Showing posts with label endurance horses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label endurance horses. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Holy $hit Bullwinkle


July 26 2025

Hillbillie Willie loves riding new trails. He is also loving staying the Spa at DWA Arabians in Bellevue ID. Helen was kind enough to give Willie and Connie’s 3 horses refuge from the Owyhee heat for a while, and between my work days I’m able to come up for a few days at a time. Willie LOOOOOOOOVES walking around the farm sampling all kinds of GREEN GRASS (of which there is zero at home), green weeds, green alfalfa, green lawn grass, etc. Not to mention it is cooler here and the bugs aren’t so bad.


Today DWA Papillon and Connie, Willie and I went out for a ride on the BLM foothills near Bellevue for a good uphill workout on great footing. We were far away from the busy Ketchum/Sun Valley trails that are inundated with speedy bikers and loose outtacontrol dogs which make riding some of those trails on horseback impossible (and can sometimes make for scary hiking).


Willie led the way for a while, trotting up a soft 2-track road alongside a creek lined by aspen trees. 

Then Pappy took over the lead, cruising along, then - BRAKES! Pappy wheeled a bit, and Willie just braked behind him.


It was a giant moose! Holy $hit Bullwinkle! 


We’d startled him and he certainly startled us! He watched us and we watched him. Big daddy! There are moose in this area, Connie has spent plenty of time hiking and looking for a moose, but she’d never seen any, and when we least expected it, we came across this giant moose! Willie wasn’t worried at all (he has seen moose on the Old Selam ride, though not on the trail and not this close!), and he just curiously watched the beast.


Luckily Monster Moose was more interested in avoiding humans, and we were just fine with that. He went up and around a stand of trees and ended up back on the trail in front of us. We gave him plenty of space and kept walking upward (we wanted to stay on this great trail), and eventually he disappeared, probably back down in the brushy creek. We made plenty of noise as we rode along so any other moose would know we were on the trail!


The horses got a good uphill workout till we ran out of road/trail, and we walked back down. Pappy was all amped up from the moose, while Willie was the one mostly lingering and enjoying the great grass along the trail (he’s usually all business and won’t eat).


Then we headed up a harder steeper hill toward a ridge, trotting much of it to near the top. When we reached the ridge, the road went onward and upward, but that was a great workout and a great wildlife encounter for our boys today!




Monday, October 22, 2018

Old Explorers*



October 22 2018

This is what endurance horses do between endurance rides

Riding the Rim Trail, we have a long, scenic view down into the Hart Creek drainage. Between the crumbly cliffs of the rim and the crick is a maze of hills and washes, what looks like an old travertine hot spring hill, and a hidden jumble of bentonite** sculptures, the leftovers from a long-ago eroded lake-bed sediment. I call the sculptures the Dragon's Backbone.

Carol and I hiked there once, from the top down. You've got to find the right ridge to climb down, or else you'll lose your footing and slide…. a very long hide-ripping, tumbling way down. 

Finding the Dragon from the bottom up is a game of hide and seek, because one cliff face looks like another, as does one hill from another, and who knows which hidden box canyon the Dragon hides behind?

We managed to catch just a glimpse of a bentonite outcrop on our regular Hart Crick trail, so we angled off cross country, bush-whacking our way to the hidden treasures. Hillbillie Willie was all for this new exploring adventure with his pal August, going places where (possibly) no horse has gone before.

Around behind a hill, the white monster appeared, growing out of the ground as we picked our way toward it, and Willie's eyes bulged in disbelief and wonder. What magic is this!?

We found names carved on one of the white mushroom rocks, some dating back to November of 18… was that really November of 1918???? Or someone modern but totally confused about the date? There were settlers living on this crick a hundred years and more ago; we ride regularly by one of the homesteads built into a hillside.

We ended up discovering deer trails leading us in a winding path (with some steep climbs!) back up onto the rim.

Willie still loves being an explorer, and he was so fascinated by the secret Dragon's Backbone that he decided he wants to be a geologist in his next life.


*Old Explorers is, by the way, a fabulous older movie, if you can get your hands on it

**Bentonite? I don't know for sure, I'm not a geologist. But Hillbillie Willie will be able to tell you for sure in his next life.


Sunday, March 25, 2012

Stoner is My CoPilot



Sunday March 25 2012

Last time I hooked up with Stoner was in January in Arizona. We went on a fantasy flight through the desert.

