blog hop · poetry month

Blog Hop: Poetry Month

Trying my hand at a blog hop, here, for April as National Poetry Month.

What’s your favorite poem about horses? If you don’t have a favorite, do some Googling and find one you like! Song lyrics count, too.

Mine is Robert Frost’s The Runaway. It’s one of his earliest, first published in 1918. Frost is my favorite poet, and he often included horses in his poetry. He spent a lot of time in Vermont and he knew Morgans well.

Frost with a foal, c. 1930
Here’s the poem.
ONCE when the snow of the year was beginning to fall,
We stopped by a mountain pasture to say, “Whose colt?”
A little Morgan had one forefoot on the wall,
The other curled at his breast. He dipped his head
And snorted to us. And then we saw him bolt.         5
We heard the miniature thunder where he fled,
And we saw him, or thought we saw him, dim and gray,
Like a shadow across instead of behind the flakes.
The little fellow’s afraid of the falling snow.
He never saw it before. It isn’t play         10
With the little fellow at all. He’s running away.
He wouldn’t believe when his mother told him, ‘Sakes,
It’s only weather.’ He thought she didn’t know!
So this is something he has to bear alone
And now he comes again with a clatter of stone,         15
He mounts the wall again with whited eyes
Dilated nostrils, and tail held straight up straight.
He shudders his coat as if to throw off flies.
“Whoever it is that leaves him out so late,
When all other creatures have gone to stall and bin,         20
Ought to be told to come and take him in.”
gear · winter

Winter Gear Review

I’ve done some roundups of gear that gets me through the winter in the past (here’s 2013 part 1 & part 2), and since this week we’ve officially hit spring (after snow flurries last Saturday, hahahaha, fuck you, weather), I thought I’d do a quick roundup of what worked really well for me this winter.

Breeches

First and best addition to the wardrobe: new winter breeches. I’ve been looking for a good pair of winter breeches for a long time; my old breeches were threadbare and wearing out fast.

That niche was admirably filled by the Noble Outfitters Softshell Riding Pants. These did absolutely everything I wanted them to: they held up to 5 days a week of riding, they were lined and warm, they cleaned up nicely, they came through the laundry just fine.

Gloves

In 2016, I spent a lot of time trying out gloves, both winter and summer. I had some abysmal failures, and some tentative success. This year, I’m happy to declare that the gloves I was happiest with in 2016 remained my favorites through 2017.

My absolute favorites were the SSG Fleece Knit Winter Riding Fleece-Lined gloves. They were warm enough and flexible enough to get me through. The caveat? They are not the sturdiest things. The second caveat? They’re no longer made; I can’t find the on the internet anywhere. Damn it all.

My runner up gloves, which were warm but not depths-of-winter warm, were the Equistar Ladies Fleece Winter Riding Gloves. Let’s be honest: these are total junk. They have zero fancy upgrades, are not particularly stylish, and I honestly might be able to sew them myself given some thinking time. HOWEVER, with all of that? They’re the best combination of warm, comfortable, and flexible that I found after the knit gloves, and at $5 a pair, I don’t particularly care that they might not last more than two or three seasons. (For the record: my two pairs are still in totally fine condition after two seasons.)

Boots

My best-beloved and discontinued Ariat winter boots remain perfect. These will last forever, God willing, and even if they do finally go to the great tack closet in the sky someday, I am happy enough with their similarities to the new Ariat winter boot lines to buy those immediately and strongly suspect I’ll be happy.

Layering

Alllllll about the layers. This winter, I could most typically be found in long-sleeved technical shirts of two kinds, depending on the weather. For warmer (20 degrees or more) days, I have a few that can double as sunshirts, made out of lighter technical fabric. For colder days, I have a few that are fleece lined and more in the style of compression shirts, most of the made by Nike. That was base layer.

I also had a nice rotation of sweatshirts or other thicker layers over that base layer, and topped it off with a Patagonia down jacket that was light and flexible but also quite warm.

