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Owners of 4 y.o.s clique check-in time!

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  • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by EquineLegalSolutions:
    I am officially nuts! (long unofficially so - ha ha) My barn buddy, who happens to be the activities director at a local high school, has convinced me that she and I need to be flag-bearers at her school's homecoming game. As in mounted on horseback, galloping around the track!
    <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    Well???? How did it go???
    If I wanted to hear the pitter-patter of little feet, I'd put shoes on my cats.

    Comment


    • Yes, my horse is still growing and he is a QH-who generally grow fast. he shot up in the rear about a month ago, and had a little growing pains with it. But he is better now, although still a little butt high. He is about 16.2 in the butt and 16.1 1/2 in the front.
      It is not uncommon for a 4 yr old to still be growing, especially warmbloods and tbs who often grow until they are 6!

      Comment

      • Original Poster

        <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by 411:
        <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by EquineLegalSolutions:
        I am officially nuts! (long unofficially so - ha ha) My barn buddy, who happens to be the activities director at a local high school, has convinced me that she and I need to be flag-bearers at her school's homecoming game. As in mounted on horseback, galloping around the track!
        <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

        Well???? How did it go??? <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

        Let's just sum it up by saying that Chase acted his age! He and my friend's 7 yo mare stepped off the trailer 100 ft from the end zone and were both pretty high-headed for about the first 10 minutes, but still holding it together, mostly just interested.
        The opposing team then made their first of many touchdowns and Chase turned into 1200 lbs. of pure baby. He spent the next two hours trying to make himself small, hiding behind me and nervously picking at my jacket sleeve and looking at the trailer, like, "Cmon, cmon, let's go home!!" He was so scared that he peed on himself at least once - poor baby. Even food, the universal calming agent, didn't help.
        The stadium was packed and all the loud noises EVERYWHERE - air horns, marching bands, balloons popping, etc. - were just too much for him to handle. My friend's mare, however, calmed down enough for her to ride in with the flag. That is no doubt the difference between 7 and 4! I was glad for my friend, because she said it was a lifelong dream of hers!
        I didn't even consider saddling up Chase. My friend suggested he might calm down if I did and I said, "NO WAY!!"

        We went to a hunter show this weekend and had a baby day there, too. I had to bribe him with cookies to get him up in his stall before we left, which probably didn't bode well for the day, like waking up a toddler early.
        In the morning, he was super for the over fences classes. We didn't pin because there were 30+ horses in each class and Chase still jumps like a baby - way too big for the 2' fences and gets the occasional awkward spot. Still, he was willing and threw in a flying change, which I was thrilled about because we haven't started him on those yet.
        On the flat, he did very well and handled the heavy arena traffic very quietly AFTER we had a little training session. He had apparently thought he was done for the day when we put him up in a stall in between jumping and flat and he threw in a big buck for the hunter hack class canter transition. He had W/T/C one way of the arena in a lovely manner, so lovely that we made the cut, then he thew in the buck on the next go-round - another 4 yo moment!! Fortunately, taking him in another arena and working him for 20 minutes after that class did the trick - that's the good thing about a lazy horse, doesn't take as much to get the edge off and refocus them.
        Overall, it was really good experience for him - 20 horses or so in each split of the flat classes in a small indoor arena. It was a cool, foggy day, so there was at least one meltdown in every class we were in (including one poor rider who got dumped and her naughty horse took a bucking victory lap - that's been me before, no fun), so good practice for Chase in holding it together in spite of that. Not that there weren't quite a few moments when he considered reacting - I spent a lot of time muttering "No..." in a threatening tone under my breath!! I also spent a lot of time trying to manage our arena space to avoid a blowup.
        Based on the flat results, we ended up reserve div. champ, which was very unexpected and exciting. So unexpected, in fact, that I was loading up the horses when the show secretary came running up with a ribbon.
        Rachel Kosmal McCart
        Equine Legal Solutions, Inc.
        www.equinelegalsolutions.com

        Comment


        • Wow!!! Congrats on the show! You must be really proud of him. I hope he got extra cookies for the bonus flying lead change!

