both of the girls out in the neighborhood so far.  I cannot believe we have such great places within our reach that are riding distance. 



 Checking out one of the multi-million dollar equestrian estates.

 One of the many reasons I love her so much.  She had yet to leave the gate of our barn before I rode her out in the neighborhood alone.

I knew about a lot of cool places in the area before we got here and I continue to learn about more.  This place just gets better and better.  I didn't think it could get any better, but it continues to one up itself almost daily.  I love this place!

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Back to Work for the Super Mares

 Klein got a haircut immediately.

Though I was only away from them for 2.5 weeks it felt like much longer.  I enjoy spending time with them and riding them so much it is pretty much physically painful when I can't do that for whatever reason.  The withdrawals are real.

I am still very, very happy though that I brought them out 2.5 weeks early.  That gave them time to settle in to their new surroundings and for Super B, let her feet start drying out.  The monster abscess from hell was pretty much healed completely by the time I brought her out to Vegas, but anything lingering is long gone by now in this wonderful dry climate!  I was SO worried that in the NJ rainforest something would get back in the wound and re-infect it during that period of time where you have to stop wrapping or it will never dry out phase.  I was meticulous with keeping it clean but that is an odd spot to be, where you need to keep it clean but you cannot keep putting moisture on/in it.

She is looking absolutely amazing here in the short three weeks she has been here.  Just wait until I put some muscle on her too.

Once again the universe has shown me how much Super B was meant to be in my world.  I have had Klein for 12 years now, and while she does love her Wes and Mochs, she never got upset when I would take them anywhere, or take her anywhere away from them.  I have heard her call for them only a few times over the years.  Klein and Mochs went on a long haul together too with the last move and their relationship stayed the same.

Klein and Super B have taken some kind of vow with each other.  Super B is also pretty independent.  The majority of the times I have taken her anywhere have been alone.  She has been excellent everywhere we have went.  However, after this trip, Klein and B are now BFFs.  They have both thrown fits when I separate them.  They don't do anything stupid, they just call for each other and run around a little bit.

Knowing them both to be very independent, I knew this would stop pretty fast and less than a week of them being back to work, it has.  Since they were in a new place I started by taking them together to the cross ties to be groomed/bathed.  There is a turn out and round pen next to the ring so I would also have one of them in the turn out or round pen while I rode the other one in the ring.  That way they could have a clear view of where the other was and what they were doing.  It allowed them to figure out the routine at the new place, which was the same before.  We go work, then they go back to their stalls/turnout.  No big deal, nothing new.

Klein humoring The Other Half with affection.


After a couple days of that I started by taking them one at a time.  Whoever was going in the turnout by the ring would go first, then whoever was working I would go back and get and take to the cross ties to groom and tack up.  When we were done they would go back to their stalls/turnout individually.  They are both very smart and figured it out quickly.  We're 6 days back into our routine and I just grab whoever is working first and the other one goes about their normal day until it is their turn.  There is no more hanging out in the turn out by the ring or being in the cross ties together. 

Letting them stretch out in the round pen.


Klein is an out of sight out of mind kind of horse and she stood in the cross ties by herself fine.  Same with work.  She doesn't care once it's time to go do something.  Super B though was having trouble standing still in the cross ties and would call for Klein and paw.  Today after our ride she stood silently and enjoyed a warm bath.  No pawing, no calling, everything is back to normal.  I love having smart horses.

#supermodel

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Bye New Jersey

Yesssssssss last time over the Delaware Memorial Bridge!

No more New Jersey for us!  We made our final trip out to Las Vegas and moved into our new house.  I'm glad that drive is over.  Though it went a little faster driving a car versus hauling horses, it's still a very long drive and we had some unnecessary excitement with weather.  I'm just incredibly glad we didn't get into that kind of weather with the horses.

