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.

Sunday Hunting

I posted this to my All things Krista blog today and felt it should be included in Blue Ridge Pony

***

Daisy Dog and I wear high-vis vests in the woods, even on Sundays

Currently there is a bill going through Virginia politics that would open the state to hunting on Sundays, which is currently not permitted.  Many people are opposed to this because Sunday is the only day during a large portion of the year (as you can see on the calendar) that is safe for people to take part in non hunting outdoor activities like hiking, bird watching, mountain biking, horse riding, etc.

I am a very active Virginia trail rider and enjoy spending Sundays in the forest with my dog and my pony.  I sent emails to the pertinent people in regards to this bill politely expressing my concern and was pleased to receive a response from several of them thanking me for my opinion.

The proposed bill to allow Sunday hunting made it through the senate in January.  Today the VA House of Delegates’ bill on Sunday Hunting died in committee by unanimous vote.  Which is great.  But the House still needs to vote down the bill the Senate passed. 

The Virginia Horse council put out this really neat calendar that shows all of the hunting days in Virginia. 

*Looking at the VA hunting guidelines, it is apparent that the VA Horse Council left off some hunting days on the calendar.  There is a spring squirrel season that runs into June and also a few other days that were missed throughout the calendar. 

*I do support hunting and I understand and agree with its need.  I just want to be able to enjoy the forest as well. 

***

Report from All Things Krista  http://allthingskrista.wordpress.com/2012/02/02/hunting-on-sundays/

Interaction with the Forest Service

After a few calls I managed to speak with someone at the local, North River Forest Service Disctrict office.  WOO!  I had a list of question, some of which I forgot in my excitement to speak to someone, but I got a couple answered. 

The two fire road turn offs, 536F & C at Bear Trap are most likely the two places I feel they are.  They were probably used for logging and that area has not been logged in 10 or 20 years so they were closed up so people couldn’t drive on them.  They are still available to be used but are not being maintained.  He also went on to tell me that on my horse I can ride any and everywhere I choose in the forest, I just can’t clear trails or bring my chainsaw, but to enjoy myself and explore where ever I want. 

Next I asked him about trail 439 that had the wooden signs taken down and now has the green tree tags.  He told me that the local bicycle club got permission to put up the green tags (they have SVBC Shenandoah Valley Bicycle Club on them! Duh Krista!) on trails they are working on and maintaining.  He said the FS is no longer putting up the wooden signs because of people vandalizing them and they are putting up metal signs that are made just like street signs, but they are still brown.  He said they get stolen or kicked down and thrown into the woods all the time.  He is going to pass on to the appropriate person that the signs are not up for that trail any longer too. 

I was so thrilled to talk to someone who was happy (or at least sounded like he was) to talk to me, and truly helpful!  He didn’t just answer my questions but elaborated and really tried to give me useful information.  He knew exactly what area, fire roads and trail I was talking about right away and he didn’t make me feel stupid or like a burden or anything.  It was fantastic.  His name was something like Christopher or something Chris sounding.  Or so that’s what I heard the receptionist call him. 

I had meant to ask about the gates being opened and what the schedule is for that, and what the criteria was for some gates to be open versus others.   And if I am ok to drive up in there in my truck or horse trailer (assuming there is turn around space for the trailer), if they check before locking the gates. 

Anyway, it was a really exciting and positive interaction, and since there have been strained relations with the local FS and the local riders/trail users lately, it made me feel even better about it. 

*To the best of my knowledge, the main issues with the local FS has been more in, what I think is the Lee District area, centered around Cub Run and Catherine’s Furnace. 

Blue Ridge Games – Spring Dates

Myself and my friends, Carol Ann, Linda and Kelly, host a mounted games series that we call Blue Ridge Games. We even have our own Facebook https://www.facebook.com/blueridgegames and web page http://blueridgegames.org/ dedicated to it.

We attempt to provide the Blue Ridge Valley with local mounted games competitions, clinics and practice opportunities and I have set up three dates for this coming year so far. 

  • March 18, 2012 Clinic and open Practice
  • April 15, 2012 Clinic and open Practice
  • September 1, 2012 BRG Fair Demo, Shenandoah Fair

These events will be hosted at the Shenandoah Fairgrounds in Woodstock, Virginia and anyone can take part. 

So what is mounted games?

I can best describe it as relay races on horseback.  Riders are generally set up on teams.  The riding area is arranged with matching lanes.  Teams are line dup at one end of the playing field behind a line, one team per lane.  A referee starts the race with the drop of a flag.  The first rider on each team races through an obstacle that has been preset in their lane, and then “hands off” with a teammate who then races through the obstacle.  The finish is called in the order the final rider of each team crosses the finish line. 

Races are generally run one after the other, with the same teams of riders staying in the playing field and completing 10-18 races within a one hour session.  The order of completion in each race gains a predetermined amount of points for each team, and at the end of the session those points are added up for a final score and placement. 

That’s the basics. 

Mounted games gives riders the opportunity to ride on a team, where working together is paramount to completing each race. 

Because all of the equipment in the lane must be left in a specific condition at the end of the race, riders must decide how fast to push their pony without disturbing the equipment.  If, for example, riders are riding around a barrel, and they knock the barrel over, it must be righted and returned to its original position before that rider can continue.  Finding the fastest speed to go around the barrel without knocking it over is a key element in games. 

But generally in games you do not just ‘go around a barrel’.  You most likely need to retrieve an object from that barrel, or place one on it while going around it.  So riders are then required to figure out how close they need to get to the barrel to pick up the object, while still keeping speed and not knocking it over. 

Some races require riders to dismount, retrieve an object and then remount before continuing.  This encourages riders to perform a vaulting mount without the aid of stirrups.  Generally reserved for the younger more agile riders, feats of vaulting onto ponies at a full gallop are spectacles to witness, but they do require a lot of training of the pony and practice of the rider to accomplish.  Spills happen.    

Lots of fun to take part in and with an array of divisions that are directed toward riders of different age and skill level, mounted games is a sport for many. 

I have been playing games since I was 9 years old,  and although Simon just started a year ago, he is already a fabulous games pony.  Simon and I ride on a team, Old School, in the adult (fossil) division.  Being part of a team is amazing, and I will be sure to post about it in the future. 

We generally take the winter months off, although there are still games competitions taking place.  We have our first one coming up at the end of February.  Our calendar packs in after that, with games dominating about every other weekend through October.  No worries, you will hear a lot about it if you choose to follow this blog.

Three of the teams at the Fall Demo 2011