Friday, May 21, 2021

May Rides

A few days late, but this is my May update for Camaro.  

Late April was good, and bad, in terms of rides. There were two days when work was being done in the indoor arena, and the only place to ride was the outdoor--briefly, for a few hours while the horses normally turned out in it were kept in so a few of us could ride in the early morning.  First day of outdoor only went wonderful, except that I was under a tight time constraint and after longeing Camaro for about 15 minutes since it was the first time in the outdoor this year, I only had less than 10 minutes to ride.  That ride was great: he was relaxed and stretchy, just as I had hoped.

The following day was rather a disaster.  Rain was in the forecast, but it was just slightly misty when we set out to longe in the outdoor.  And then came a lawnmower--or rather, a guy racing a zero-turn as fast as it could go up the side of the barn, towards the outdoor, apparently also trying to beat the rain.  Camaro, understandably, in response to the noisy death machine zooming toward the fence did a full fledged Arabian episode of snorting and bucking and cantering like an idiot on the end of the longe line.  I had just gotten him back into a more intelligent state when the clouds opened and the rain arrived.  Rather than get my saddle and bridle soaked in order to ride, we aborted the riding plans for that day and dashed back to the barn.  It was rather frustrating.

Two days later, however, back in the now improved indoor (overhead lighting!! no more spooky shadowy corners!!) we had one of our best rides so far, with Camaro on the bit, attentive, forward, and yet relaxed.  He got extra treats that day.  

May has been up and down.  Although even the down days are better than most our good days last fall.  There's improvement.  The connection is nearly constant rather than hit and miss.  He's less distractable and more focused.  We've been working lately on developing different trots; there's warm up trot (oh yeah, we trot a lot more in warm up than we used to because he's not nearly as spooky as he used to be six months ago), there's our 'regular' trot, there's the stretchy trot (for a horse that liked to go with his nose up like a camel, having a stretchy trot on demand is awesome), and now there's what I call 'short trot' (slightly collected) and 'big trot' (more power than regular trot, this should become our extension months from now).  We have multiple walks, too.

Some days we have a few honest to goodness leg-crossing steps of leg yield. Other days he wants to plow a diagonal path with his shoulder instead of cross his legs.  Some days our turn on the forehand is smooth.  Other days it's like prying his feet off the ground one by one.  But overall, we are better than we were when Spring began.  Halts are really getting square and almost entirely off my seat, hardly any rein involved now.

I think we're just about ready to begin focusing on canter.


His favorite first stop in turnout is the water tank.



Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Sewing Update, May

 Since my April sewing update, I have sewn way less than I knit. And I didn't knit a whole lot.

I got the borders, a solid red fabric, put on my Christmas quilt.  I do have both backing and batting for that, but put my sewing machine away upstairs in the room that's supposed to be for crafting (I had to put it up there so I could use the dining room table for other things) and have not worked on that quilt one bit in the last three weeks.  It would be so nice to have room upstairs for a nice table to sew on.  The desk where the sewing machine lives when it's actually upstairs is nice for small work, like masks, or single quilt blocks, but just not good for anything long and/or large.

Did I think to take a picture of the quilt with it's borders sewn on?  Nope. *sigh*  I'm in a phase currently where life seems to be going at full throttle and I'm getting dragged along behind, just trying to stay on my feet.  Kinda miss winter, it's a little less packed with stuff.

I do have pictures of a few quilt blocks I made for a forum quilt that I am participating in (and head up annually).  They all feature the same blue fabric, as that is this year's forum quilt fabric.  It doesn't look it from the pictures (some were more cropped), but with trimming, all the blocks are the same size: 12.5".

disappearing 9 patch

ocean waves variation

four-square


Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Knitting Update, May

 As is typical this time of year, my knitting time has been cut way back.  I managed to finish the Christmas stocking (#1 of 3), with the exception of the embellishments (icord hanger, stitching a bow on each wreath, finding a star button to sew onto the top of the tree) that I will do all at once when I have the other two stockings knit.  No picture to show, because I forgot and it's all ready tucked away upstairs.

Rather than start stocking #2 right away, I've been concentrating on my pair of Early Spring shorty socks.  Sock #1 is done, and Sock #2 is about 75% finished--I only need to do about 24 more rows on the foot and then knit the toe.  Hoping to have that off the needles by this weekend.

I learned a new technique on these socks: the German short row heel.  I may actually like this more than a gusset heel (which is my go-to heel treatment).  I definitely love it a million times more than the wrap and turn heel.  

IRL, heel doesn't look as funky as in this photo.

Last month, I finally finished Dressage Riding by Watjen!  Before I'd gotten to the last few chapters, I knew that I wanted to make a goal to always be reading a dressage-related book this year.   So as soon as I finished reading Watjen, I picked up Four Legs Move My Soul by Isabell Werth and Evi Simeoni.  That will be my slow reading horsey book for the next couple of months.