We got back together again for some Colorado Rocky Mountain highs with some dear friends:

Kevin and Far

Rusty and Quake

Garrett and The mighty Fury

The foothills of the Rocky Mountains are not for pansies. They are for the fleet of foot, and the humongous of hearts. 

We trotted, cantered, galloped up mountains as if they were molehills, 15 miles of bliss. We flew together again, Stoner and I, through the Rockies, on the wings of a lithe, lovely endurance horse.

Thanks once again my friend!

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Drinkers of the Wind Arabians: The Quest for the Perfect Horse

Tuesday July 12 2011

if you somehow miss that ardent sparkle in his eye, you definitely won't miss the fervor in his voice, when Robert Bouttier (known to all his friends as "Archie") expounds on his Drinkers of the Wind Arabian horses on his ranch in Bellevue, Idaho. He's always got a story to tell, and it always involves his horses.
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"Breeding Arabians is my passion," Archie says, as he launches into the detailed bloodlines of a particularly impressive month-old colt born to a home-bred mare DWA Croix Blanche and by the legendary racing and breeding stallion Monarch AH.

Call it passionate or obsessed, Archie is aiming for breeding the perfect horse. After decades of hard work, he's approaching perfection with the bloodlines he's ultimately focused on. The horses he breeds for racing and endurance carry some of the most outstanding Polish Arabian blood one can find in the US.

It was in the mid-1970's, when Archie, a commercial pilot, was furloughed from United Airlines, and moved to Idaho to ski and work in a ski shop in Sun Valley. And it was there he met an endurance rider who later introduced Archie to Wendell Robie, the founder of the Tevis Cup. "Listening to his friend talk about the endurance rides made Archie want to try the sport," says Helen, "and another friend who worked at the ski shop got him Tezan, Archie's first endurance horse."

That was in 1975. "I didn't even know how to ride," says Archie, "I bought a Steuben saddle, and I started going to CTRs (Competitive Trail Rides). Tezan was the greatest horse that ever lived. He took care of himself, and he took care of me. I couldn't override him because he wouldn't let me.

"On our first CTR, we got second place and Best Condition. The lady judging said there was no way Tezan could get BC because, she said, 'the guy can't ride!' Tezan ended up getting BC anyway, and after that, I ended up trying endurance riding because there were a lot less rules."

Archie and Tezan finished Top Ten in a couple of endurance rides in the West. "I didn't know what I was doing. That horse Tezan, he just took care of me." Archie's second endurance horse was Mateus, whom he got as a 3-year-old, and kept till he died at 35 in 2009, and whom he considered his best friend. Archie then discovered Ride & Ties, which he was quite successful at for 4-5 years until his running partner retired. Archie also dabbled in polo, which was popular in the Wood River valley for a time. "Then I got married and sort of didn't do anything with horses anymore."

Luckily for the Arabian breed, the horse fever started burning in Archie again in the mid-1980's, and he got interested in Arabian racing. Archie knew the Wrigley family, who owned a big Arabian ranch on Santa Catalina Island off the California coast, so he contacted their trainer Joe Dawkins and asked where he could find some racehorses. Dawkins recommended Sabson as a stallion for breeding.

"I asked him who Sabson was, and he said, 'You'd better do your homework!'"

Sabson's race record was somewhat mediocre, showing 2 wins in 5 starts at 3 and 4. "Back in the old days, they started racing 3-year-olds at 1 1/8 miles, 1 1/4 miles," Archie says. "They didn't have 5 furlong races. Then after Sabson's racing career, they made him a Park Horse. He was Reserve Champion Park Horse in Scottsdale after he raced." And while Sabson had proven his athleticism and versatility, Arabian show breeders didn't really fancy him. "It was the 'show horse thing.' Sabson didn't have a classic show horse head, so nobody was using him."

Lucky for Archie. "Sabson has the bloodlines of the two most important and prolific racing Arabian mares: Sabellina and Forta." These two mares have since become the pivotal aspect of the Drinkers of the Wind breeding program.

Sabson's sire Czort "is the only horse they made a Shrine to at the Polish National Stud," Archie says. Czort raced 19 times over 4 years, winning 13 races, 8 of them stakes races. He won at all distances and carried up to 146 pounds. As a sire in Poland, he sired the most winners of stakes races than any other sire. Some of his offspring (including Sabson) went on to win championships, in racing, performance, and the show ring.

