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Help! Am I being a wuss?

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  • Help! Am I being a wuss?

    Dear COTH Peeps -

    I'm having a cold-weather related existential crisis and need your advice!

    OK...temps plummeted here in Virginia this week. I'm really a pretty hardy person, and typically ride all winter. I run outside all winter too!

    In the past, I've always boarded where there is an indoor arena, so unless the actual temps were down in the teens, I'd be out riding. But the horses are home now, and although I have a great arena, it isn't indoors! And when I contemplated riding last night, the cold drove me inside my house with the horses snuggled cozily inside their snug little barn.

    But now I'm filled with remorse...I have goals! Plans! Shows in the spring! How will I ever be ready if I wuss out when the temps hit 23* with windchills in the teens?

    So...dear COTH friends - please either tell me I'm not a complete wuss and that not riding for two or three days will not be the end of my training. OR, give me a swift kick in the pants and tell me to get out there and do it because it really ain't so bad.
    Here Be Dragons: My blog about venturing beyond the lower levels as a dressage amateur.

  • #2
    Well, its likely to get worse long before it gets any better but I have noticed that when we get the first 60 degree day in the fall we are putting on a parka but the first 60 degree day of spring we are stripping down to our tshirts. So 23 sucks now but may not seem as bad in January or February. If you like, wait until then.
    McDowell Racing Stables

    Home Away From Home

    Comment


    • #3
      I'm with you. It's really not that bad out when I consider how bad it's going to get, but right now I just want to stay inside and sulk. I know I'll get over it in a few days, but for right now, I'm just going to pout and whine.

      Bundle up in layers. When I first get to the barn I'm always frozen, but by the time I'm done riding I've taken off a couple layers.

      Comment


      • #4
        My words for you are: Irideon fleece lined riding tights.

        If it's not wet and crappy, and not too windy, I don't care how cold it is. Just keep moving, and do a long gentle warmup in the cold, for both of you.
        I tolerate all kinds of animal idiosyncrasies.
        I've found that I don't tolerate people idiosyncrasies as well. - Casey09

        Comment


        • #5
          Take a break and let your blood thicken. I was a wuss for the first few days, but now I'm used to it.

          Comment

          • Original Poster

            #6
            Originally posted by Lori B View Post
            My words for you are: Irideon fleece lined riding tights.

            If it's not wet and crappy, and not too windy, I don't care how cold it is. Just keep moving, and do a long gentle warmup in the cold, for both of you.
            I think this is part of my problem...not enough warm riding pants. Lots of great jackets. I'll look into them
            Here Be Dragons: My blog about venturing beyond the lower levels as a dressage amateur.

            Comment


            • #7
              My single biggest and best motivator to get through the long dark nasty Ohio winter is this.

              Pick a date for your first horse show. Then print out calendar months from today to that horse show day. Count backwards and mark every single day from today to that day of the show. For example. I have 106 days until the first show on XXX day. Today would be marked 106, tomorrow marked 105 and so on. Then hang it somewhere where you see it everyday and can mark off the days.

              With this visual marker in front of you everyday, you can now give yourself permission to alternately take a day or two breather or soldier on. Either way, horse show season waits for no one.
              ...don't sh** where you eat...

              Comment


              • #8
                Warm clothing in layers is a must. I also have a support network that we all razz eachother about riding through the winter. Usually it works out, when someone is down..someone else that is picking them up.

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                • #9
                  I'm right there with you in wussiness ... and I was raised in Minnesota !

                  I just brought home a new horse last week and have not yet ridden her ... the wind and the cold started the day she arrived and my stiff, old self is not getting on a strange 4 year old in those conditions.

                  *star*
                  "Avoid loud and aggressive persons, they are vexations to the spirit."
                  - Desiderata, (c) Max Ehrman, 1926

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                  • #10
                    Well, lemme tell you. I hung out with Mr Ted while he was feeling very ouchy. I'd come, groom, give him his meds after I warmed them up (that took 20 min alone). Stayed much later if he wasn't doing well.

                    And what happened? Viral infection followed by asthma issues followed by bacterial infection. I can't bear the thought of going out there in the cold when it hurts to breathe at room temp.

                    I so want spring.
                    www.specialhorses.org
                    a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      If you're a wuss, what am I?

