My Old Pony Club Bulletin Board – 2012

Pony Club rallies require teams to set up a tack room. The tack rooms have to be set to very specific parameters and include specific items, all impeccably clean and labeled. The tack room is inspected by horse management judges and points are given for any infractions found.

When I was in Pony Club one of the items required, and possibly still required, was a bulletin board to pin the schedule to. Most clubs had plain brown bulletin boards, and my club was no exception. Most clubs at the time did not have anything fancy in their tack rooms. A few had bridle or saddle racks painted in club colors, and towards the end of my Pony Club tenure some teams had moved up to matching wooden brush boxes also painted and decorated. But for the most part, decoration was not something many clubs delved into.

One year, my friend and fellow Pony Clubber, Margie, was over at my house to play for the day and we decided to paint our bulletin board. It started out simple with us painting the cork part yellow and the frame part royal blue, in our clubs colors. But it moved on from there and we painted our clubs name across the middle, “Frederick Pony Club” and then our team’s ponies along the bottom. I can’t remember for sure, but I think I had a pony shaped sponge or something to work with.  Or it’s also possible my dad made a stencil for that part.  We also added in some equipment to spice the board up and dun dun dun, we had a custom board.

Recently when I was at my parents house my mom pulled the board out of her basement to show me and I decided to take it home. I think it will be fun to hang up in my sewing room for now and possibly my tack room one day.

Ponies: My pony Berry, Jenny’s pony Jack, Mollie’s pony Tess, Christine’s pony Tease, Margie’s pony Blaze

My pony, Berry, was a strawberry roan with some white spots. Notice my signature to the left of her.

Margie’s pony Blaze, was a perfect chestnut

BRP – Cyber Bullied

On Wednesday 8/22, this blog, Blue Ridge Pony, was the victim of cyber bullying.  The bullying was conducted by full grown adult men. 

To end the tirade I shut BRP down.  I apologize to my regular readers for the brief absence. 

***

I consider BRP to be a pretty simple noncontroversial blog.   I enjoy posting photos of my pony, talking about competitions I take part in, trail rides I go on, products I have tried and sharing general pony antics.   BRP gets some traffic, but is certainly not a popular blog, which is ok with me because I think of it as a fun sort of way to document what I am doing in the equine world. 

At lunchtime last Wednesday I received an email notice that there was a comment in response to a post I made in early February.  Being one of the very few comments this blog has received, I eagerly pulled it up.  After reading it I questioned if it was a legitimate comment, or if it was instead a new type of clever spam, because the response did comment on my post, but it completely missed the very clear and simple point, and seemed more like the writer had only read the headline. 

The blog post in question is titled “Sunday Hunting” and is about Virginia’s decision to continue to ban hunting on Sundays.  I include a calendar that the Virginia Horse Counsel put out that marks days that are open to some form of hunting so riders can decide if they want to ride at home, venture into the woods, or if they want to put on blaze orange for the day.  In the post I state that it is my preference to keep the ban in place.

The commenter was clearly and outspokenly interested in changing the law to allow hunting on Sundays.     

The difference in opinion is fine, and his statement, although it sounded rash and a bit off topic, was  fine.  But it was quickly followed by additional comments, by the same poster as well as a few additional posters.  The comments quickly turned malicious, feeding off of each other’s lack of sense and rational,  and snowballed into utter nastiness.  Wild ‘facts’ were thrown out and propaganda and conspiracy theories against hunting were blamed. 

I also got a few ping backs on my blog, which lets you know when your blog has been listed as a link in another location.  I followed the pings and came to a Facebook group titled “Legalize Virginia Sunday Hunting For All”.  And the unpleasantness, and lack of actually reading my blog posts before jumping to conclusions, was continued by the lead instigator, a grown man,  who was joined by other grown men. 

In the commenter’s defense, I had not listed the reasons in my original blog post as to why I prefer hunting to remain banned on Sundays, nor did I elaborate that I am pro-hunting, and supportive of hunters rights.  Although it was apparent that they were truly not reading the blog post before commenting anyway, and preferred to make their own assumptions.  But I did leave them to decide my reasoning on their own.  And they were, as expected, wildly and totally off the mark. 