Czort is out of Forta, "among the greatest Polish Arabians of all time." While her race record was unremarkable (2 wins from 11 starts over 2 seasons), her successful production record has been unequaled. Forta produced 20 foals by 11 different stallions, 18 of which started at the track and were race winners, five of those winning Classic races. Additionally, some were champions in the show ring, and most of them were great producers in their own right.

On Sabson's dam side, Sabellina reigns supreme. She was a "perhaps the finest race mare ever to leave Poland," (7 starts in two years, 5 wins including the Derby and the Oaks), and she also became a superior broodmare. Her 16 foals won championships on the track and in the show ring. Twelve of them won stakes races in Poland. Most of them also went on to produce great offspring on the track, in performance, and in the show ring.

"The Polish Arabians - everybody thinks they're bigger," Archie explains, "but the Poles breed for 14 2 1/2 hands. And short cannon bone - that's why they're so fast. The long cannon bone is the weak link - that's where all the leverage is, the tendons and ligaments - that's where all the force is. A short back is stronger than a long back, a short cannon bone is stronger than a long cannon bone."

In 1986 Archie bought the then-16-year-old stallion Sabson from Gilbert Van Camp Jr. At the same time, Archie won his first Arabian race as an owner in 1986. He became one of the founding members of the Arabian Jockey Club in the U.S. He began breeding his mares to Sabson when they were finished racing; then, enamored with - or obsessed by - the Forta and Sabellina lines, he started acquiring broodmares with that breeding, and mating them with Sabson. "For some people, it doesn't make a difference. But to get that close to Sabellina? I mean, like a granddaughter of Sabellina? And you're breeding her to a stallion that's got Sabellina in him? or Forta?" His eyes still sparkle with astonishment at the thought.

The validity of this mating nick at Drinkers of the Wind Arabians (named after the book of the same name written in 1942 by Carl Raswan) has not only produced some successful racehorses but some outstanding endurance horses.

As of 2010, DWA-bred horses have racked up 104 first place wins, 206 Top Ten finishes, and 53 Best Conditions in endurance riding in the U.S.

Nobody would know this better than Christoph Schork of Global Endurance Training Center in Utah, who in September of 2010, was acknowledged as world record holder of the most first place finishes at endurance events.

Schork has ridden seven DWA horses since 2000, to 69 first place finishes. The first of these was DWA Sabku +//, foaled in 1993. DWA Sabku started on the racetrack, but he didn't take to it. Endurance was where he belonged. Making his first endurance start as a 6-year-old, he competed over 12 seasons, finishing 69 of 74 rides, 17 of those first place finishes, 61 of them Top Ten. He completed 10 of 11 100-mile rides, and he might have won the Tevis in 2004, if his rider Ali Khalfan from the UAE hadn't fallen off and broken his arm during the ride, and, still riding with a broken arm, if he hadn't gotten off the trail and lost for several miles. They still finished fifth. DWA Sabku +// raced an incredible 1335 miles in 2002 alone, finishing all 23 of his starts that year. He is just 40 miles short of 4000 career miles.

Also ridden by Schork, DWA Powerball and DWA Millenium were similarly tough and sound. Over 8 seasons, DWA Powerball has completed 71 of 74 starts, 2 of 3 100's, has 35 1st place finishes, 64 Top Tens, 7 Best Conditions, and a total of 3720 miles. Over 8 seasons, DWA Millenium has completed 39 of 43 starts, 4 of 6 100's (including a Tevis), has 14 first places, 32 Top Tens, and a total of 2210 miles. Both are still competing this year.

A good portion of endurance rider Tennessee Mahoney's career 5680 miles have come on DWA horses, including DWA Pearl (5 seasons, 1250 miles, 29 finishes in 34 starts, 9 first places, 6 Best Conditions), and DWA Sabella +/ (5 seasons, 1655 miles, 30 finishes in 34 starts, 10 first places, 6 Best Conditions).

Speed, soundness, toughness, and longevity - they don't come much more solid than that.

Sabson died in 1999 at Drinkers of the Wind ranch at 29 years of age. "He was always a gentleman," Archie says. Archie now uses two stallions on his ranch, DWA Ziffalat (a sound, 4-season racehorse who traces back to Forta on his topside, and Forta and Sabellina on the damside) and Moment of Valor (a sound, 4-season racehorse; a son of Wiking, with Sabellina and double Forta on his damside). He's got frozen semen from several stallions, including Monarch AH ("the Secretariat of Arabian racing", with 19 wins - 13 of them stakes races - in 23 starts, and who traces back to Sabellina and Forta on his topside), and Samsheik (a 5-season racehorse tracing back to Forta and Sabellina through his sire Sambor - a full brother to Sabson).