It took us four days.  We could have done it faster with the cars but we had our two cats and didn't want to have them in the car for and entire day.  They were great travelers but I still worry about them getting dehydrated or UTIs from not using the cat pan from stress.  We had the throwaway cat pans in the cars to stop and let them out to use them if we thought they needed it but they never did.  They did use their cat pan in the hotel rooms though and they ate and drank normally.  Also, being such a long trip, that's four days of stress for them so they needed their nights to stretch out and relax.  They treated the hotel rooms like playgrounds at night too so they got their energy out at night...while we were trying to sleep of course.  Has anyone seen the video of the rabbit doing laps in the bedroom at night while its owners are trying to sleep?  Yeah.  That was us with our cats.

A friend suggested Feliway for them too.  One of them doesn't care about anything and thinks everything is a big adventure.  The other one gets stressed easily.  She just likes things the way they are.  She is very social and cuddly when at home with us but is understandably stressed when out of her comfort zone.  I got a Feliway multi-cat diffuser for the hotel rooms and spray to spray on her blankets in her crate.  It helped A LOT.  By the second day when was sleeping in the position she normally does and taking baths in her crate like nothing else was going on. 

You can use it for all kinds of different situations from cats that are tearing up the furniture and going outside the litter pan to trips to the vet to help them not be so stressed.

 The reason we need a king size bed.  

The first day we had nice weather the whole way from Medford, NJ to Nashville, TN.  The second day we got into some nasty storms.  We hit a red cell that was coming down I-40 out of West Memphis.  I got extremely windy and the clouds in front of us all of a sudden looked very threatening.  I actually took a picture.  There was a diesel pusher a short distance in front of us right in front of the ugly clouds and I saw him hit his hazards and that is when I knew we were about to get it.

I have never in my entire life driven in rain where it was a complete whiteout, but that is what happened.  I couldn't see ANYTHING all of a sudden, and blindly pulled over on the side of the road hoping I wouldn't go off the side, down into the embankment.  It thankfully was short lived and we were able to get going again but we pulled into the next rest area to check the radar because if there was more of that coming down the highway I was going to just wait until it passed.  That was dangerous.  When we pulled into the rest area several other people did as well and were making comments about what we just drove through.  There were broken trees all over the place in the rest area too.  That storm was borderline tornado weather. 

The wall.

The radar was clear so we got back on the road.  A short distance later we saw a truck in the median that had clearly run off the road in that storm.  

What we drove through.  Ignore the Nashville part, it was west of Memphis, I just had Nashville selected on Weatherbug and then zoomed into where we actually were. 

 Just a fat cat enjoying his road trip.

We stopped in Weatherford, TX that night.  The local news had a lot of warnings about a big storm coming to the north eastern part of Texas and DFW area that was going to coat the area in ice.  If we would have left one day later we would have been in the direct aim of that thing.  We knew something was up when we crossed into Texas in Texarkana that day we started seeing brine on the road and that only means one thing.  Significantly bad weather is inbound.  That storm would explain it.

The next day we thought we were good to go and that we were so smart because we were ahead of the ice storm.  Wrong.  We got into part of it thought it only was freezing mist and fog.  The roads were fine thankfully.  The worst that day was heavy freezing fog from Pecos, TX to Van Horn, TX.  There was one point where everything but the highway was COATED in a layer of ice and it was 25 degrees.  I was not happy. I really hate stuff like that.  I knew the road was fine.  There was brine all the way out there too and I could see water coming off of the tires of the vehicles around me but being that everything surrounding me was coated in a ice and we were in dense fog, it worried me.  There was an RV that had rolled over and disintegrated in the median on that stretch too.

Shortly before Van Horn I saw the end of the storm and the sky cleared to beautiful, blue, sunny skies and the temperature went up by over 30 degrees.


The rest of the drive that day was easy, thankfully.  We thought that would be the worst of it.  That night we stopped in Lordsburg, NM.  We were relieved to be so close to home at that point.  We were only 546 miles from home at that point which was easy compared to the 850 miles we did on just the first day alone.  We found a great restaurant down the road and had dinner.  Meanwhile, Woodward continued acting like he was Undercover Boss of the Hampton Inn by fully inspecting the hotel room.  BTW, in case you don't know, La Quinta Inn and Hampton Inn hotels do not charge pet fees.  Some hotels wants $20 extra per pet.  Those two hotels have no extra charge.


