What Color is Linus?

May 15, 2013

Several people have asked me what color Linus is.  And honestly, I am not completely sure.  When I got him he had a winter coat, which tends to be a little different than a summer coat, and often lighter in color.  He clearly has some roaning, but it was not clear to what degree.  up close it appears to be red roaning, but from afar it sort of looks like blue roaning.  he also had some blue in the to pof his mane, which might have been throwing me off.  To complicate things, he often has grass, mud or poo marks on him, making it harder to determine what color his marks are, and also, what is an actual natural mark and what is a stain.  Complicated.

I also confess that I am not a very observant person.  Particularly when it comes to color.  I suppose I do not store my memories in full color.  For example, unless someone has strikingly white-blonde hair, or fire engine red locks, I probably will not be able to recall what their hair color is.

Now that Linus has mostly shedded out, his patches are a bit darker.  But since he still has grass, dirt and poo marks on him, so I decided ti was best to give him a bath and then take a good look at him close up.

Mind you this was Linus’s first bath.  He did very well.  he was a little unsure of the hose, but he actually liked the water hitting him, and quickly stuck his head into the spray.  After a few minutes, chewing and licking his lips and deciding that the hose was not going to kill him, he stood happily, ground tied, while I worked away scrubbing and cleaning him up.

I determined that YES, as was pretty much apparent before the bath, Linus is a paint.  he is primarily white, which patches of red roan.  His roan does vary in darkness, and is heavily muted with white.  His patches are not clear and well defined and sort of blend away into his white.  They are also awkwardly shaped.  He also has a blaze and some blue in the top of his mane.

This led me to Google horse colors to determine if there is an actual name for a red roan paint.  No success.

So if anyone happens to know of a fancy name for a red roan paint, I am all ears.

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pre-bath: grass stains on his front leg and shoulder and one near his stifle.

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pre-bath: this side was pretty clean.

 

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wet and freshly scrubbed. you can see how his roan patches are odd and the darkness is varying.

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Freshly washed, and still damp. His roan patch sort of fades into his white on this side.

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The roan patch under his neck is easy to see. Its wet and freshly washed here and the skin shows through nicely.

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still wet, his roan patches are uneven here. The small black marks on his flank are little nicks.

Fear of Men

May 14, 2013

On Saturday I asked Rich to assist me with Linus. Since I ride in a large open field, I wanted someone present for our first ride after his mouth was worked on. He should be able to truly focus and we should be able to get some real mounted training accomplished. But we quickly realized that Linus is afraid of men.

To date the only men that have tried to handle Linus have been the ferrier and the vet. Linus melted down for both, but we assumed it had something to do with the ferrier smelling of burning hoof and the vet smelling like a vet. Turns out this may only be a portion of the problem.

Generally Linus trots up to me when I enter the field, and all but shoves his nose into his halter. He wuffles my hair, and lays his head on my shoulder, thriving on attention. But when Rich entered the gate into the field, Linus began snorting and keeping a good distance while dancing around, never letting his eye leave Rich. It took a few minutes for me to get a halter on Linus and bring him up, but whenever Rich approached Linus became utterly terrified.

Rich being the champ he is, spent nearly an hour socializing with Linus. He walked him all over the barnyard and held his feed bucket for him at feed time. By the end Linus was walking on a lead nicely, although a little behind Rich.

Needless to say, we did not attempt riding.

Rich enjoyed working with Linus, and has offered to continue it until Linus is comfortable with him. He said it was rewarding to see Linus improve and he likes Linus’s personality, just not his name.

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Trail Obstacle Training

May 13, 2013

Yesterday I took Simon and went to the Saddle Doctor in Timberville, Virginia and took part in a trail fun day.  It was a really fun day!

There were a five of us and Jenny, our instructor who demonstrated on her horse and her husband, Paul, who helped on the ground.  In general there was a lot of backing up, side passing, and general “bomb proofing” involved in most of the obstacles.  There was also a degree of coordination, planning and problem solving to complete them.  The biggest factor was having communication and trust between horse and rider.  Both parties had to think and work together to complete the tasks.

We went through a ton of obstacles.  We started out trotting through ground poles.  One set was pretty basic and the other set was set up with raised ends.  Jenny explained that sometimes they are different distances apart, and might be set up unevenly or zig-zaggy and you loose points if your horse hits a pole with his hooves.

