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Showing posts with the label owning a Standardbred

Wentworth Hunter Pace - June 6, 2021

After Margaret and I had such a fun time at the fall hunter pace, we opted to go again this spring! This time, while I rode Rejoice again, Margaret rode her horse Jester and had a friend ride Ladyhawke. All Kennebec Morgans!! Jester and Rejoice have the same dam and Jester and Lady share the same sire. Unfortunately instead of a lovely late spring day, we had one of the first intensely hot and humid days of the year. It was definitely a bummer, but the ride was mostly in the shade of the woods and we had a great time!  most of the fences were 3' coops but we found a small log and this hay to jump haha Until we didn't. 😑 We brought along a third friend who rode Margaret's older mare, Ladyhawke. She's a good rider but hasn't known Ladyhawke for very long and didn't realize how much of a cranky boss mare she could be at times. She kicked Jester right in the front leg just about halfway through the ride, and while the cut itself ended up not being a big deal in the...

Canter Progress

Like any Standardbred, it has taken time and patience with Snappy to develop her canter.  She is physically able to canter but what is holding her back is her mental block about the gait.  She raced until she was twelve years old, and I even trained and raced her under saddle (at a trot), so it was quite ingrained in her mind to never canter, just trot as fast as possible, even under saddle. She is honestly scared of the canter, as she was trained as a young horse that any time she moved into that gait, she was hit in the mouth hard with the reins/bit.   Last summer I wrote about her current canter , which wasn't much as I wasn't really pushing the issue.  Back then, her left lead was stronger, her upwards transitions were horrid, and she could barely hold her right lead to go an almost full 2o m. circle.  After the canter, she forgot how to trot, bend, or relax and I had to go directly from a canter to a walk for her brain to settle down. Thankfully, m...

Searching for the Elusive Canter...AGAIN!

I spent YEARS and YEARS working on Dreamy's canter, as I was always working against her breeding and race training years.  I wrote an entire post about cantering your Standardbred back in 2009.  I am not saying it wasn't worth it, but I had believed that my next "show horse" after her would be anything but a Standardbred.  Don't get me wrong, I love the breed, but it's really time for me to move on. Of course, what we think it going to happen in our life and what actually happens it not always the same!!  LOL!  I could write a book about that!  Snap Dancer fell into my lap and I couldn't say no.  Now that I am down to two horses, Dreamy being the other one at age 25 this year, it's not as though I have a lot of choice if I want to show.  It's either don't show or show Snappy.  I didn't show for two summers, both 2014 (deliberately took the year off, save for two little shows, one for each horse) and 2015 (pregnant!).  Obviously, if I...

USTA Blog

"...the mares teach folks at horse shows all over New England just what a Standardbred can do – in every imaginable discipline." Thanks to Ellen Harvey at the USTA for the shout-out in her blog !  I love when my mares are featured!  Ellen is a wonderful supporter of the Standardbred athlete, both on the track and off!  :-D

Being on the bit

WARNING!  I have dragged out my soapbox!  This is a self righteous rant , I mean PSA.  Read at your own risk...don't get mad if you are offended.  Just stop reading!  ;-D Every once in a while, I see something that really bothers me and I can't keep my mouth shut any longer.  You always see photos, such as on Facebook or a popular website, of horses not anywhere near being "on the bit" in the proper sense of the word.  And then the comments are so complimentary, despite the fact that the horse is actually moving really poorly, at least in the moment the pic was taken.  I especially hate when professional photographers post pics of dressage horses that are SO behind the vertical or are completely moving incorrectly, that it makes the regular horse person think that is how you "ride dressage". The more the general horse public sees incorrect movements, the more they mimic it. "On the bit" is a very misleading term.  Many people see a horse ...

Day One: 30 Day Challenge

So, it's March and I need some inspiration to get me through one of the toughest months here in Maine!  LOL!  I have Facebook friends who I have seen do a 30 day challenge with pics, but I don't really want to do this on Facebook.  I am going to try my best to post every day for the month!  (OK, so yeah, there are 31 days in March....whatever!  LOL!!!) Day One:  A picture of you and your horse Well, this one is easy!  :-) First up is Revenue Stream, nicknamed Reva.  She is a 2006 Standardbred mare who I have owned since July 5, 2009.  Reva never raced or even qualified as she was unable to train down past 2:20.  She was given to me by Carter Duer of Peninsula Farm (as in I am listed as owner on her papers!).  This is a photo of us cantering along during a clinic last summer with Chris Lombard .  Next is Dreamy Starlet, a 1991 Standardbred mare.  Dreamy is a retired race horse and broodmare who started out as a ...

Big Surprise!

I love getting mail. Like real, paper-envelope-in-my-mailbox kind of mail. In this technology age, the only thing I ever get in the mail anymore are bills and catalogs! LOL! So it was pretty darn exciting to see an envelope addressed to me with the "Peninsula Farm" return address. I felt my heart skip a beat and I knew what it was as I tore open the envelope. Can you guess?? :D Inside was a nice note attached to Reva's papers and DNA typing sheet. The Filly is mine! :D Thank you Mr. Duer!!!!!