Miscellaneous

One of my very favorite additions to my winter wardrobe remains my fleece helmet cover. It makes a HUGE difference in comfort, both as a insulating layer to keep my head from bleeding warmth and as a windbreaker to block the vents in my helmet. I freaking love it.

blogger meetup

Nashville Blogger Meetup?

In about two weeks, I’ll be down in Nashville for a few days for a bachelorette party. Said party will take over most of my time there, BUT!

It literally just occurred to me last night that some of you are in the Nashville area and we could meet up.

Because of time constraints & other commitments on my part, the only day/time that works is afternoon through evening on Sunday, April 23. I will have at that point rented a car so I can do some traveling further afield but would rather not go more than an hour.

Are you in Nashville? Want to put together a horse blogger meetup? Send me an email: beljoeorATgmailDOTcom.

Also: if there’s anything horsey (or otherwise) I should check out in Nashville, let me know! I may have an hour or two free in the previous days that I can use to pursue my own interests.

(I am…not really a country music fan? But I like Tennnessee, and history, and barbecue, and biscuits, and tourist things.)

house post · smartpak

House Post: Recycling Smartpak Containers as Seedling Planters

When I reorganized the basement, I set up what would become a new seedling growing area. After last year’s initial foray into growing from seed, I doubled down this year because I am apparently trying to reach peak Vermont.

I had a grow light that my father gave me, I had some scrap lumber, and I had most of what I needed from last year’s seedling supplies. I did not have quite everything I needed, which is where the Smartpaks come in.

First, the actual setup itself.

First picture is the location; second is my scrap lumber grow light holder.

As you can see, I had the tray, but what next?

Well: I happened to walk by the barn’s pile of Smartpaks for recycling on my way out of the barn and that started the wheels turning, so I grabbed a pile and came home to work my germ of an idea into an actual plan.

Necessary tools: a drill with a thin bit (I used a 5/32 bit), used Smartpaks.

I ended up putting five holes in each well, and stacked them all up so I could do a whole bunch at a time.

It took me maybe five minutes..

Then I laid them out in the tray. I had a standard tray that I bought at Agway; I think it’s roughly 10″ x 20″. By some miracle, the Smartpaks fit beautifully 4 across and 8 down What you’re seeing below is a combination of a couple different sizes of Smartpaks; some fives, some threes, some twos. Four 5 packs + three 4 packs would’ve been perfect but I made do.

Then it was fairly easy to pour soil over the top of them and portion them out. I can’t plant for a little while longer, since Vermont will be a frozen tundra until Memorial Day, but I did start lettuce in my other open tray just to get something green in my life.

I’m getting ready, though, and plotting out how much of each I want to grow!

blog roundup

Weekly Blog Roundup

The Vaccination Struggle from The Exquisite Equine
Tris doesn’t react badly to vaccines so this isn’t something I usually worry about, but I have friends for whom this is an annual problem.

RWYM – General from Pampered Ponies
Some really good notes on a riding position clinic. Lots to think about here.

Eventers: What’s under your show coat? from PONY’TUDE
I’ve only fairly recently graduated from my old hunter shirt to more technical fabric, so seeing the range of replies in the comments was particularly interesting!

World Cup hangover from Hand Gallop
What a cool way to experience the World Cup!

march madness 2017

March Madness 2017 FINAL: The Pie v Beauty

Whew.

Three rounds, sixteen excellent competitors, and I bet some of you would have called this final match from the very beginning.

Here we go; poll will be open until midnight on Monday, April 10, EST. I expect it to be fiercely competitive and to go right down to the wire, so make sure you vote!

Final Match

The Pie

v

Black Beauty

Instead of the images I’ve been sharing, I thought I’d insert some clips from the movies that feature these famous fictional horses.
First up is a nice compilation of scenes from National Velvet in four minutes, but 0:46 starts the really memorable bit.

And here’s the very last scene of Black Beauty. If this clip doesn’t make you cry like a baby, well. I don’t even know.

Now that you’ve fortified yourself, it’s time to vote.
And having voted, make sure you enter the Rafflecopter one last time for your chance to win a custom quarter sheet (or saddle cover, or helmet cover, we’ll talk.)

a Rafflecopter giveawayhttps://widget-prime.rafflecopter.com/launch.js

lesson notes

March Lesson Notes

Super behind, but I DID have a lesson in March!

