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To all of the oldies back in lessons . . .

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  • #81
    <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by RegalBeagle:
    Skeezix - I'm not familiar with the board game, it may be the same character. You may be pleased to know that the character in the cartoon strip, Gasoline Alley, was a lovable persona. Known for being charmingly mischievious, always in a bit of trouble. The strip was a little unique as the characters aged, so Skeezix started as a young boy and grew up. The strip ran for years in the Globe & Mail newspaper published in Toronto. The reason I know all this and had the license plate .... my grandfather used to call me Skeezix and when I saw the name a bunch a lovely memories came rushing back. Thank you.

    I've often wondered when I compare how I thought I rode 5 million years ago, whether time softened the memory of previous skills ... that I have always struggled. But I look at that picture from the late 1980, flat back, with a decebt lower leg, right at the girth, heel down over a 3'6" oxer and yearn for it.

    http://www3.sympatico.ca/hcurtin/Han...80_dwyer_2.jpg

    And yes, they were grey breeches, LOL.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    I think the grey breeches look pretty with the grey jacket...great picture

    "In riding a horse, we borrow freedom." Helen Thompson

    Comment


    • #82
      God, I know- I have a couple of big framed photos of me on my last two junior hunters stuffed away in my husband's closet....sigh...I drool over those. Look at my tight leg! My capable seat, my soft, talented hands...it's like memory porn....so I only look at them to give me impetus to improve my cruddy riding. But why do my knees ache so much?

      Looove the grey breeches- I had a pair, along with a couple of rust ones. Yummy.

      You can take a line and say it isn't straight- but that wont change its shape. Jets to Brazil
      You can take a line and say it isn't straight- but that won't change its shape. Jets to Brazil

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      • #83
        love the grey on grey....
        my biggest problem is my beloved crump prix desalute (postage stamp)is no longer enough to keep my old and almost decrepid body where it belongs.... like up right or off the ground after landing on both feet i find myself in a heep on the ground in serious pain...mainly knee pain.. I have been eyeing the newer 'style' of close contact with just a tad bit more support on the knees... course I like the pessoa but my bank account is saying HDR with of course the lined girth....
        I still can jump a bit maybe 3' but then mom mode clicks in and with a husband who is deploied the 'if something happens to me who would tend to the kids' mode clicks in.
        I just love that im not alone in the older one returning to riding after taking time off.
        so what shall we call this clique of ours???

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        • #84
          Do we have age limit for clique or years out of riding or years in riding (learning as an adult) . I take notice of the mothers who ride becuase their daughters do or did so they want to be represented.

          Oldies but Goodies seems a common thread but I am not sure we all want to be called old. I can survive the name. Any thoughts from you Literature Majors or Marketing Majors. I am a Bean Counter with little or no imagination. and a terrible typer if you have not noticed.

          Keep up with good thoughts and FUN riding.

          "Angels fly because they take themselves lightly."

          Steph
          Steph

          http://community.webshots.com/user/stephanne014

          Rerider/Haydunker Clique

          RIP Barbaro, you were my hero!

          Comment


          • #85
            "Lost and Found"? or perhaps "Lost and Not Yet Found"? LOL!

            What about "Back in the Saddle"?

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            • #86
              I like Lost and Found. That is whats happens when you are out on course. In my life my riding skills are often left in the Lost and Found. Either I lost them or they were found laying at the in gate and somebody turned them in.

              "Angels fly because they take themselves lightly."

              Steph
              Steph

              http://community.webshots.com/user/stephanne014

              Rerider/Haydunker Clique

              RIP Barbaro, you were my hero!

              Comment


              • #87
                Well, I've been back riding for 2 1/2 years after a 30 year break. It took a year just to be able to identify my various body parts when mounted and another year to start to be able to control them. When I started again I part boarded saintly older horses and took lessons from even more saintly and patient instructors. Got to the point where I could hack out alone and actually enjoy it. Then last summer I finally got the horse I've been wanting since age 10, I bought an Icelandic foal. Now my only problem is I can't afford to part board any more and it will be a while before my boy grows up! Guess I'll just have to try and get as much saddle time as possible in the next 4 years and hope that the ole bod is still functional at 59, when he comes home. Suppose I could have gotten a trained horse, but I wanted the whole experience from babyhood on and Icelandics are what I lost my heart to. Anyway, every day is a good day now, 'cause I have a horse and it makes me feel like I'm 10, not 55.

                Icelandics - Tolt-ally wonderful!
                Icelandics - Tolt-ally wonderful!

                Comment

                • Original Poster

                  #88
                  "Oldies but goodies" hmmm, I am on the wrong side of 40, and a lot of times I FEEL a lot older , but that might date us. "Lost and found" is kind of cute, except I've been lost for a while now, and hoping to be found Okay you wonderful creative folks out there, what should we call ourselves?