By this time I had received a good dozen comments, that rolled from irrational smears to outright verbal attacks and threats to myself and my horse.  I quickly turned on the blog’s built in comment monitor, and removed those that had already appeared to the public, because nothing healthy was happening.  Certainly threatening my life and my horse’s life, does not further the cause of legalizing hunting on Sundays, or stay in line with the upbeat, friendly blog I have intended to provide. 

The assaults continued until I had enough and shut down Blue Ridge Pony. 

I am sad to see a group of grown men, act like a bunch of school yard bullies, while hiding behind computer screens. 

Certainly any creditable group would not make wild death threats to prove their point? 

If a true discussion was the intent, all a commenter had to type was “why do you not want hunting on Sundays” rather than attempting to publicly post an elaborate description of field dressing my horse

Sadly all of this was stated in the name of proving that hunters are responsible and should be allowed to hunt 7 days a week, and that everyone will be safe to enjoy the woods if it is permitted.

These men certainly showed their maturity, the degree of self control they possess and made the level of their rational thinking clear.    

Shame on you grown men, who give hunters a bad name.

Warm Up Routine

I mentioned in my previous post that I have a standard warm up routine. It’s simple and helps warm up myself as well as Simon, and gets my arms and hand eye coordination warmed up too.  I am also the type that gets SUPER bored, SUPER easy.  Trotting in circles makes me want to cry.  I am also not very athletically, hand eye coordinated naturally, so I think the little extra effort really helps me with my skills. 

Basically I have a couple lanes of equipment set up, generally poles with mugs, balls and cones and flags and cones.    Sometimes I throw in something else, but only things that can be done on the straight away.  I try to have two set up to one side of the riding area and another lane or two set up on the other side.  I just keep them set up like this so they are always ready when I hop on. 

While warming up and trotting around the ring, I trot through the races on the straight away.  I’ll pull a diagonal across the arena from one lane and pick up in another, and I’ll throw in some 20 meter circles and serpentines in between, with lots of change of direct.  And when I trot past a cone with a flag in it, I pull the flag, when I pass a cone with a ball on it I pick it up, and when I pass a pole with a mug I shuffle it.  And I keep it all at the trot. 

I keep everything set up in lanes, vs just having a cone or pole placed along the track, which would also accomplish the task at hand, for several reasons.  One, I want to be able to actually practice without resetting everything.  So by keeping it set up in lanes, its ready to switch from warm up to practice with no added labor.  Two, it teaches my pony that he can trot past a lane of poles, or through a flag race, without speeding up.  This is a common misbehavior in games pony, and I am as guilty as the next for having ponies that see a line of poles, and bolt through them.  But since Simon has always warmed up through races, maintaining whatever speed I set him at, he understands that facing a lane of poles doesn’t necessarily mean he needs to run like his tail is on fire.  The third reason I like my warm up equipment set up in lanes, is that I find it harder to perform most of the skills straight on.  When you turn around a cone and place a flag, you have more time to do the placing as you make the turn, but going straight past it, you have a lot less time so accuracy is more difficult.  So I feel by being straight, it creates more of a challenge. 

It is also note worthy, that I only make wide sweeping turns and curves, vs tight cutting turns.  After all I am warming up, and those turns should be saved for practice, not warm up. 

I mentioned above that Simon has learned by doing this warm up routine, that he does not need to bolt off when he faces a line of equipment.  I do think this warm up has helped with this, but it should also be recognized, that Simon does understand that this is warm up and when he is in the heat of the game, he knows the difference and will launch off from a stand still directly into a gallop. 

That said, Simon has been doing this routine since I purchased him as a four year old, and was new to the sport of mounted games.  I do feel it helped acclimate him to the equipment, although he never batted an eye at any of it from the start.  But I did also incorporate this into my semi-retired pony, Osh Kosh’s training several years ago.  This was after Osh Kosh had been an accomplished masters level games pony for over a decade, and he was, and still is, completely guilty of not being able to walk past a line of equipment with 3 hooves on the ground at the same time.  After a few weeks of using this warm up daily he did begin to settle into it.  He still tended to try and bolt off if I leaned over to place a flag, or pick a mug, but the more time he spent warming up this way, the more relaxed he became. 