As far as fiction reading goes, I read Lisa Wingate's newest (I think, it was published a year ago. . . ) novel The Book of Lost Friends.  It read very quickly, for the most part being engaging and hard to put down. 

My current fiction read, just started over the weekend, is The Late Bloomers Club by Louise Miller.  I read her debut novel a couple of years ago, and really enjoyed it, so I'm hoping this second book is just as good.

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Riding Camaro, April Edition

 April has been a good month for riding.  I've been able to work Camaro 4-5 days a week this month.  At the beginning of the month was Spring Break for the school DD1 teaches at, which meant I wasn't needed to care for Faline in the afternoons.  Translation:  I had absolutely no timetable I had to work within for five whole days, and I spent my mornings leisurely grooming and riding Camaro.  It was a fantastic week, we had great rides, and I cantered him (something I had only touched on once last spring, shortly before he had his laminitis episode) two separate days, as well as rode him outside for the first times this year.  

Backing up a bit, I should probably explain that last fall, the county drain commission came through the farm that I board Camaro at and tore up the two biggest pastures while replacing a large section of the drain that runs through the property.  Losing her two best winter pastures meant the farm owner had to some shuffling of horses for turnout, and that the mare group ended up claiming the outdoor arena as their new turnout.  Where they still are, since the destroyed pastures have to be stayed off of until the grass (seeded in December, and then again in late March) that the drain commission planted there once the project was completed, regrows.  So outdoor riding hasn't really been an option, but as the ground has firmed up after the thaw, we can lightly ride on the 'lawn' around the front of the barn and between one side of the barn and the pastures near it.

So, anyway, after doing most of our daily ride in the indoor arena, Camaro and I moseyed around on the lawn for the 5-10 minutes of cooling out each day during that first part of the month.  Since then, however, there has either been crappy weather--wet and/or cold and/or windy--and the big door on the end of the indoor arena has been latched shut again, so we haven't been back outside to ride.

When I cantered Camaro early this month, I noticed that he got really tense when he felt me go from posting trot to sitting trot in preparation for giving him the canter aid.  And on the right side, he just wanted to fling himself on the forehand and run (ie trot faster and faster) into the canter.  On the left, he was tense, but not so inclined to totally lose his frame and just speed up.  Either way, I was left with some questions about his past.  

I all ready knew that he'd been started and shown as a youngster in Arabian Hunter Pleasure, and had a history of being ridden strongly in draw reins. I knew that the lady I had bought him from hadn't been a good match for him, her being an anxious kind of rider (and, I suspected, one that balanced on her reins and yanked them upward when frightened). I knew that when I first began riding him, having contact with his mouth made him throw his head and drop his back, and that he was rather timid under saddle.  We'd worked slowly through the contact and timidity issues.  He's gotten much bolder and less apt to shy and spook since I began working him again once his feet issues went away.  So, I suspected this falling apart when asked to canter was residual tenseness (flashbacks, if you will) to how he'd been ridden prior to me.

I asked my friend, who'd worked with him and his previous owner, about his history with the canter, and she pretty much confirmed my suspicions.  He'd always gotten tense about the canter transition, and rather discombobulated at the canter.  

This info led me to decide to drop, for now, the canter under saddle.  Instead, I have only cantered him on the longe line. And when asking for canter departs on the longe, I first make sure he's balanced in the trot before asking for the transition.  If he tries to run into the canter, we go back down into trot until he's balanced again.  The departs are getting a lot better.  A balanced depart has led to less scrambling once he's in the canter.  And less scrambling has enabled us to work on having balance in the canter with canter bounds that are both rhythmic and upward.  I'm very happy with that, and hoping that soon we'll try cantering under saddle again.

Meanwhile, in the saddle, there's been a focus on teaching him to remain relaxed if I'm sitting the trot instead of posting it.  We've spent lots of trotting time with me going from rising trot to sitting trot and back again.  I've also focused on transitions within the trot, asking for working trot, slightly collected trot, and slightly extended trot.  All while maintaining the connection with the bit, and staying balanced no matter if I'm rising or sitting.  No tensing, no rushing, no throwing his head up and dropping his back.  In a way, it feels like we've regressed, going back to all this work on connection and relaxation that we had no problems with at the beginning of the month. Yet, I know from past experience that this is actually going forward. Because every time you raise the bar, and move up in skill and difficulty in riding, a step or two backwards seems to immediately follow the first step in gaining prowess.  To get better, first we fall apart a little.  Sitting trot is our bar raise for now.

I'm looking forward to working on canter under saddle, and willing to spend this 'falling apart' time of rebuilding in order to have calm and instant canter transitions this summer.