                  Someone earlier posted a question about Osteoporosis. My mother has it and rode fairly regularly until a couple of years ago when her back was really hurting too much to ride. On a rare occasion she will still hop up on one of our old timers. So I guess she rode until her mid sixties. I know her doctor told her repeatedly over the years that she really should stop riding--she ignored him until it got too painful for her.

                  I am SO GLAD that so many of you are directionally challenged. It didn't take my trainer long to figure out that I kept doing the wrong thing becuase I couldn't tell my left from my right. So now she just says "inside/outside." I thought it was just me being an dingbat
                  \"Tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it.\" Anne of Green Gables

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                  • #89
                    How 'bout 'Chronologically Challenged Riders'

                    Icelandics - Tolt-ally wonderful!
                    Icelandics - Tolt-ally wonderful!

                    Comment


                    • #90
                      Hags On Nags...
                      \"It is never too late to be what you might have been\"

                      Comment


                      • #91
                        I like many of these naming suggestions, but in line with our faltering economy, I'd like to put forward a motion to downsize the name to something smaller and more cost-effective, such as "Re-riders". Or "NMP", which stands for Needs More Padding.

                        On the subject of saddles: my flat little cc saddle from the 1980s has a new name: The Punisher. My older and wider bum could use a little more generosity in the saddle area, if you catch my drift.

                        You can take a line and say it isn't straight- but that wont change its shape. Jets to Brazil
                        You can take a line and say it isn't straight- but that won't change its shape. Jets to Brazil

                        Comment


                        • #92
                          Tee Hee, I am enjoying this thread thoroughly.

                          I love Re-riders! Although Lost & Found is apt - while I lose my position on course and find it again several fences later.

                          Comment


                          • #93
                            While not very creative how bout seasoned riders. Wether we are returning from a extended period off horses or riding because one of our children took it off or any of the other variables we have listed here face it we are 'seasoned' we have the experance that younger ones dont wether it be in riding or math ;-).
                            course I like the other sugstions like re-riders and lost and found.

                            Comment


                            • #94
                              One of the things I have done with the horse I currently have, is to ride western. Very different from an english saddle because you have more holding you in and something to hang on to if the moment occurs when they are leaping in the air! It is a way to enjoy a trail ride without the fear of falling, and she is more relaxed because I am. For ring or indoor riding I ride english, but for trails I prefer a western saddle.

                              Comment


                              • #95
                                "NMP", which stands for Needs More Padding." Hmm don't know about that, less padding in certain areas is what I need.

                                I like Back in the Saddle and Lost & Found. How about BBOB - Baby Boomers on Board.???

                                Remember those stickers we put on our cars - no SUV's then!

                                South Georgia Clique
                                Why walk, when you can ride!
                                Reriders keep on riding
                                Why walk, when you can ride!

                                Comment


                                • #96
                                  LOL! You all have great ideas. I especially like "Chronologically Challenged Riders" .

                                  Just to throw out another one...
                                  There is a used riding equipment store in Toronto called "Repeat Rider". We could be the "Repeat Riders".

                                  Comment


                                  • #97
                                    I love this thread. Though I haven't officially started back yet, I am oh so ready. It's been 8 years since I've ridden on any kind of regular basis. And 2 kids later, my body is not what it was. My feet got so wide after having my 2 children, I don't know if I can find a pair of riding boots to fit. I've got a drawer with 4 pairs of full seated britches from oh so long ago. But it looks doubtful that they'll ever get back over these hips.
                                    How about "Repeat Offenders"?

                                    Success is a journey not a destination.
                                    Success is a journey not a destination.

                                    Comment


                                    • #98
                                      I heard someone call us "Rusty Stirrups" which I think is kind of cute.

                                      I'm one of those who took her first jumping lesson as a 40th birthday present. Now, 10 years later, I'm totally obsessed with my OTTB. But I find that my irrational fear voice pipes up now and then....especially when Betsy has us do something "death-defying" like jump through a chute of jumps without hands!

                                      Comment


                                      • #99
                                        <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Mallard's Mum:
                                        Hey, I'm not alone - what a relief. I can't wait to let my trainer know that there are other challenged people like me out there. She has been threatening to paint L and R on my gloves. This could be a new clique forming.

                                        South Georgia Clique
                                        Why walk, when you can ride!<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                        My trainer has said she would tatoo R and L on the horses ears for us!!!

                                        There is no spoon--Neo
                                        Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons--For you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup!!

                                        *******************

                                        Comment


                                        • So my oldie is basically retired. I picked up basically a rescue, and sent him out for training. They told me yesterday....he's ready to come home if you want a pet/trail horse. *coughs*. When you get to be an oldie, is that what the kids think you are worthy of? Only wanting a pet? sigh. Did nothing for my confidence. That's not really why I sent him out to learn to jump, lmao.

                                          At least my 13 year old daughter is a cheerleader for her gettin older mommy, who still wants to jump.
                                          ReRiders Rock *grins*

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