I find this technique helpful for myself, and also for my ponies. 

Plus, it sure beats just going in circles to warm up!

Early Morning Ride – 2012

It has gotten hot here in Virginia so I decided to start riding before work to try and beat the heat. I got up just after 5am yesterday and again today, and Simon and I got in a good ride both mornings.

Yesterday it was still crisp and fresh with dew on the ground. A perfect morning.

This morning the humidity and an additional wave of heat had rolled in and it was already in the 80s. Gross hot. And the sun wasn’t even shinning down yet.

Do my eyebrows always look like that?

I normally ride after work, when it’s hot and I am tired and worn out and my body is dragging. So it was nice to get my blood flowing and do something I enjoy to start my day. I arrived at work feeling fresh and awake and had a smile on my face.

I think Ill try to keep riding in the mornings while it is hot, and the sun is up early enough.

Focused Practice

Tuesday and Wednesday were nice cool days.  I love riding on days like that.  Tuesday it didn’t even reach the 80s.  Awesome.  Simon and I upped the mark and incorporated some more games practice into our rides and focused on a few specific skills that I personally need to improve.  

One of these skills is placing the orb back onto the turret in the Windsor Castle race.  This is the task of the third rider in this race, which is generally the position I ride for Windsor Castle, and I want to be able to accurately place my orb at a greater speed.  So I have been working on that and am currently placing the orb at a solid canter with consistency. 

I am also working on my flag placement skills.  Two flag placement is something I have generally continued to practice over the years, as this is a skill that I need to keep at to really trust in.  It requires the rider to stick a flag into a cone on a straight away.  So you are cantering past the cone and must place the flag into it.  This is a common place for mistakes in all divisions,  It is also a skill, that if done with speed, can really push a team into the lead in that race.  So I practice that skill quite a bit.       

This has been compounded by the recent rewrite of the Three Pot Flag Race.  This race is set up with three flag cones going up the lane.  One in line with the first pole, one on the B line and a third at the far end of the lane.  There are four flags placed in the center cone at the start of the race with all riders starting behind the A line.  In the end of the race there should be two flags in either end cone.  They can be moved in any order by any rider with each rider moving one flag.  This means that one rider will need to place a flag on the straight away into the first cone while heading for home, when there is already a flag in that cone.  Already having a flag in that cone can make a clean placement at speed a tad harder.  So I have been practicing this placement and am happy to report I am consistently getting it clean at Simon’s full speed.  Woo, go me! 

Another skill I am working on is part of the Bottle Shuttle race.  This race has a barrel set on the B line and a second barrel set at the end of the lane.  one barrel has a bottle on it and the rider carries a second bottle out from the start line.  Formerly I rode this race as rider 2 or 4, which means I would ride to the end of the lane, place my bottle on that barrel, and then pick up the other bottle as I galloped past the other barrel on my way back to the start line.  But, now that I am on a slower pony, and have teammates  that are skilled at this position and riding faster ponies, I have switched to riding position 1 or 3.  This means I ride to the first barrel and place my bottle and then pick my second bottle up from the end barrel before running for home.  Simple right?  Actually yes, simple.  But to place the first bottle on the first barrel with speed takes some practice.  Which I have been doing a lot of.  And so far so good, as I have sped up my placement and accuracy greatly.  I still have a ways to go though, so I’ll keep at it.  

And now he is ready to eat.

Those are the three main skill improvements for myself that I am working on right now.   I still spend time with Simon and his litter turn, and other skills for myself like ball and cone, which I should probably bump up to a main practice skill set soon.  And I usually warm up through mug shuffle.  Actually, I have a whole warm up routine I do most days that I’ll have to blog about soon.  It’s pretty simple and great for the rider that gets bored overly fast trotting in circles.