The microwave?  Seriously?  Is that necessary?   Cats use the microwave?!

I don't have any pictures of Snickers from the trip.  Her crate was in the back seat in my car and in the hotel room she was either eating or curled up with us.  Woodward is always the explorer.  Snickers wakes up when we turn the lights off and then the both of them run around like they're on a playground.

We had heard that Phoenix had some uncharacteristic weather and that it was possible Tucson was going to get flurries.  No big deal.  The next morning there was a light dusting of snow on our cars but nothing on the ground.  It was windy and cold with some flurries but nothing sticking to the ground as we drove out of town.  That all changed 14 miles down the road.  14 miles down the road it was a blizzard and the highway was becoming covered in snow.  The problem with this is that my Cadillac is NOT an AWD Caddi, it's RWD.  In addition to this, it has all season tires.  It was HORRIBLE in the snow.  Why do I have a RWD car with all season tires?  Because I also have a 3/4 truck so NORMALLY I wouldn't drive my Caddi in that kind of weather. 


The Caddi started slipping and went fishtailing.  It was at that point I pulled over.  I know better than to pull over on the side of the highway but I didn't really have a choice.  At that point we were in the middle of nowhere just before the AZ state line and the only exits were those with nothing on them so the plows had no reason to plow them.  No one was using those exits obviously because there was nothing there so the risk was higher for me to try to exit on one of them.  I'm fairly certain my ice skate of a Caddi may not have stayed on the road.  

I pulled over and waited for it to get light out, the plows to make a few passes, and for it to let up a little.  I checked the radar and to my disappointment, I saw that the storm was not going to cross the highway, more like sit over it and follow it east.  Eventually I felt like the plows combined with the traffic and a period of lighter snow made it to where I could at least get back on the highway and just take it easy.  So, that's what I did, for another 130 miles.  There was snow ALL THE WAY INTO THE SOUTHERN EDGE OF TUCSON.  That is almost unheard of.  The weather just HAD to get one more punch in before we got away from it.

The spot I was in when I took this wasn't even in the frame.  I was still to the right, not even in Arizona yet.  FML.

In those 130 miles there were numerous vehicles spun out on the sides of the highway and in the median. There was also a jack knifed tractor trailer in the median, and a 40 car pile up going the other direction.  The only way out was through though.  It actually only got worse in that area too so sitting there or turning around would have done us no good.  A friend in Tucson had 4" of snow in his backyard yesterday.  If I had horses with me, I would have turned around and stayed in Lordsburg as long as I needed to.  I wouldn't have taken any risks.  The Other Half never stopped, but his car is much better in the snow than mine.

At the south edge of Tucson I finally passed the back wall of the storm and I saw blue skies and sun again, though there was still snow on the ground.  North of Tucson the road was dry and the temp climbed again to almost 30 degrees warmer.  The rest of the drive was FINALLY in the clear.  

I got into Vegas in the early evening.  After I got Snickers home we went to see the super mares of course!  I am SO HAPPY TO BE HOME WITH THEM!  I missed them SO MUCH!  My BFF that has been visiting them daily has told me Klein has been throwing some hissy fits lately.  That is Klein code for she's bored.  She doesn't like to be unemployed for long.  She's always been a workaholic, and I love that about her.  Well, wish granted.  They both went back to work yesterday!

Though the weather got rough, we couldn't have timed this trip any better.  Our house had already arrived in Phoenix the day before we drove through it.  That meant it was able to be delivered the next morning after we got there.


Look closely and you will see them bringing out an orange barrel aka one of my skinnies.  I had them pack all my jumps : )  I always do, unless they are starting to fall apart, then The Other Half builds more when we get to our next place.

Part of the beautiful area we live in. 

Klein and Super B look absolutely amazing like always.  Super B has gained the weight back that she lost from pain/stress with her monster abscess.  Even riding her last night I could see the gain in her neck.  I would say she approves of her new home.  




Finally, everyone and everything is where it needs to be and this chapter has officially started.