Despite retiring from piloting airliners in 2003, and notwithstanding the number of Arabians of all ages that Archie owns on his ranch (56 or 57 when we counted, depending on the definition of "own"), Archie isn't much interested in riding. He did 3 Limited Distance rides in 2003 and 2004, but now any spare time is spent taking care of his ranch and horses, growing and cutting and stockpiling his own hay (and cutting hay for farmers in the area) - and following his passion for breeding, looking for that perfect horse.

He has a few in mind that he's bred that he'd consider "pretty close to perfect": DWA Zahir, a 4-year-old gelding by DWA Ziffalat out of a Sabson daughter; DWA Barack, a 3-year-old bay gelding by Moment of Valor out of a Sabson granddaughter; and DWA Malik (by Monarch AH out of a Sabson granddaughter) a 4-year-old recently bought for endurance by Bar Lazy Y Ranch.

If the likes of DWA Sabku +//, and the new babies on the ground are any indication, one would tend to think Archie's getting pretty darn close to the perfect horse.

To contact Archie and find out more about his available horses, see www.dwarabians.com

Saturday, April 9, 2011

CAMWHAB



Saturday Aprl 9 2011

This was the day, come rain, sleet, snow, hail, wind, heat, cold, Carol and I were going a 20 mile ride, no excuses, no whining. Jose and Justy needed a good long ride, with the 50 mile Tough Sucker coming up next weekend. Justy needed some wind taken out of her sails, and Jose just needed to do a long ride, as he hasn't had one since November 1st. Come to think of it, Carol and I needed a long ride too.

We got up and on the trail early (well, 9:30), into the cold, into the brisk wind, and we did our ride.


We headed north up onto the flats, to and across the highway, and toward Wild Horse Butte along the Snake River. The cold wind blustered and made our eight eyes and four noses water, but our horses trotted along handily at an average of 9.5-10.5 mph.

We'd already hit around 10 miles when we got to Wild Horse Butte, so we opted to not go all the way around it, and instead of turning around, we took a different loop back - taking trails we knew, but trying to guess where we'd exactly we'd end up.

We followed the Oregon trail for a while (somebody seems to have made it their mission to break all the BLM Oregon Trail posts along this section), and instead of following the usual trail into the neato winding deep wash, we missed it, and ended up following a new road. I thought at one time I knew exactly where we were... but I'm still not sure if I was right. Things sometimes look completely different when you're moving the opposite way.


One could have said we were lost - but out here you can't get lost. If you go too far one way you'll hit the Snake River; too far another way you'll hit Oregon, waaaaaaaay too far another way you'll hit Wyoming; too far the other way you'll hit the Owyhee mountains and home.

We trotted onward, following a soft two-track road that eventually petered out onto a hill that eventually ran into... a road we knew that led us right back to the highway. Saved!

We missed another shortcut trail back and ended up touring through the tiny berg of Oreana (I'm pretty sure Jose has never seen it), then we followed our usual trails back home.


25 miles, 3 1/2 hours, and we trotted most of it; the horses were fresh, we humans were not cold or wind wimps; and we discovered a new little trail and an overall great loop: the CAMWHAB trail:

Carol
And
Merri
Wild
Horse
Almost
Butte.


Jose pinning his ears at his cousin Justy.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Shape Up! Part II



Sunday March 13 2011

(Part I is here.)

TRAINING: IT’S ALL MENTAL

Lest the months of walking, laying the LSD conditioning foundation, may sound boring, it can be far from it if you take advantage of the time to have fun with your horse while you teach him different things.

While ten trainers may disagree on conditioning methods, they will agree on the importance of training your horse. “In most cases,” says Lynn Smothermon, “both recreational and competitive horses must be disciplined, well educated, confident horses and partners with their owners.”

Besides proper conditioning, another big advantage of the LSD training is that your horse is not rushed into speed, which may affect his mental ability to stay calm on the trail. Your horse should remain calm with several initial weeks of walking; as you progress to walking and trotting, your horse should continue to move forward calmly, and in control. If you do come to a spooky situation, it may be best to slow the horse’s pace, so he can evaluate the situation and calmly deal with it, rather than trying to force a horse past a scary object. If you know you will be encountering some scary situations on the trail, bring along another friend who has a well-seasoned horse that will not react badly to these situations. If that horse is calm, your horse will much more likely react the same way – with a non-reaction, which he will carry through to the next time he encounters it.