          I give you a ton of credit for being brave enough to take him to the homecoming game. Even though you didn't get to ride him, you should be really proud of him. I know lots of mature horses who would have had a complete meltdown in that kind of environment. He sounds like he's coming along really well. You'll have to post some pix!

          My 4 year old had his first baby moment this weekend. We have a large pig that roams the farm and he made an unexpected appearance yesterday. Had the audacity to OINK at my boy as I led him to the ring. It went all downhill from there, at one point I tried to ride on the side of the arena nearest the pig and Baxter backed up about 80 feet. (I've never been in a position to try to stop a backwards moving horse. How does one do that???) Had a very good rider get on him and when he refused to go forward she pushed him and he reared. I almost had a heart attack. Seeing that upset me more than seeing the pig upset him! He's been so unflappable I was really surprised by his reaction. And he has seen the pig before. I guess some horses just don't like pork.
          If I wanted to hear the pitter-patter of little feet, I'd put shoes on my cats.

          Comment

          • Original Poster

            411, there is SOMETHING about pigs and horses. My trainer swears that horses are hard-wired to fear pigs, a leftover from prehistoric days when pigs were horses' predators.
            I believe it after the day I had to get on the "old reliable" 18 yo Paint school horse who wouldn't go near one end of the arena because he'd seen THE PIG (harmless potbelly who periodically escapes from a neighbor and comes prospecting for handouts) earlier in the day. Last time THE PIG made an appearance, one of the other horses got so wigged out that he worked himself up into a colic, ripped up his leg and needed stitches (resulting in a giant emergency vet bill for his owner ). The worst part? The horse was in his stall when saw THE PIG across the barnyard.
            It's odd - both of our horses (and about half the horses at the barn) are fine with pigs. Chase likes the potbelly, will nibble on his back and try to make friends, and neither of our horses is afraid of the wild pigs that frequent the trails around our barn. Maybe they didn't inherit the pig fear gene - ha ha!
            Rachel Kosmal McCart
            Equine Legal Solutions, Inc.
            www.equinelegalsolutions.com

            Comment

            • Original Poster

              [QUOTE] You'll have to post some pix!

              {/QUOTE]

              Well, okay, twist my arm!
              Here's a couple of pics of the goofus at the Gold N Grand (big open show that was our "big show of the year"):
              Chase's Photo Album
              Rachel Kosmal McCart
              Equine Legal Solutions, Inc.
              www.equinelegalsolutions.com

              Comment


              • He's beautiful! I love his color and his markings. He's really flashy. Too cute going over that jump. He's got a great expression and you can tell he really wants to do his best.

                The whole pig thing mystifies me. I think, if I can get close enough to the pig and his owner will let me, I may cut off some of his hair and let Baxter smell them. Maybe if he gets used to the smell that might help. My trainer said she'll work on desensitizing him whenever she sees the pig, but the trouble is the pig is elusive and mysterious and will appear out of nowhere and then will just vanish! He's pretty clever that way and he knows the horses hate him and he basically thrives on it. Evil pig.
                If I wanted to hear the pitter-patter of little feet, I'd put shoes on my cats.

                Comment

                • Original Poster

                  411, could you bribe the pig to come closer? I hear that pigs are particularly partial to chocolate bars... Our local pig likes horse cookies and carrots, I know that much.

                  Thank you for the nice comments on the goofus - he does try hard to be a good boy (well, most of the time, anyway).
                  Rachel Kosmal McCart
                  Equine Legal Solutions, Inc.
                  www.equinelegalsolutions.com

                  Comment


                  • We now know why the pig has been so brazen in coming to the barn...Someone left a plastic container with horse treats out near the grooming area, and piggy has been helping himself to them. Hopefully we will see less of him now that the treats are gone!

                    Had a great day w/ my 4 y/o on Sat. Jumped him for the first time and it was AWESOME! We just trotted a little crossrail a few times, but he was perfect. He's only jumped three times before with my trainer, but he acted like he'd done it a hundred times, and boy, does he have a nice, comfortable jump! I'm so proud of him.
                    If I wanted to hear the pitter-patter of little feet, I'd put shoes on my cats.

                    Comment

                    • Original Poster

                      How funny re: the pig - no wonder!!!

