Hello London – Day 1 – 2015

August 13, 2015 

We are in London and currently sitting in our hostel’s “chill out” room.  The hostel is pretty cool. We have 4 bunk bens stuffed into a little room with a sink. The bathroom is down the hall and shared with the floor. 

When we landed late this morning we met up with Jaycee and then took some train/tubes to our hostel.   It was a successful adventure.  And it was drizzling.  We checked in, took s nap and showers and then went for a walk and dinner.  After we chill for a while we will hit the hay so we can get an early start tomorrow.  Colton worked out a your rout for us tomorrow to economize the amount of things we can see before we go to the Escape Room!!!

Right now we can hear a band playing upstairs in the pub.  They are covering a U2 song right now.  The crowd is apparently singing along! Too cool. 

We will have tons more to blog about tomorrow.  

The team is working on a video blog right now.  I am not sure if it will be posted daily or as a longer video at the end.  Do any readers have a preference?  

The chill out room    

 

Eating out!

    
  The burger joint 

  

 

**update on Daisy aka- the smelly dog.  I though she was smelling good until we were in the car for a few minutes.  Yikes.  I called a Petsmart in my route and got an appointment.  It took 1 1/2 hours but she came out smelling so much better.  Total shout out to the Winchester, Va Petsmart by the mall.  

I raced to my parents house, dropped her off and raced off to meet the McBains and head to the airport!   Sadly my hands still stink a little :0( **
 

Packing was put on hold…

August 12, 2015 

We are flying out of Baltimore today on our England-Wales trip. Yea! After work yesterday I ran around town taking care of last minute things. You know, like a vet appointment to update the dogs shots.  (Why did I think the day before I leave town was a good day to set that appointment?) Picking up socks. (How is it that I do not have enough pairs of socks to make it through a week?  And that does not include any that match.)

I got home and got the packing under way.  Feeling good about my progress I decided I had time to get a short ride in on both ponies.  I had not been able to get in a ride the past few days and the ponies we’re excited for attention.  I tacked up Poe first and headed out for a leisurely hack around the farm. About ten minutes in Daisy came racing across a hay field to catch up.  As she got closer I noticed she was running funny,  ducking her head to the ground, dragging her face… Uh oh. 

When she got closer I could smell her. Skunked. 

I cut my ride off and headed back to the house and quickly put Poe up.  I got out my dog-de-skunk kit. It consists of a bucket loaded with a bottle of dawn dish soap, a bottle of peroxide and a large box of baking soda.  *Just add water and a stinky dog*  So I did. 

Sadly it appears Daisy was sprayed in and on her mouth. She has skunk breath. The face is so hard to wash.  She is tolerant and well mannered so I got my scrub on and finished up with just enough time to feed ponies before dark.  

She dried out and the one spot is still a little rough.  So this morning she is getting another scrubbing.  And my hands too. They also smell like skunk.  

Ok, ready, steady, go!!!!

A snap chat story recap…  

  

  

  
   
 

MGAA U17 Team Training Camp – 2015

August 11, 2015

This past weekend we had a training camp to prepare for the trip to Wales. We all met up at the Royer’s home for two days of training and team bonding.

I left Friday at lunch time, picking Coltin and Bella up on the way.  They certainly made the drive a lot of fun.  We arrived in the evening in time to met up with the rest of the team and join in an amazing taco dinner put on by Cherie.

Now before I get into all the riding and team time, let me gush a bit about the Royer’s and company.  Cherie and Howard are amazing hosts.  They let us have full run of their awesome older (I call it antique) family home and made us feel like we were part of the family.  They were gracious enough to let me bring Daisy, who also felt right at home and absolutely loved every moment of the weekend.  We got to play with Alicia’s puppy Cricket, and who doesn’t love a little puppy time?

We woke each both morning to a massive home cooked breakfast, and let me just say, yum.  We rode their ponies and used their games equipment and just had an amazing time feeling part of the family.  Thank you so much for hosting us.  It was perfect!

OK so, the riding.  The kids were lucky enough to be lent a good pool of challenging and differing ponies.  Tyler lent his massive pony Halo, Alicia her little rock pony Sky, Krista lent her sweet Mud Pie and her challenging Cuddi and Heather lent us her wild Breeze.  All pony owners were at the arena during the three riding sessions to help set equipment and give any riding advice needed for their varying mounts.  MGAA people are such amazing people.

The first riding session we focused mainly on riding the different ponies.  Each rider spent a few races on each pony, giving me a chance to see how they fit the different types.  I learned a lot about each of them in this session and was also impressed that each rider, hopped from pony to pony and race to race with no complaints.