It may very well take the same amount of time to mentally condition your horse, young or old, on the trail as it does to physically condition him. “Re-educating an older horse out of bad habits can take months of patience and firm guidance to reestablish the horse as a partner in anyone’s training discipline,” says Smothermon.

Take advantage of the time spent going slow for conditioning to expose your horse to all kinds of situations he may one day encounter on the trail. Go out alone; go in company, and rotate positions: be the leader, be the follower, be in the middle, be on the left side and the right side, and stay relaxed in all situations. Your horse should willingly and easily move off your legs, back up (only when asked!), respond to your seat and weight, stand still when you get on and off until you ask him to move out. Yes, your horse does get bored with the same trails over and over. Take him on different trails, go different directions. Get him used to hikers, pack horses, bikers, motorbikes, dogs, different groups of horses coming or going. Practice perfecting and hastening your transitions between the start, walk, trot, walk, stop. Teach your horse to stay on the trail, and to willingly leave the trail when you ask him. Take him through as many trail obstacles you may encounter: rocks, sand; creeks.

Encourage your horse to drink at water spots. Let him graze occasionally along the trail. Teach him to walk back home calmly on a loose rein. When you get back home, or to your trailer, teach your horse to tie to a trailer, or a tree, in case you will be in a ridecamp or camping out on the trail all night. Teach your horse to accept everything he would encounter at a vet check in competition – touching his mouth, his legs, his rear end muscles, taking his heart rate, listening to his gut sounds.

If you have friends whose horses are further along in their conditioning, resist the temptation to just follow along faster than your horse is ready for, just to have company. Ride to your own horse’s training level.

When you think of all the things you can do during these months of walking and slow trotting, and you see how obedient and supple your horse is becoming, you will realize there is no limit to what you can teach him. You may find you really enjoy these training strolls with your horse and you don’t want to progress to trail competition.


THE FINAL PRODUCT

Don’t be in a rush to get your horse fit or competitive on the trail. Remember, slow is fast. The time you may have think you saved rushing your horse’s body systems into shape can come back at you through injury and a much shorter career. Throughout all of your successful efforts of conditioning and training your horse, be it for Competitive Trail Riding, Endurance, or just Trail Blazing solo or with friends for the day, you will develop a strong horse and a unique partnership and understanding with him that will last for many years.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Shape Up! Part I



Saturday March 12 2011

Since it's that time of year for many riders – time to get back in the saddle and get your blubbery horses back into shape, I'll have a few articles and links on conditioning horses. The following is a general training article of mine that was originally printed in Trail Blazer magazine in 2007.


Shape Up!

You’re one of those riders who doesn't enjoy the confinement of an arena. Your horse doesn’t take well to it either. You love the outdoors and can really think of nothing better to do than spend all day in the open spaces with your horse. Maybe you’d like to have the option of adding competition to your riding repertoire. But how do you get there from here?

Whether your goal is to participate in competitive trail rides, endurance rides, or just pleasurable trail rides, start with the fundamentals of building a solid foundation of physical conditioning and mental training underneath your horse. Getting your horse fit and confident to handle any challenge, physical and psychological, is essential to a thriving partnership and success on the trail.


PART I
CONDITIONING: LET’S GET PHYSICAL

Conditioning is subjecting the horse to the stress of exercise, in gradually increasing workloads over time, allowing the horse’s body systems time to adapt to each increase. This process is known as progressive loading. Not only will it maximize the horse’s performance, but will also help keep the horse sound. Increasing workloads means slow and steady increase in either the duration of exercise, or the speed of exercise, but not both at the same time, approximately every week.

You have an advantage if you are working with an older horse who has previously had an athletic career. His body has already been accustomed to the conditioning program, so you won’t be starting from scratch, as you would with a youngster or an older horse that has never had any kind of physical training.
What type of horse do you need for success? “Any breed of horse and any discipline of riding can compete at the North American Trail Ride Conference Novice level as long as the physical and mental preparations are made to compete at 20 to 25 miles,” says Lynn Smothermon, a recreational/competitive trail trainer in Orange, California. The same applies to limited distance endurance rides and pleasure trail rides - any breed can be successful. While Arabian horses have proven best in general for long distance endurance rides, there are of course exceptions; every horse is an individual, and some may naturally do better than others despite their breeding.