                      We did something REALLY fun this weekend. Our local backcountry horsemen's club sponsored a Halloween "spooky objects" clinic at the public arena in the park next to where we board. I took Chase (the 4 yo) and my friend who was visiting from Sacramento took Juice, my husband's 14 yo. We had a BLAST! There were all sort of obstacles and I was a very distracted photographer, so didn't get all the obstacles photographed, but here were some of the highlights:
                      Spooky Objects Clinic
                      In addition to the classic tarp walkovers, they had a "carwash style" PVC pipe frame with plastic strips hanging from it that you had to walk through, lots and lots of things that made noise, bobbing for apples, and the scary, carnivorous trick-or-treat blow-up arch! (I got some good photos of that)
                      Juice was not afraid of ANYTHING - that's the benefit of being 14, I suppose. Chase wasn't too sure about the Halloween arch, went through the first couple of times like it might bite him on the butt on the way out. They had a really cute twist on bobbing for apples - see pics. Chase got frustrated, couldn't manage to trap any of the apples after some deep dives, so he took the easy route and upturned the whole bucket, grabbed an apple off the ground! I had to enlist a helper to hold him while I refilled the tub and dragged it back into the arena.
                      Rachel Kosmal McCart
                      Equine Legal Solutions, Inc.
                      www.equinelegalsolutions.com

                      Comment


                      • About a month ago, I took Brain to the DVPC HT at Foxcroft, at Beginner Novice. Unfortunately, he "grew" an abscess between dressage and cross country, and we had to withdraw.

                        The good news is that we went back last week to school, and he was great on all the BN fences, and some of the higher stuff.

                        I went with Gillian, and we put him to some of the bigger fences (including Training). She called it "pushing the envelope", I called it "deliberately overfacing him", but the object was to determine how he reacts when "pushed"- to see if he is "an upper level prospect" or not.

                        While it took him a couple of tries to figure it out, he did it all (including jumping oover a couple of logs into deepish water, a ramp drop, and a BIG chair).

                        The verdict was that, based on what she saw on that Saturday, he IS an "upper level prospect.

                        Then, this Sunday, I did some of the "Lucinda Green" exercises with him.

                        He got the concave approach to the arrowhead right away (though he WAY overjumped it the first couple of times).

                        It took him a couple of tries to figure out how he was supposed to do the convex approach. But once he figureed it out, he was consistently good about it.

                        The same witn the skinnies- the first few times, he was concentrating so much with his front end, that he forgot he had to get his back end over as well. But then he figured it out.

                        Then we combined the arrowhead (both ways) with 2 skinnies set on "not a true distance". Not a problem!

                        And we finished up with jumping on an angle. A straight line that started off over one arm of the arrowhead, then the skinny at about a 45 deg angle, then a (normal width)X at a 45 deg angle the other way. We made it a slightly curving line (there really isn't room to jump a 4' wide skinny at a full 45 degree angle), and he left long for the X the first time. But going the other way, and the second time in the original direction were sensible and workmanlike!
                        Janet

                        chief feeder and mucker for Music, Spy, Belle and Tiara. Someone else is now feeding and mucking for Chief and Brain (both foxhunting now).

                        Comment


                        • I have had a wonderful week with my 4 yr old! We did our first solid 3'3" course the other day - and got all of our leads! Then on Sunday we went on our first Hunter Pace. She was an angel. She jumped everything (mind you - the first few jumps were jumped like they were at least 6' and staring at them as she went over - but she did them!) Nothing bothered her. She only looked a little at the big scary cows!

                          I'm so proud of her!
                          Hoofbeats - my favorite music.

                          Comment


                          • Well, I don't own him, I only lease him, and I have onle been leasing him for the past 3 days First, some info. He is a 4 y/o Canadian Warmblood gelding, 16.2 hh, dark bay, 3 socks and a star. He is owned by my coach and training 2 days a week with her daughter. But, I am going to start on this thread!! My very first ride on him was a jump lesson (only poles and cross-rails and one 2' vertical) but he was SUCH a good pony! We were doing canter poles, and the horse before us kicked the last pole in about 1.5-2 feet, and I was trying to bring him back and make it a little collection exercise, but what does he do? He LEAPS over both poles that was definitely a surprise for me! But, he just carried on like a good boy!! He really makes me realize how many bad habits I got while riding my cranky mare for 2 1/2 years!! More updates will come as I ride him more!!