We worked more on getting him truly forward, and then on working out how much weight he takes in the reins right now.

I always worry about this line: when do I take too much weight back, too much of a pull, and I’m backing him off or being hard on his mouth?

The answer we worked out in this lesson was: way more than I had been using (I’d been using an extremely light touch with the reins to keep encouraging him to fill them up) BUT the key was that he had to be going forward.

Forward is always the key; I should be able to remember that by now, right? Ha. But: when he is forward, I can take much more weight than I can otherwise, because I’m not sucking him back, or stalling him out. I’m using the weight to encourage him to lighten.

Primarily, I was using very strong inside aids to a firm holding outside rein as a very hard half halt. Strong aids is not a new thing for Tristan, but I struggle with getting in & getting out again, and often fall into the trap of simply increasing the strength of the aid over and over again.

That’s actually been the story with my leg aids for a long time now, and I’ve been working hard on leg aid means GO and then taking them off in the meantime.

This may sound really stupid, and I feel kind of embarrassed for putting it out there, but Tristan has typically required constant, strong, nagging leg aids to maintain forward momentum. It’s a training problem, and it’s entirely my fault. I’m working hard on fixing it right now, with the result that we’re getting long minutes at a stretch of a springy, forward trot with only occasional leg aids to ask him to come strongly out of a corner.

By the end of the lesson, I’d reached a new equilibrium with my rein aids and he was giving me a lovely strong uphill feel through the base of the neck and into the bridle.

In the two weeks since, he’s been going really well, like we’ve unlocked something in him, to the degree that I’ve been schooling transitions in that uphill frame, and working on lightening him in the bit in the trot. Canter still weighs a ton and is not wildly maneuverable, but I can feel how much lighter it is already, and I’m excited!

2017 horse goals · 2017 life goals

2017 Goals: March Recap

Previously, I set horse goals and life goals.

January RecapFebruary Recap

So, how was March?
Horse Goals – original post here

1. Put hands on my horse 5x a week – yes! accomplished

2. Be less perfunctory – Baby steps. One thing that’s really helped me in this goal this month is to force myself into making deliberate decisions about things. I had gotten into habits of “well, we’ll wait and see.” Now I try to take a moment, examine the situation, and actively decide: “should I keep reading/watching tv/etc. and if so, is that how I want to spend the next period of time? or should I get up and do something? when I say I am going to accomplish X today, what does that mean?”

3. Aim toward dressage schooling shows – I guess? Still not sure what to do about my schedule problems.

4. Take more lessons – March, check! Scheduled April.

5. Horse-specific income stream / funding emergency fund – Tristan’s emergency fund is now at $700/$1500, and my overall emergency fund is at $8,315/$12,000, which means Tristan’s account is on track to complete this year and the emergency fund is growing slowly but surely and will be complete next year.

Some progress on the income stream: a couple of inquiries are bearing fruit and I’ve written a business plan.

We’ll see.

6. Do more thoughtful work – Um…I spent all of March doing the March Madness stuff, which was a ton of fun but not exactly thoughtful. Then I flaked out at the end. I get a big fat F on this one for this month, but have been trying to make notes for April posts.

7. Get more media – Faiiiiiiiiil.

Life Goals – original post here

1. Pay off car – yup still on track. Realistically, though I would love to knock this out early, I’ve had to divert some savings to important things like replacing my 12 year old desktop computer at home.

2. Read 75 books – 21/75 down:

Some Luck, by Jane Smiley

The Fireman, by Joe Hill
The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by NK Jemisin
The Broken Kingdoms by NK Jemisin
The Kingdom of Gods by NK Jemisin
The Path Between the Seas [halfway] by David McCullough
Again, slower due to heavy nonfiction.

3. Revive history blogs – Suck. Just suck.

4. Do better about food – Tiny steps, but also some backsliding because goddamn, pizza is the perfect food.

5. Decorate the house – does reorganizing the basement again count?