Patience is a key to conditioning; it is tempting to start too soon and do too much too fast. It can take 2 to 3 years to fully condition a horse’s body systems. The cardiovascular system is the first to whip into shape. In approximately 6 months, your horse may stop huffing and puffing so hard after a workout, and he may appear to be in shape. But it’s the other systems that need the most nurturing and that take the longest to come round. According to Dr Nancy Loving, DVM, it can take ligaments and tendons 6 to 12 months to fully develop, and it can take up to 1 to 2 years for the conditioning of bone.


FAST IS SLOW

Ask ten different trainers, and they will give you ten very different plans for properly and carefully conditioning your trail horse. While methods always vary, the basic underlying theme and key to getting your horse fit in all these disciplines, that all trainers will likely agree to, is Long Slow Distance training, or low intensity aerobic work

Lynn Smothermon says, “In my opinion the young horse is all about slow and steady. This means spending at least 6 months to a year building hours in the saddle, with a calm confident walk as the foundation and forefront to all the other work involved – uphills, downhills, gullies, creek crossings. It’s just miles and miles of patient body building work based on the horse’s abilities.”

For the older horse, start out with taking him 4-6 miles every other day for about an hour. This will be mostly walking, with very little trotting. After 3-4 weeks, it’s time to add stress by increasing his workload. This means adding a little speed, or a little distance – but never both at one time. Either add more trotting over the same distance, or increase your training time by 15 minutes. A good rule of thumb for older horses is to increase workload on a 5 to 7 day cycle.

Over the weeks and months, you will gradually increase your horse’s workout time up to a few hours, with more time spent trotting and occasionally cantering. This is a good time to begin monitoring your horse’s heart-rate and recovery; it is one of the best ways to determine the progress of his fitness. In well-conditioned horses, the heart rate should be around 60 beats per minute 10 minutes after a reasonably demanding workout.

As you work on conditioning your horse, monitor his progress by observing the change in his physical appearance – you should be able to see muscle development and definition in the first month. Monitor his weight by measuring his girth. Watch and feel his legs for any signs of heat or swelling. Observe his attitude: is he enthusiastic and alert during and after his training, or is he dull and tired? Keep a log of your training schedule and progress, and his heart rate and recoveries. Take pictures every week so you can see his physical change over time.

When your horse’s heart rate recovers to 48 beats per minute within ten minutes of completing his exercise, (which can take from several months to a year of training), and your goal is simply pleasure trail riding, you can maintain your horse’s fitness at this level by continuing the same distance or speed of workouts a few times a week.

If your goal is competitive trail riding or endurance, now it’s time to add strength training. Add some inclines to your training, or trot your horse through sand. Be very cautious in sand, however, as it’s hard on tendons and ligaments. It’s best to avoid trotting through sand with young horses, and be extremely wary in deep sand with any horse.

Now is also a good time to take your horse into the arena once a week as part of his workout regimen. Suppling exercises of circles and figure 8’s, leg yielding and sidepassing will increase your horse’s flexibility and range of motion, and therefore help prevent injuries.

If your ultimate goal is long distance endurance riding, you should add some anaerobic training to your conditioning program. Endurance rider Dr Nancy Loving gives good insight on aerobic and anaerobic conditioning in her books Go the Distance and All Systems Go.

If you are aiming for Trail Riding Competition, your first goal will be the Novice level of 25 miles. Same goes for endurance competition: your first goal should be the shorter limited distance rides of 25 miles. Depending on how your horse comes out of the ride – tiredness, weight loss, heart rate recovery – you may want to do several more limited distance rides – no more than one a month, before you progress to a slow 50-mile endurance ride. When your horse has done several 50-mile rides and handles it well – perhaps in his second season of endurance – he may be ready for his first multi-day ride, or a longer endurance ride.

The same goes for ride competitions as it does for training: slow is better. If you want to have a fast top ten horse, spend 2 years of riding slow (especially if you are riding a young horse, a 5 or 6-year-old in his first years of competition). Your horse will stay sounder longer and go many more miles over the years.

Next: Part II – Training: It's All Mental

Thursday, March 10, 2011

The Party's Over



Thursday March 10 2011

It's been a lazy winter. Flab is overtly abundant. One particular Horse-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named (starts with a "D" and has the letters u-d-l-e-y in the name) has love handles and he didn't particularly appreciate me squeezing them.