Another cool thing this month, is that on Friday mornings, I get to ride in a pseudo dressage ring!  The barn owner has some students who are thinking of showing in Western Dressage classes this summer, and so once a week she sets up cones and letters in the indoor so they can practice test riding during their lesson.  For me, I'm in dressage queen heaven once a week, riding in the sandbox with the alphabet!  Camaro thinks that M stands for MONSTERS!!, and so every Friday we have to work through him being totally suspicious of that corner of the arena, but he's coming around and it's just so much fun for me to have my letters as guides again.  I hadn't realized how much I missed being in a dressage barn with a dressage arena until the first morning I led him into the arena for our session and I just got totally giddy when I spotted the cones and letters all set up.

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Sewing Update, April

Time for a check in to talk about what I've been sewing in the past month. On the UFO challenge I'm participating in, March's number was 11.  On my project list, 11 was written as "Christmas quilt for couch".  A totally unstarted, unplanned, but several year wanted item.  I had a mish-mash group of Christmas-y fabrics in my stash, but nothing specifically coordinated and didn't even have a pattern in mind.

About the middle of the month, I happened upon a pattern I liked, that I thought I could easily adapt to the size I wanted a Christmas quilt for the couch to be, and that should work with my particular fabrics on hand.

Enter the four-square quilt!  I've never actually followed someone else's pattern before when making a quilt, let alone purchase a pattern, but this time I did!  For the most part, anyway.  It was quick and easy with the majority of the math all ready figured out for me, and I sewed most of the quilt top in just a week.  It just needs the borders cut and sewn on to be a completed flimsy.

I made mine 4 blocks by 4 blocks--couch sized once I add the borders.  Which maybe I'll get done yet this week, because the main hold-up on this project was that I took time out of doing my own sewing to teach DD2 how to make a quilt.

She has a good friend (and former college roommate) who is getting married this weekend, and she wanted to make a throw quilt for the bride and groom (who started dating back when she was a roommate of the bride).  DD2 has zero sewing experience.  But she was determined that she could learn, given an easy enough pattern.  

So we choose a giant log cabin block.  Literally, a quilt that is made of a single huge log cabin block.  She had some fat quarters that she'd been collecting for a while (the quilting bug might have been slow in coming,but she'd caught the fabric buying bug a few years ago, LOL).  Using some of those fat quarters for the shorter strips she'd need, plus going stash diving in my fabric hoard, she picked out each color of the quilt.  She did her own math on how long of each fabric she needed strips cut (and sometimes sewn together to be long enough), and I gave her a basic tutorial on pinning, using the sewing machine, and ironing.

I won't say that it was a totally lovely and joyful experience; there was weeping (on her part) and gnashing of teeth (on both our parts), but in the end, she has a nice, personal, handmade gift to give that hopefully will see many years of  love and use.

Pinning the outer strips on the floor when the quilt outgrew the table.

Finished front.

Finished back (you can't even tell where it was pieced to be wide enough).

She chose red for the center block to represent both love and the warmth of the hearth.  Greens are for plants and trees, blues are for the sky.  

Although she swears up and down, after getting this quilt finished, that she will never ever make another quilt in her life, I have the feeling there will be more in the future.  Afterall, she came home from craft-store shopping with a friend the other day and showed me a couple of fat quarters she couldn't resist buying.



Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Knitting Update, April

 This year is flying by.  I know we're only a little over three months in, but wow, it seems to be barreling along at high speed.  Hard to believe it's the first Wednesday of a new month all ready; time for a knitting update.

And. . . I haven't done a whole lot of knitting in the last month.  I'd thought I'd get to at least work on my Vertex socks for a little bit each afternoon while babysitting Faline.  In actuality, I took my knitting bag--with yarn, needles, and pattern for the socks--to her house daily, but never did any knitting there.  The only time I worked on them was quite recently, and it was all done at this little place here.  Faline is awake for about 2 hours at a time now during the day, with a preference for a nap of 30-45 minutes in between waking hours.  So we play alot, she sleeps a little, and I didn't touch my knitting any during the 3-4 hours a day I babysat.

I did, however, manage to finish the socks right before Easter.  Phew.  Felt good to get the second sock off my needles and put them both onto my feet.  Honestly, I loved knitting this pattern.  Like all the ones I've tried from this designer, it's simple and easy to follow, yet the finished product looks complicated.

Love the colors of the yarn on this one.

Not liking the yarn colors so much on this one.

Close up of design on leg.

I knit very, very little on Honorary Son's Christmas stocking.  I hit a roadblock with a big blank spot in the chart where the pattern designer didn't include instructions on how to make that part of the stocking look exactly like the one she'd made. I felt that part was integral to the overall harmony of the colors in the stocking and I wanted to duplicate it. It took me a while (and the inclination to dig out my old books of counted cross stitch patterns in order to find a pattern to make a similar 'picture' on this stocking) to draft a chart for the next part and actually work on it.  But, I'm rolling along again now and should soon be done with the leg portion of the stocking,  If I keep working on it in the evenings, I might actually finish his stocking this month!  Then I can start on the matching one for DD1.  My goal is to have three: one each for Honorary Son, DD1 and Faline, finished before Thanksgiving.



