Kicking off the Games Season

In just a few days Simon and I will be at the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo, in Harrisburg, PA.  We will be riding, with our mounted games team as part of a demo competition for MGAA, Mounted Games Across America.  MGAA also has a booth that will be operating Thursday through Sunday. 

Tomorrow morning Simon and I are driving up to teammate, Linda’s  house.  Then Linda, myself and our teammate Kim will get together to have a practice and get our ponies cleaned up and show ring presentable.  It should be a fun day! 

Friday morning we will be driving up to the expo and working the MGAA booth all day along with a few other friends.  I am looking forward to checking out the facility and looking at all the cool booths.  I am also very excited to talk about MGAA and mounted games all day long. 

Saturday we will be loading the ponies and driving up to take part in the expo.  We are riding at 4pm, so if you happen to be there, be sure to cheer us on.  We are team Old School and will be dressed in navy with yellow.  One of the best parts about mounted games is that as a spectator you can cheer really loud and pick a team to support. 

Ill be sure to blog about the experience next week.  I am excited to ride in such a different type of venue, but I am also excited to take part in it with my team.  It’s a cool way to kick off the games season! 

http://www.horseworldexpo.com/PAmain.shtml

We Need a 5th Rider

I am starting to get pumped up for the new games season.  Wooo! 

I love the people I ride with.  Linda, Kim and Carol Ann are the best teammates.  We have tons of fun together and have our whole hand signal, when to push each other and when to laugh at each other type of stuff worked out. 

Ideally we would like to have a fifth rider, someone that fits in competitively and likes to have fun.  If someone comes along we are ready to scoop them up asap (hint hint).  But our division is still growing and there’s not that many people that don’t already have a team to ride on. 

As I see it we have two realistic options. 

  1. Find someone that is already a strong rider but new to the sport of mounted games that is ready to dive in and kick some butt.  Train them up and outfit them in some of our team gear.
  2. Get someone that used to play but hasn’t in a long time and remind them how much fun it is and convince them to come practice with us.  One practice is bound to get them re-hooked and want to ride with us. 

Here is a video of us at the last competition in 2011, the Mid-Atlantic Series #5 at PG Equestrian Center in Upper Marlboro, Maryland in October.

The weekend was really muddy from start to finish.  This was probably the driest it got all weekend, in our second session on Saturday.  We are playing 4 flag, which involves riding to the end of the field (where the video taper is), selecting a flag, and then ride to a metal holder.  The 4 holes in the holder are color coded and you must slide the flag you selected into the matching slot. 

You know you want to ride with us.  Look at how awesome we are!    

Pony Ear Muffs

Simon and I are going to be riding with our team at the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo http://www.horseworldexpo.com/PAmain.shtml in just under two weeks.  It is a really neat opportunity to show off our sport (mounted games) to a large variety of spectators.  Our organization, MGAA, has a great 1 hour time slot at 4pm on Saturday.   

We will be one of the five MGAA teams taking part.  Our team will be representing the adult fossil division, with other teams representing the intermediate and masters divisions.  Two of our usual teammates, Linda and Kim will be riding with Simon and I as well as two riders, Nancy and Phyllis, from one of the other teams we usually ride against. 

If you or anyone you know will be at the expo on Saturday, be sure to swing by for our time slot and cheer us on!  Mounted games loves loud cheering and good hearted heckles and our team might need the extra encouragement since we will be riding against some of the USA’s top games riders who are still in their prime!

Stock photo of the ear plugs. Simon was not going to let me get a photo of him with them in.

MGAA also has a double booth for the expo which will be open Thursday-Sunday.  Linda, Kim and I, along with some other friends, will be working the booth on Friday.   We will have MGAA clothing for sale as well as great information about the sport of mounted games, equipment on hand for spectators to see up close and personal, and a selection of photos on display and video playing.  We will also have information about different clinic and competition opportunities in a variety of locations.    

Going back to the exciting riding portion of the expo, we are told that it is a spooky location and even accomplished, been-there-done-that horses get a little weirded out by the echoes and sounds.  One thing to our advantage is that most of those horses would be in the arena one at a time, performing all on their own, where our ponies will be piled into the ring with 24 others and allowed to stand in tight knit groups, toughing their buddies. 

But since it was recommended to try ear plugs, I picked up a pair of wool twist plugs in black.  I attempted to stuff them in Simon’s ears and had absolutely no luck.  I might have been successful at inserting them if I could also grow an extra arm or two to aid in the process, but I decided that even if I was able to get them in, chances were he would not be in any kind of temperate mood afterwards.  So Scratch that idea.

I had a very fuzzy memory of a ear bonnet mixed into my horse stuff so I spent some time digging around until I came up with it.  So I gave that a try last night.  Simon was fine with me putting it on, but kept twitching his ears in attempts to dislodge it so I decided to put it under his bridle instead of over it.     I now understand why people put them on top, as getting his bridle on was a little less than easy, but once it was all straight and in place he seemed less annoyed with it. 