It's time to get down to business. Regina reminded us the Tough Sucker endurance ride is only 5 weeks away. It's practically spring in Owyhee.

No more time off - the workouts and re-conditioning has begun. Hills are crying out to be climbed. Sand washes are clamoring to be worked up.


No more indulging at gorging hay 24 hours a day (well for Horse-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named for sure, anyway).


We have a lot of horses to get in shape. Ourselves too!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

The Great American Horse Race



Tuesday February 1 2011

What were you doing on May 31, 1976?

Some people were converging at the starting line in Frankfurt, New York, on a race across America, 99 days and 3200 miles to California.

On horseback.

It was the brainchild of Randall Scheiding, a then-33-year-old self described "gambler" and "free spirit."

After finishing high school in Illinois, Scheiding went to college, hitchhiked around the US, joined the US Air Force, and worked as a broadcast teacher at a community college.

Then he took the trip of a lifetime: an 800-mile cross-country horseback trip from Illinois to Kansas. It was the start of a dream - creating a cross-country horse race from coast to coast.

He put an ad in Western Horseman and got 650 replies, and there was no turning back from there. He spent over a year organizing it and raising money to put it together, always working toward making his dream come true.

Charles Waggoner joined Scheiding as co-founder of the race, working on recruiting riders from around the world and overseeing legal matters and sponsorships. Chuck considered the race a great challenge, "pioneering an exciting new concept in horse racing," and "a way to pay homage to the animal which has played such a vital role in the building of this nation.

"The race will provide Americans with an opportunity to experience their land from a different point of view - from the back of a horse."

It was a most outlandish and huge undertaking - and this in the days before the BLM and Forest Service required a now near-impossible stack of permit paperwork before traversing public lands - to organize and map the route and find campsites and secure equipment, organize the veterinarians and checkpoints and rules, and deal with entrants.

The ride would start in Frankfort, New York, cross Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, Nevada, and finish in Sacramento, California, following pieces of the Lewis and Clark Trail, the Pony Express Trail, the Oregon Trail, the California Trail, the Cherry Valley Trail, the Mormon Trail, the Donner Trail and the Diamondfield Jack Trail.

Festivals and parades would greet riders along the way, and a total of $50,000 in prize money - with $25,000 to the winner - would be waiting at the finish in California.

With a $500 entry fee, they came from the 32 states in the US; from Canada, Germany, Austria (a Count), France, Switzerland, Iceland and Australia, from 17 to 70 years old - 107 of them at the starting line. (*Numbers vary according to different sources: it was either 107, 91, or 101 starters.) Some came to have the greatest adventure of their lives. Some came just to ride. Some came to win. Some had practically been born on horses; one brought "no special skills - just love of horses" to the race. Some had years of experience in endurance riding - including Tevis buckles and Virginia City 100 buckles; some had never tried it but thought they had horses that could do it.

Horse breeds included: Spanish Mustang, Arabian, Morgan, Saddlebred, Standardbred, Pony of America, Pinto, Icelandic pony, half Orlov trotter, Mule, Appaloosa, Palomino, Thoroughbred, an Albino, Quarter Horse, Connemara pony, Paso Fino,

Vet controls were strict: 4 checks every day. Only one or two horses were allowed per entrant, and the extra had to be ponied at all times, or else time penalties were added to the day's ride time. They would ride 6 days a week; average miles per day was 35 (the average included rest days figured in), though 40 to 70 miles on some days were not uncommon.

***

With the next - and likely last - XP ride across half the country coming up this year along part of the Pony Express Trail, I'll be looking at more stories on this original Great American Horse Race and participants as time goes on.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Wings



Saturday January 29 2011

Through the desert, we fly.

A sliver of fear, breathlessness on an unfamiliar horse

We are going fast.


Twisting trails at a transcendent trot

Hard hills at a careening canter.


Ducking beneath the saguaro

Twisting away from the palo verde

Desert claws reach out and tear, trading blood for skin.

Nimble horse feet dance past jumping cholla.



We fly...

the mass of muscle effortless beneath me, perfectly balanced.

Fear fades to exhilaration, breathing synchs in rhythm with horse and desert.


Winding washes at a hurtling gallop, the sand no more than a magic carpet

Munger Hill looms above - charged up at a run!

The earth churns and spatters beneath hooves. We are long gone before it settles.


We are flying

Flying

(Thank you, Redford! : )