Well, I’m back. Tired, sunburnt, and a little sore today. But essentially in good shape
It was a really long week. My friend, Shirley, from Oklahoma arrived on Sunday night for a visit. The farrier came on Wednesday morning and right after he was finished, we jumped in the truck and drove up to Lac Tremblant in Quebec’s Laurentian Mountains - north of Montreal. About a 6.5 hour drive. My family has a summer cottage at the north end of the lake. There’s no road access, or hydro, so it’s very remote and quiet. We got there Wednesday evening, and then had to leave again early on Friday morning.
We got back at about 3 in the afternoon, tossed all of King’s gear in the truck, and loaded him up to go to the ride. I had to vet horses on Friday night, and again on Saturday. As I led King out of his stall though… my heart sank. He’s pulled that same shoe again. Always the right front. He was shod Wednesday, and sometime between then and Friday afternoon, he got it off. Since April, I don’t think he’s managed to go a full six weeks without pulling that right front.
When I got there though, a farrier was working on some other horses on site. So he put a used shoe on King for $10. I gave him $20, because King was so awful. Jumping around like a fool. I apologized afterwards for his behaviour, and the farrier said “Oh well, it’s to be expected. He’s a thoroughbred.” I was a little startled and said “um no, he’s an arab”. He looked sort of doubtfully at him and said “part thoroughbred?”. “Nope, full arab”. I can’t believe how often I have this kind of conversation.
My friend Sue and I were scheming to get Virginia back on a horse in competition on Sunday. Virginia has competed fairly often, but due to a series of bad experiences has lost some confidence. Sue is the owner of Dante, who some of you may remember as the horse I rode in the Ride n Tie a few weeks ago. He’s like riding a big old sofa. He’s quite overweight, and his nickname is “The Cement Truck”. So we figured that Virginia would gain a lot of confidence riding him. He can be quite bouncy, but he is a good-natured sort of guy, and always comes back to you when you ask - no matter how excited he is.
Virginia has been resisting because Dante is not exactly a drop-dead gorgeous horse. He’s actually built very well, but he’s part Appy, part Arab, and got the Appy head, the Arab short back and high tail, Appy legs and huge feet, and shorter Appy neck. His colour is sort of a washed out bay with occasional white freckles, and a lot of white around the eye. Make all that overweight, and he’s not a real head-turner.
Anyway, I promised her that she could ride with me, and that I’d take good care of her. I was planning to go as slow as possible, and told her that if we didn’t make the time, I wouldn’t care. So she finally gave in and agreed.
So Saturday after vetting was done, Sue and I went over to pick up Dante and bring him back. Unloading him at the ride camp, he managed to stomp on my left foot but good. Left a big purple mark on the top of my foot. I did a bit of hopping around and cursing, but a bit of ice and elevating the foot brought the swelling down. We took the two of them out for a short hack, and they got along very well. The deerflies were really bad though, and King was wired for sound. He felt like a ping pong ball bouncing around. Dante was great though, and I could see Virginia relaxing and beginning to enjoy herself. King actually bounced right off Dante a couple of times and Dante didn’t even seem to notice. He’s got to weigh about 1400lbs right now. Mind you, King is not exactly dainty these days either. He’s 1100 lbs on the weight tape.
I vetted King through on Saturday night, and his pulse was 40. 40!!!! Holy cow is that low for a young horse. At the Dufferin ride his pre-ride pulse was 56. I figured that he must have been half asleep or something.
Sunday morning, King was wired for sound again. He knew exactly what was going on and he was really excited. No patience at all. Jen drove up to help me, and I was REALLY glad to see her. She brought food, and hot chocolate, and gatorade. And she helped out all through the day. It’s wonderful having a pit crew. Especially good having Jen, who King knows and trusts.
At the start, we had to go down the road about 300ft, and then turn and go about 500 ft along the edge of the camp. King spooked at all the road signs. He didn’t care about the cars, but the signs were obviously horse killers. Then we turned right to go down along the camp (all of this in full sight of everyone in camp), and King started to buck. Buck, buck, buck, ALL the way down past the camp. He wanted to go, and he was NOT willing to be held to a walk. I stuck through it all, which was something of a relief after promising Virginia that all would be well…
He settled down after that though, and we managed to get into a nice steady trot. Dante was excellent through it all. We did two 7.5 mile loops. So it was the same distance as Dufferin. But we had an hour less total time to do it in. 4.5 hours instead of 5.5 hours. That includes a half hour break at the midpoint. So 4 hours riding time. He and Dante were both in great shape at the end of the first loop. King pulsed through at… 40!!! I couldn’t believe it. I actually asked the PR tech to repeat it. 40 pulses are excellent even in a very experienced horse. At Dufferin last month, King was 56 at the start, and 52 at the mid check.