I left it on and went for a hack around the field to see how he reacted and I was less than impressed.  The bonnet is better used over the top of ear plugs, to help hold them in, and being used on its own hardly dampens sounds.  And although Simon seemed to get to the ‘whatever’ point about it, I decided that a less annoyed pony will be the better choice for me at the expo. 

 

Blue Ridge Games Spring Poster

I have been working on the PR for our Blue Ridge Games Clinic and Open Practice sessions that are coming up.  I made up this flyer to post all over the place.  I think it came out pretty good.

We are offering clinics that are open to riders that are brand new to games as well as those that are already playing but want to advance their skills some.  It would be great for any Pony Club games riders that are gearing up for their regional or the national competitions or that want to start playing MGAA games this year.  Riders will be grouped by skill and experience to best optimize their time.  Its only $25 and riders may also stick around and take part in the open practice for no additional charge. 

The practice is open to anyone.  We bring the equipment, and mark out an A and C line and everyone can dive in and have fun.  It’s a great opportunity to brush up for the spring season, and get the bugs worked out of your pony.  It is also a fabulous way to get a new pony out and experienced before going to a  competition.  Practice is $20 a rider. 

We are doing these at the Shenandoah Fairgrounds in Woodstock, Virginia.  Everyone must register in advance.  We ride in a ring on all weather footing, but will cancel if the weather stinks. 

We have a website – which is still under construction – www.blueridgegames.org and we also have a facebook page www.facebook.com/blueridgegames that you can “like” if you want updates. 

I am also happy to answer questions kristashine@hotmail.com

Color Coordination – 2012

I am a very colorful person.  Some days I love bright yellow or day glow orange.  Some days I am all about Kelly green or deep red.  But on just about all days, I love blue best of all. 

Recently when packing for a weekend visit with some friends, Irealized that just about everything I own is blue.  I almost always wear blue (except today.  Today I am wearing green and grey).  It does make it easier to get dressed, I just have to be careful my shades of blue don’t clash!  And growing up, blue was the primary color of all the groups I belonged to. 

And not just blue, but blue and yellow specifically.   

  • My K-12 grade school colors were blue and yellow.
  • My pony club, which dominated my childhood, colors were blue and yellow. 
  • And even now, in my adult life, my riding team, Old School, rides in blue and yellow. 

Which is good because most of the horse stuff I have is blue! 

For the holidays I got a gift certificate to Distance Depot http://www.thedistancedepot.com/ which sells endurance and trail tack.  I have quite a few things from their company already, and have been really impressed with their service and the speed at which a custom ordered item is received.  They are really fast.  I placed my order last Friday for a custom made bridle and I picked it up from my post office on Tuesday.   

I also love biothane.  It is a leather like substitute, but unlike leather it doesn’t mildew or rot, it can get wet and it can go in the dishwasher (if you have one, which I do not) and it comes in so many colors.  It also comes in different textures.  Depending on what color you want, you can select a more ridged biothane or a softer, leather feeling biothane, which is what I prefer. 

After I got my first piece of biothane, which was my breast collar, I was really hooked.  Maybe part of that is that I just love being colorful, and being color coordinated, but I loved the way it felt to the touch and it holds up great.  Way better than cheap leather, which is becoming harder and harder to separate from good leather, which is really expensive.  And when you think about the leather industry, gross.  Not only is it animal skin, and it is very hard to determine the humanity, or lack of, that was enlisted in the process of securing it, but the tanning and dying process is soooo bad for the environment.  In the old days, tanneries were always set up outside of town, down wind and downstream for a reason.  Gross.  So yeah, go biothane! 

My trail tack for Simon is supplemented by a lot of “light navy” colored gear with touches of pink.  I have a light navy biothane crupper and a breast collar, a martingale attachment and reins, and I also have a matching bridle with bright pink on the brow and nose bands.  You can see this get up in several of the photos on here.  It all matches my saddle bags excellently.  If they only had a Toklat dark blue endurance cool back pad… sigh.

When I ride on my games team I use my trail bridle, which since purchasing, is the only bridle I use anyway, but we dress in navy and yellow, so I wrap the pink nose and brow in yellow electric tape, so I can keep with the proper colors.  Seriously, I am really bent up about color coordination. 

So with my gift card I ordered a navy and yellow bridle.  I also tried a differently designed bridle and I love it. 

On my other bridle, the bit attaches to clips on the cheek pieces of the halter.  But since I have a pony and a high cheeked bit, it sort of gets bunchy sometimes.  But I still wanted a removable bit and a halter style bridle.  So I picked out the “Full halter bridle with add on headstall” https://www.thedistancedepot.com/Biothane_Tack_p/bbt-fhaoh.htm

I had to add about a dozen holes per side of the headstall so it would fit Simon’s short pony face, but in the end it works great.  The headstall is technically suppose to go on the outside of the halter part, but I think it is ok to strap the throat latch over it.  I did on one side but not the other to see what I thought.  Either way, it works.

The headstall attaches onto a pin at the pole, and is super easy to pop on and off, but is tight enough to stay in place.  Very cool.  And Simon looks spiffy in it too. 

Now I just need to decide if I want to use my blue or my yellow cotton reins with it.  Decisions decisions.