                      The only way I'm going outside in 23* temps is if the house is on fire.

                      Fortuantely, we don't get too many really cold days in SE Texas... many damp and cold nasty ones but not prolonged cold with snow and ice everywhere. I venture out to feed, hay, water, and check to make sure everyone has appropriate outerwear and pulse. That's it. Ride? Forget it. But then around here, if you wait a day or two, temps shoot back up to 80 anyway.
                      "I did know once, only I've sort of forgotten." - Winnie the Pooh

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                      • #12
                        I had a lesson last night and it was approximately -10C (14F). I wore layers to the barn: t-shirt, sweat shirt, insulated vest, winter coat, irideon winter breeches, snow pants, wool socks. That kept me warm through my chores, grooming & tacking, and I was able to strip off the winter coat and snow pants for riding. I was sweating before the end of my lesson. Once you get the blood flowing, it's really not that bad! You can try running on a treadmill before going outside, or doing a quick workout before going out in the cold, that really helps.
                        Jigga:
                        Why must you chastise my brilliant idea with facts and logic? **picks up toys (and wine) and goes home**

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Beware of the freeze thaw cycles though. Ask me how I know!!
                          www.specialhorses.org
                          a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I am a total weather weenie!

                            IF I got out of work before dark I would work on Green beans round pen. It is pitch black when I get out of work. This weekend I will be in the round pen with him wearing multiple layers. He is a wooly mammoth. The hardest part with him is not getting him to sweaty.
                            Insignia MC - Spanish PRE mare
                            Kenny - Hanoverian Gelding
                            Tuggy - RIP at the bridge (9/12/2016)
                            Theodore the Boxer - RIP at the the bridge (10/5/2017)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              It's all about dressing for it. As Lori B implied, Polartec Wind Pro fleece is the way and the light. It is 4x more wind resistant than regular polar fleece, which basically means that the wind chill is no longer relevant. On Sunday I was riding in the very conditions you describe--about 22 degrees, wind chill around 15 degrees--and I was snug as a bug in microfiber long underwear under Irideon Wind Pro breeches, the Mountain Hardwear Ozone fitted fleece (made of Wind Pro), an EZ Cozy Helmet Cover (http://www.pelham-saddlery.com/wmn/5264.html), Roeckl Chester winter fleece-lined gloves, and Mountain Horse Ice Rider paddock boots with Thinsulate lining.
                              Head Geek at The Saddle Geek Blog http://www.thesaddlegeek.com/

                              Comment


                              • #16
                                I'm a fair-weather rider, and freely admit it. I long for the upcoming days when we will have our own indoor. In the meantime, I hunker down inside or go out and pet noses, and only ride when I feel fully capable. It might be different if I had a desk job, but this time of year I'm out in the weather and I just flat don't HAVE to put up with it on my days off.

                                But then, this might be why I'm not showing in the Spring. So there ya have it.
                                COTH's official mini-donk enabler

                                "I am all for reaching out, but in some situations it needs to be done with a rolled up news paper." Alagirl

                                Comment


                                • #17
                                  But it's not just the tacking up and riding - that part I can deal with. It's the cool down when you are cleaning up and cooling down.

                                  Of course when you are getting sick it's probably real hard to stay warm anyway.
                                  www.specialhorses.org
                                  a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

                                  Comment


                                  • #18
                                    I find that the first few cold weeks are the hardest...I refuse to get out all my winter stuff and consequently get all cold and grouchy. Once I accept that the cold is here to stay and put on all my layers, I feel much more enthusiastic about going out and riding.
                                    Proud member of the "I'm In My 20's and Hope to Be a Good Rider Someday" clique

                                    Comment


                                    • #19
                                      Any chance you can trailer to a nearby indoor? See if any local barns have reasonable rental fees for a few hours' worth of work.

                                      Comment


                                      • #20
                                        It's OK not to ride when it's 20 degrees! It it's a bit above the 20's AND there is high wind, ok not to ride then either. That's no fun at all.

                                        We typically are riding through big open fields and then woods trails. Finding a good safe place to have a canter can be a challenge. Sometimes all we can do is big long trots. Which is good for the horses. But the older we get, the less we want that biting wind in our face.

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