The second session we settled more onto specific ponies with limited switching, and worked on some skills.  We focused on using the voice to supplement the legs, hands, seat and body.  “Whoa”, “Stand”, etc were encouraged and improved on throughout the session.  I was impressed with everyone’s end turns and vaulting skills.  Each rider’s specific fit on the team became more apparent as well.  Who should fit as an anchor, or a starter?  Who is the steady rider that can be counted on? Who needs a little encouragement, or a little leveling, and who might need which reminder and when?

We also talked about a few simple skills, like handing off a plastic flag, S turns and hard S turns, checks and hard checks, setting up barrel turns with different types of ponies, and if each rider is a picker or a scooper in litter.  We talked about stacking flags in flag fliers and the difference in mug size.  We worked on end turn vaults and drilled drilled drilled!

Sunday morning we had our final session of riding.  We redid a few races and took a few runs through some we had not gotten to the day before.  We threw in a few more pony swaps and I think we ended on a good note.  Everyone looked fantastic.

I have a pretty good feel for which rider will fit what type of pony best, and which rider needs what out of me as trainer.  I can’t wait to work with them on the ponies that are lent to us.  They all took coaching very well, and I think this is going to be a big growing and learning experience for all of them.  Having watched them over the years as they have grown up and advanced in their skill, I am excited to see how much they advance over this trip.  A couple of them are really at that special point where they are about to really make a big step up in skill and ability, and I am excited to be a part of that.  Nothing helps a rider really make a big leap in their game like going international on a borrowed pony.

The non riding time was also a great chance to get to know this team better, for me and for them.  Three of them are non stop talkers and have so much enthusiasm and energy bubbling out of them that I cannot imagine if there were more of them in the group.  One is very quiet and reserved, which is a relief with the other three. She is the one you know you can count on in all situations.  I sort of see her as the quiet flower with the three busy bees flying haphazardly around her.  Coltin, being a little bit older, the only boy, and having some international experience under his belt, I think will make a nice team leader.  He is a strong rider and very level headed for his age.

We spent some time swimming in the pool during the day, and it was nice to see the team interacting in a fun non-horse setting.  I also really enjoyed the water.  We went for ice cream, had pizza, and an excellent cook out Saturday evening.  All of these opportunities were excellent for the team to interact and for me and Alicia to see how they work together.  Saturday night, after the cookout the team piled into the hot tub and we talked about packing, our itinerary, what the trip will be like, and they got to ask lots of excellent questions.

Tomorrow is the big day.  Wish us luck!

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Ireland 2014 Touring Photos

April 24, 2014

Below is a selection of photos from the touring part of the Ireland trip. I’ll work on a written recap next week.

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Ireland Day 6 – 2014

I do not have a guest blogger for day 6. All the riders have decided they have had enough blogging for this trip.

Sunday was the second day of competition with session 3 and a final. The weather was sunny, chilly and windy.

Gen started out the morning riding on her four man Open team for Cork. She rode excellently. The pony she was riding, Freddy, was no match for the speed of the division but Gen rode mistake free and enjoyed riding with her team.

Two teams joined the U17 division for
Sunday and we were split into two heats of 5 and 6. The team rode a decent morning session with few
mistakes, which proved to be their general style for the week.

Ann brought by a fantastic home cooked lunch for everyone. I am a little amazed my pants still fit after all the amazing home cooked meals she prepared for us. And let’s not even talk about desserts.

During lunch break we did some packing, socializing and swapping of MGAA gear for Irish gear.

The final sessions started up and Gen continued to perform, riding mistake free and finishing 6th.

The U17 team went into the B final as the leaders. They were a little wound up and distracted with all their new friends. And the exhaustion from all of weeks activities was showing.

They started bumpy, but got it back together part way through. They took second in their joker race, Mug Shuffle, pulled off several perfect races. They went into the last race one point behind first but had a minor slip up and tired for second. The tie breaker was two flag, which had proved to not be their best race earlier in the competition. They did ride Two Flag much better than previously but it was not enough and they finished a very respectable third.

The week of perfect weather slipped up and it started to rain during the awards. Aw shucks. We rushed through a quick pack up, sending the Lockyer family including teammate Emma, off to catch their ferry. And we all made out way back to the Devitt’s house.

Ann greeted us with another amazing dinner, and we had a our last social evening, with some new Irish friends stopping by to join in.

We packed the van and after a short sleep we headed to the airport at 4am to make our flight home. I am writing this while make our way across the Atlantic and I am beyond ready for a nap.

The entire trip was amazing. We found the Irish to be exceptionally friendly and welcoming. The country is gorgeous, clean and gorgeous. What an awesome opportunity.

We are extremely grateful, and truly hope to return the opportunity to some of our new friends.

I will post some photos into another post in the near future. :0)

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