There was another obstacle that involved two barrels set up about 3 or so yards apart.  There was a 2×4 stretched across the barrels, with an end on each barrel.  One end of the board had a rope handle on it.  The rider picks up the board by the handle and walks a circle around the two barrels, holding the rope, and turning the board, so that the other end stays on top of the barrel and it pivots around the circle with the rider returning the end being carried back on the top of the empty barrel, in its original position.

Simon and I kicked butt at this one.

Another obstacle involved side passing over a rail on the ground and reaching into a mail box, removing the mail, showing it, putting it back in the mail box and side passing back over the rail.

In another obstacle poles were laid out in a giant W.  The goal is to side pass through the W with two legs on either side.  There was a fun obstacle in the woods that involved picking a flag out of a bucket on a barrel, side passing to another barrel with a bucket on it and deposit the flag.  The catch was that the side pass was done going up hill.  This was trickier than you would expect.

The side passing continued on the ground.  I dismounted and asked simon to side pass in both directions.  He did surprisingly well on the ground, and also well when I was mounted.  We have some work to do, but I was pretty pleased him.

Simon backs well, but I found he tends to angle to his right.  Something we need to work on.  There was also a lot of backing, including through poles in the shape of an L.  In another obstacle we backed up a small hill, between two cones, around another cone and then back down hill.  It went pretty well for our first try.

Some of the ones that were particularly easy for Simon involved bending through cones, picking up a raincoat and putting it on, putting a spooky decorated hula hoop around his neck while mounted and stepping over logs and pausing with legs on both sides.

We rode over a tarp in the woods, through shower curtains in trees, pushed through and under pool noodles, and rode past wirly gigs.  Simon took it all in stride.  We also rode over the bridge and teeter totter, rocking it back and forth, like we did at the Blue Ridge Games intro to games day we did a month ago.

We also attempted ground tying, which went better than expected (although we were in the ring for that part, so there was no grass to distract him) and we mounted (always make sure a judge sees you check your girth) and dismounted from the offside.  This was much harder than it should be.  Jenny and Paul told us about a lot of different possible obstacles, and challenges we could face at a competition. the possibilities are endless!

One of my favorite obstacles was pretty simple.  There were two jump standards set up, with a rope tied to each end making a “gate”.  You had to, using only the one hand and not switching the rope over to the other, open the gate, ride through, and then close it behind you.  It involved a little backing and side passing.  It was not particularly hard, but it did involve a little more planning and coordination than you would expect.

Simon had two nemesis.  The first was a big tractor tire on the ground.  He walked right through it with no qualms, but that was not the real obstacle.  The goal is to put either the two front legs or the two back legs into the tire, and then side step around it in a circle, keeping the two legs in and the other two legs outs.  Its sort of a combination of a side pass and a turn on the forehand or haunches.  We could get about a quarter of the way around.

Paul and Jenny were very kind and send me home with a tractor tire so I can work on that one at home.

The other big trial for Simon was the big blue fish.  It was a simple blow up pool toy from the Dollar Store with bailing twine tied to it.  The goal is to drag it behind you, and ride off and around a barrel and back.  You might also be asked to back up, pulling it with you, or drag it into your horse and pick it up.

Simon was very interested in the fish.  He bit and wuffled it quiet a bit, and eagerly followed after it when Paul drug it.  So much so that Simon followed it without prompting from me.  He would let me drag it a little ways, but would start to side pass to keep his eye on it, and eventually scoot away from it until I let go.  I am going to pick myself up a fish or some type of scary blow up critter and work on this one at home.

It was really interesting how much Simon enjoyed himself.  He was not working all that hard physically, but being a fidgety pony, he was happy to use his brain.  He licked his lips and chewed a lot, particularly at the fish.

The whole day was really fun.  The Saddle Doctor is a really happy place to be, and Jenny and Paul are great.  The other rides made me feel right at home as well, and it was just an amazing day that left me smiling ear to ear.  Paul found an arrow head in the ring while we were riding, and Jenny fitted Simon to harness so I could see what size he needs and how it should fit him (driving Simon is another future activity).  It was just a great day with great people.  And an introduction to a really neat horse sport I am excited to take part in.