Of course, I also couldn't resist the siren's call of sock knitting, plus I've been wanting to make myself more shorty (ankle) socks now that the weather is warming.  So yesterday I cast on for a pair using the pattern Early Spring Shorty Socks although I won't being doing them Magic Loop, and I'm making them a solid green (green is my favorite color) rather than with contrasting cuffs, heels and toes.  No picture yet, as I'm just 4 rows into sock #1.

Reading:

I read two books, yay me!  For a person who used to devour books 60 pages per hour, sometimes I find it depressing at how long it now takes me to finish a book.  I still do read fast, just not quite that fast, and not nearly as often as I'd like.  Life just gets in the way, ya know?  Not to mention that I spend some of my free time knitting (and sewing), not just reading.

Another One Bites the Crust by Ellie Alexander, number seven in her Bakeshop Mystery series.  An enjoyable and easy reading mystery, as always.  So as to not blow through all the books in this series in a few months, I'm limiting myself to 3-4 of them per year.

What Happens in Paradise by Elin Hilderbrand, the sequel to her Winter In Paradise, which I read last year.  It picks up right where the previous novel left off, moves quickly, and ends with yet another plot twist.  Which means I'll be looking for #3 in this series sometime late this year.

I'm still reading Dressage Riding a bit at a time when I have the mental power to digest the information in the book.  

For fun, my current fiction read is A Buzz in the Meadow: the Natural History of a French Farm by Dave Goulson.  I'm just a scant chapter in, and it seems like a book I will find both interesting and relaxing, like nature-watching with a friend.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Talkin' 'bout Camaro

 Camaro, the blog name I chose for my current horse, has not been talked about much on here, considering I've owned him for nearly a year and a half now.  Last year, I intended that I'd post about him pretty regularly, documenting our progress as a team and his career change from an English Pleasure horse (which he was 'too sensitive' for, one of the points that drew me to consider buying him) to a dressage horse.  

Ironically, the sensitivity that sealed the deal for me when purchasing him, was part of my main focus in our early months.  Not making him less sensitive to my leg and seat, no, I love that part of his sensitivity; but to getting him to accept contact with my hands/reins through the bit without freaking out about being touched in the mouth and immediately throwing his head up and dropping his back, very effectively inverting himself.  

Last Spring, just when I was achieving a nice steady contact with his mouth and he was learning to use his back instead of dropping it, we hit a major roadblock.  Laminitis.

I can't tell you the amount of metaphorical weeping and gnashing of teeth (all mine) that ensued over the next 6 months.  In the big picture of things, it was a relatively minor bout of laminitis as far as laminitis goes.  I mean, after weeks of stall rest, a low-sugar pelleted feed and grass hay (absolutely not one trace of alfalfa) diet change, and a set of fancy shoes with gel pads, he worked his way back up to being sound and on 8 hours of turnout (with a grazing muzzle) in only three months!

He did hate the muzzle.  But he learned how to eat through it, by late summer he'd become very adept at sucking up lunchtime hay like spaghetti.



So I got to gingerly get back in the saddle in late August.  Where we started at square one on the contact issue. *Sigh* For exactly five rides spaced out over 3 weeks when he started very obviously displaying signs of an abcess in his right front.  *Double sigh*

Another emergency vet call.  The abcess was located, cut out, and drained.  I got to practice my foot poulticing skills for about 10 days while it all drained out and healed over.  Yay.  Fun.  More weeks of not riding a lame horse.  

poulticed

This was followed up by a thrown shoe just as we were once again sound and resuming light riding.  And, same shoe, thrown again three weeks later. From there proceeded some farrier issues, the very tough decision to part ways with the farrier I'd used since 2007, and to trust my horse's foot care to the farrier that the barn owner used.

Can I say I haven't once, in the nearly six months since then, regretted that decision?  Camaro has been joyously sound.  I've been back in the saddle somewhat regularly--barring two weeks of heavy equipment ripping through the farm doing drain repair for the county, the holidays, bouts of frigid weather, and adjusting to becoming Faline's afternoon babysitter--and we are again making progress.

Am I afraid of a repeat laminitis episode this spring and the grass comes back to life and there's actually something to graze on outside during his hours of turnout?  You betcha!  But, he's lost about all the weight we wanted him to lose (his bloodwork last spring put him at borderline metabolic syndrome), we've kept the changed diet, and he again will be wearing a grazing muzzle all through his daily turnout as soon as the grass starts growing.

Happy horse, happy owner