![]() |
| invisible mare camouflages with the “greenery” |
It’s so easy to fall into nasty little ‘survival mode’ habits with Doozy, ya know? She’s so good at the jumps, and so… er, tricky, about everything else, that I often kinda just do the bare minimum before getting on with it.
![]() |
| all the way in the back corner with her boyfriends, trying to manifest the mud into grass |
But ya know. We have to address the trickiness eventually, right? And for Doozy to really understand her job, I have to be consistent in my expectations. Which, anybody who has been reading will know is a key theme in our recent lessons with Dan.
![]() |
| fast forward and we’ve arrived at Cheshire! |
The ring at Cheshire is gorgeous but FULL of distractions — as every window opens out to lovely vistas where as likely as not, other activities are happening. Horses galloping in turn out, riders schooling in the outdoor, and naturally just the normal foot traffic of people and horses going hither and yon.
![]() |
| for once i have no media from a sally lesson, massive sadness :( here’s a shot from our last time in this epically gorgeous ring tho! |
I was hoping the lesson would be more course work, but we actually ended up starting with a little gymnastic grid first. Started as a single X, grew to a ~28’ two stride (obvi set quite short but rode fine on a waiting stride), finished with a bounce in to the two stride. After that, tho, we started picking up some singles off sweeping lines.
![]() |
| and for shits and giggles, another shot from a different ride with Sally, our last time at Kealani |
So it was good practice. Doozy was definitely a bit of a handful throughout in these upward transitions — especially into the grid. Just like last time, she had a tendency to get almost a little stuck and up and down and sideways, vs traveling fluidly forward. I found it very helpful, tho, to stay laser focused on the steadiness of my position, tempo of my posting trot (at least for the grid, that we trotted into), and steady unmoving rein contact. Just repeating to myself, keep it simple, don’t overthink it.
![]() |
| oooooh that face is strangely familiar!! |
She was also getting a little stuck in her rhythm upon being presented to the fences — with little disruptions a couple steps out that would sometimes take us off our distance or line.
Tho our last exercise of the ride was maybe a bit better, because we strung together a second jump. So landed from the first — and it should be noted, Doozy actually landed nicely (for us) from everything all day long, vs spooling off into a bolt — organized, and turned to approach a second jump. She still made a bit of a rhythm-disrupting move ahead of that final jump, but it was overall more fluid than just the singles alone.
![]() |
| of course, it’s two Big Brown fillies!!! so stinkin cute, amirite? |
For my own personal confidence, I would have liked to do more course work… string more things together, more related lines etc… But then again, for the purposes of the horse’s education and advancement, I think the starting and stopping and repetition of “not overthinking it” into our upward transitions probably has more long term value. We know she can jump. It’s just… all the other stuff LOL.
One thing at a time, I suppose haha — and decent rideability through a lot of transitions in an unusual and super distracting ring is a worthy enough “thing.” Especially when you consider her last jumping session was an xc school!







Another productive lesson in the books for you and Doozy! And you are right about her blanket, it does provide nice camouflage. 🙂
ReplyDeletelol I feel like *everything* is the same mud color right now, the whole landscape is like one murky smear haha! But it’ll start getting hazy green soon I hope !
DeleteHer muscling and coat are looking SO good! The trailer pic really shows that off. How fun she got to meet a relative!
ReplyDeleteThe starting and stopping is tricky with BB for the opposite reason, hard to get motivation and pace going again. Like you said though, excellent to practice the hard things with supervision.
Honestly I think the starting and stopping is hard for most horses… I mean it’s hard for me too when I’m trying to do various tasks etc… much easier to just get into a gear and stay there… I’m trying to be better personally about staying flexible tho esp when sometimes rings run late etc and times just are what they are…
DeleteI'm with you that it's so much easier to cruise around vs starting and stopping. But I also see the value in starting and stopping in a lesson. And for a horse like Doozy who might like to get rolling along, the starting and stopping will have her thinking if a stop might be expected rather than just rolling along and getting hotter. Hopefully next lesson you get to tackle some courses though! Sounds like a great lesson!
ReplyDeleteAww, you can definitely see the family resemblance! Cute fillies!
ReplyDeleteAnd landing in an organized manner is a big step forward! Good girl, Doozy.
Sounds like a really solid ride! The focus on the transitions and rideability will probably pay off so much once you start stringing more jumps together.
ReplyDelete