I excited to incorporate some of this into my basic training with Simon.  I can see how it will improve our communication and help in our everyday riding.  Yea!  And I am also excited to try one of the competitions.  the only one left this year that does not correspond with a Mid-Atlantic Games Series competition, is one in June.  The two in the Crystal Crown Series in the fall take place during the last two MAs.  boo.  One thing I did notice is that the Judged Pleasure Rides are mostly on Sundays!  This is fantastic for me since I work on Saturdays.  wooo whoooo!

Thank you everyone at the Saddle Doctor for a fantastic day!
back through the L

back through the L

 

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Good Ponies

May 9, 2013

My ponies are so good. Today is the first day this week it hasn’t been dumping buckets from the sky. Which means I got to spend some much needed pony time after work. Simon and I got in a nice hack. Lots of circles and just general hacking. Then we did some side passing over the length of a  jump pole and backing through an L shaped formation of jump poles laying on the ground.

The entire time I was brushing, tacking, untacking and sponging Simon, Linus was woofling my hair and laying his head on my shoulder. He is such a sweet thing.

Linus hasn’t been worked since last Thursday, and was eager to be groomed and tacked up. He loves the attention. I started him off on the lunge line and we picked right up where we left off a week ago. He happily walked, trotted and halted by voice command. He even showed more confidence than last week. Next I spent some time doing basic ground conditioning, leading him around, climbing on the mounting block at his side and jumping up and down while petting his ears and pulling on his mane. I did this on both sides, patting him all over, flapping the irons, rocking the saddle and lots of jumping around and whooping. Followed by good boys and reassuring pats. I also did some softening on his mouth with the reins, getting him to drop his head. Just general ground work.

I wanted to get on him, but no one was around, and since I ride in an open field, I would like someone to be around when I get on him. Hopefully that will work out Saturday afternoon.

Afterwards he sponged off like a champ and followed me around until I put dinner out. What good ponies.

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The Week of Linus

May 7, 2013

Linus ended up getting about 3 weeks off while I got the vet out to sort his teeth, while he was healing up from the extraction and while I was getting Simon ready for MA1.  But last week was re-start Linus week. 

I started each day by tying him up and giving him a good grooming, hoof picking, etc.  He is already good at being tied and groomed, but I wanted to reinforce this and start off on a good note with each session.  Next I tacked him up, which he is also comfortable with.  Even if I am not going to mount up, I feel that tacking up makes it clear that this is work time.  I took him to a different area of the field each day and lunged him. 

His lunging is rather rough.  I suspect at one time it is possible he was just chased into gates in a roiund pen.  I do not think the person I got him from was working him in this manner, but she only had him briefly and reworking this practice takes some time and consistancy.  I want to develop a proper controlled and comfortable lunge foundation for Linus in addition to developing voice commands and hand signals.  So basics up.  We are in no rush. 

I took him back to lunging from the ground up.  I led him on a long line, and let some distance grow between us.  I rotated my body towards him, slowly moving into a facing him position, continuing to let the gap between us grow.  While doing this I continued to walk in a circle, moving myself more and more into a lunge position and holding my back arm up, almost in a whip like position, towards his flank.  He quickly began a moving in a small lunge circle around me, and after a few nervous attempts to “bust off” he relaxed and began to walk properly around me.

The first day we primarily worked on walk and halt commands, and developing a calm demeaner where he could feel relaxed enough to learn.  The second day we continued walk and halt and added in trot, with a lot of transitions up and down.  Linus was much more relaxed and trusting and quickly started where we had left off the day before.  The third and forth days we continued to work on his paces through trot, and he continued to improve. 

He is such a pleasant pony.  He is eager to please and happy to learn. But he does have some fear, and he gets nervous so it is important to me to develop a strong level of trust between the two of us.  He is particularly fearful of whips, so I have been working without a whip at this point.  I will add a whip slowly, because I feel it is important for horses to have respect for whips, but not fear them.  Plus I’ll hopefully be starting him on games in the future, which involves whip like flags!  But for now I want to work on his basics and trust. 

This week it is rainy, and I have not worked him in a few days.  But it will clear up eventially and we will get his studies back underway!

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