Dante’s gut sounds were kind of quiet on the upper quadrant, and they told her to get more electrolytes into him. So we gave him an extra dose. King had been getting electrolytes since the night before, and he was eating like a pig on trail (grabbing tree leaves on the fly), so his gut sounds were excellent.
We got saddled up and started out on the second loop. King went out okay for the first few minutes, but once we got around the camp again, he just put on the brakes. “Nope” he said “I’ve done this already, and I’m not doing it again”. So we sort of stopped and started across the Girl Guide camp. One of the other riders came along in the other direction and laughed when she saw us. “I see the two chunky chickens are running out of steam”. Dante was not looking too eager either. Both King and Dante sort of stood out of the crowd of lean little distance horses just for sheer size. Both overweight, and both big tall horses.
Virginia was a bit concerned at first, she asked me if I thought King was okay. With a 40 pulse at that vet check though, I knew he was just being King. Once he finally committed himself, he went along fine.
Seeing some mares pass him on trail helped a lot. He’s absolutely enamoured of every mare he sees. And it finally did trigger some bad trail manners on his part. He tried to go along with a mare who passed, and kicked out at Dante on the way. Definitely a case of something better coming along. She was, of course, a CHESTNUT mare. King’s favorite. So, he’s going to need a red ribbon in his tail from now on.
Dante tried to roll in some sand we were going through. She didn’t notice, I guess she was looking at something else. Dante got his head down, and was already starting to buckle his knees. I said “he’s going down!”, Virginia asked “what?”. I got a little frantic and said it again. I guess she misunderstood and thought something was wrong with him. I should have actually said “he’s going to roll”. So she jumped off. It stopped him anyway. She’d never had a horse try to do that, so it never occurred to her what might be happening.
At the water stop, we got out the electrolytes, and gave Dante his dose from the syringe. I had about three doses left in a little plastic juice bottle. Dante got one, and I went to give King his. Well, the boy has decided that he really LIKES electrolytes. So he tried to grab the syringe from me. Trying to bite it with his teeth. After I finally got it in without destroying the syringe (he bit one syringe before the start in the morning and cracked the plastic), he went for the bottle. So I let him lick it. He got hold of the mouth and tipped it up and drank the whole thing. Horses typically HATE electrolytes, and you have to struggle to get it down their throats. Trust King to be bizarre though.
He and Dante drank well at every single water stop. At least a gallon each time for Dante, and King probably drank at least 2 gallons each time. No problems with drinking and eating for these two.
By the last mile though, King was definitely tired. We did this ride considerably faster than Dufferin, and he has not been ridden enough in the last few weeks. Mostly just around home. He heard a horse whinny as we were coming in, and made this funny noise which sounded like he was going to answer, but was just too tired to bother. Dante has a lot more miles on him, and is older. So he was doing better at the end. We finished with 2 minutes to spare.
Final pulse for King… 48. Final pulse for Dante… 46. So King was 40-40-48. Dante was 52-52-46. Both had great gut sounds at the end, and went through with all A on the scorecard. King was not too energetic in his trot out though. He was definitely tired.
King and Dante both got completion ribbons. I got the horsemanship award, Dante and Virginia got the best condition award. Sue was beaming at that.
Shirley got an appreciation certificate for working as a timer all weekend. It was her first time at a horsey event, and she did an excellent job. Especially considering that I sort of abandoned her for the entire day.
Virginia was pleased as punch with herself (and was trying to figure out how to talk Sue into selling Dante). She wants to ride him at the next ride - Thames River Valley. She’s offered to trailer King down to that one. It’s a three hour drive, and I can’t afford the gas on top of entry fees etc right now. So I might be doing the twelve mile ride there on August 15.
The vets commented to me that King was going to be “another Cob”. A great compliment. Traverston Cob is an older endurance horse. I think he’s around 17 or so now. He’s an ArabXCob cross. Tough as nails, big-boned, competitive, and highly attitudinal. He’s very sound, and has finished most of the rides he’s ever entered. He’s been to the Pan Ams, and Canadian Championships, and was shortlisted for the World Championships. He has around 2600 miles in OCTRA miles, and 3800 miles in AERC. Picture of him here:
http://www.octra.on.ca/images/random/3.jpg