                            Andi

                            Comment


                            • my 4 yearold pony went to his 1st show today!!!he was well behaved.he got 5/7 in a good grooming class but didn't place in the w/t(there where 24)he only speed up a few times didn't take off or do anything stupid. i am very happy with him

                              Comment


                              • Latest update! My 4 year old is BRILLIANT! All of our issues seemed to have disappeared and she is just the most wonderful horse I have ever owned! She is now solid w-t-c in a first level dressage frame and is very very happy! Easy to ride and just a joy! She also got body clipped for the first time and was an angel...looking forward to the winter and getting her out to some shows in teh spring!
                                PROUD MEMBER OF THE \"OMGiH I LOFF MY MARE\" CLIQUE

                                Comment


                                • Mr. Brain (4 yo TB) demonstrated another good quality this weekend - generosity.

                                  We were working on an exercise with trotting into a short (9') low (&lt;2') bounce, one stride to a vertical (somewhere between 2'6" and 3'),one stride to another low bounce (a bit longer).

                                  One time through, he jumped into the first bounce WAY too deep, and hifted to the right to give himself some room. As we landed from the bounce, we were aimed WELL to the right of the standards for the vertical.

                                  As we landed, I tunred him back to the left, but he could perfectly well have said "oops, sorry, too late" and I would not have been too upset with him. But instead, he changed direction in one stride, jumped the vertical on an angle, and continued through the rest of the exercise.

                                  So I think he is going to be a "forgiving" horse, and not one that takes advantage of every weakness.
                                  Janet

                                  chief feeder and mucker for Music, Spy, Belle and Tiara. Someone else is now feeding and mucking for Chief and Brain (both foxhunting now).

                                  Comment


                                  • Magic

                                    Here's a link to my 4 yr old. The hunter turned event horse. He has completed 1 intro level horse trial and 2 novice horse trials, one of which was @ the recognized level. If he's not sold by spring he will come out as a 5 yr old doing a few more novice and then bumping up to training until sold. I just did update my webshots, so I'm not sure if his 2 pictures from yesterday are there yet.

                                    He's a 15.2 hand TB/Welsh that was supposed to be a large pony. His sire was 12.2 1/2 hands and his mother stands a solid 15.2. Don't know what happened, but we hit large @ age 2 Can't wait to hear what every thinks ...

                                    Comment


                                    • Castlegate- so glad to hear your horse is doing well!!

                                      I have had a lot of improvement with my baby, as well. I've been working on those weak stifles and have switched farriers. He now is doing MUCH better!! Glad to see we all seem to be on the upswing!

                                      Comment

                                      • Original Poster

                                        Well, my guy has been a silly goofball lately. In general, I think he's as bored about riding indoors as I am, but thanks to the fact it gets dark so early now, we're stuck in there during the week.
                                        Thank goodness it was finally dry enough outside for a turnout this weekend - Chase really needed one, almost dumped me TWICE last week! Once I thought he was getting tired during our over fences lesson and just after I had that thought, he tried to take off bucking, so we raised the fences - no more excuses! The little stinker!
                                        After he settled down, I asked my instructor to ride him through a line because I wanted to see what he jumps like these days, and boy, was he a super-brat with her - "You're not the boss of me", "I don't want to round up, what's wrong with flattening out and running at the fences?!" etc. He just about jumped her out of the saddle the first time through!
                                        Wouldn't you know that was the lesson my hubby decided to watch?! He saw that bucking fit and said, "Gee, he's not easy to ride, is he?"
                                        Rachel Kosmal McCart
                                        Equine Legal Solutions, Inc.
                                        www.equinelegalsolutions.com

                                        Comment


                                        • Well, my 4 y/o is now off...he did something to his stifle (we are HOPING it's soft tissue damage so that he will be better by next weekend and that it isn't torn ligaments or anything (8 weeks off). He is on stall rest, and not very happy about it for sure..he is practically climbing the walls! Poor boy! Will have an update on him on Wednesday.

                                          Andi

                                          Comment

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