trail rides

Exploration

This morning Mahogany and I took our first trail ride since she arrived here. She has always had a strong preference for the company of other horses, but it was never a huge issue until this morning when I tried to ride her away from her new pasture mates. I had an honest-to-goodness fight on my hands. I finally opted to dismount and lead her off to the trailhead and out of sight of the herd and stables. This basically just relocated the fight instead of ending it, but at least it was just the two of us there with no human or equine witnesses to the struggle. Having a battle of wills with your horse in front of curious onlookers is like dealing with a tantruming toddler in a grocery store…it’s just awkward no matter how you handle it.

So anyway, I led her through the back gate and remounted, and the battle resumed, and I eventually won. And once I got her onto the river trail and she was basically locked onto the path, we had a really lovely ride. The flipside of Mahogany’s willfulness is her bold fearlessness, which makes her a wonderful exploring companion.

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At a couple of places along the trail we found cows sheltering in the brush.

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(For the curious: I always try to include bits of horse in the photos I take from horseback. That’s how I tell my trail ride pics apart from my hiking pics.)

When we looped back into the pasture, Mahogany set up for another fight. She wanted to run straight to her buddies, and I wanted to remind her who was steering by making her walk around the perimeter of the pasture. That ended up being more of a heated argument than an actual battle, and then she remembered that I’m even more stubborn than she is and did her laps without any more fuss. But I can see that this will be our first training project here: Mahogany needs to learn to leave the herd behind whenever I ask her to, without a struggle.

Luke and Elizabeth and I have fallen into a pattern of exploring at least one new thing every weekend, and today we investigated the Colleyville Library. We found it nestled in a village with a remarkably Southern California vibe. The whole setting reminded us of a cross between the Mission Inn area of Riverside and Disneyland’s Main Street USA.

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While the Hurst Library is still our reigning favorite, the Colleyville Library is far and away the prettiest one we’ve seen in the Metroplex so far.

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One of these days I’m going to just drive around and take pictures of all of my favorite buildings in the Mid-Cities area, and post them. There is some crazy beautiful architecture here.

I freaking love this place.

Categories: Animals, environment, Family, Horses, kids, Life, trail rides | Leave a comment

It’s My Blogaversary!

Ramblings is one year old today!

Some highlights…

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What a difference a year makes.

And…apparently that’s all I have to say about that.

PS. Happy Love Thursday!

Categories: Animals, Artwork, Family, kids, Life, Love, Love Thursday, NaBloPoMo, Road trip, Spelling Bee, trail rides | Tags: | 4 Comments

Summer Adventures, Part 3

“Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air…”
— Ralph Waldo Emerson

I just spent an amazing five days at a horse camp in Montaña de Oro State Park in up in San Luis Obispo with Julie and her sister Kelly. Julie and I drove up on Wednesday; Kelly lives in Merced and met us there. A fourth girl, Heather, joined us Friday night and left early Sunday morning.

This park is absolutely gorgeous. There are mountains and creeks and little foresty places, and a long sandy beach that just begs to be galloped upon.

The first day we were there, Mahogany wanted nothing to do with the ocean. On the second day I coaxed her into at least walking in wet sand. This was big progress for my water-phobic mare, but she forfeited her brownie points later in the day when I had to dismount and lead her across a tiny little creek back in the hills. Actually she leaped over the creek and landed practically on top of me. No cookie for her!

On day three we actually got her to stand quietly as the waves washed over her ankles! Whoot! And on the fourth day, miracle of miracles:

Day four was full of firsts, actually. She willingly crossed a creek about three times wider than the one she’d balked at before, without the slightest hesitation. I guess once you’ve been in the ocean those little babbling brooks aren’t quite so terrifying anymore. Then we rode a trail that took us over several long wooden footbridges, and amazingly Mahogany moseyed right onto and across them.

This trip was the best thing that could have happened to her! I’m hoping to find time to ride her down to my hideout sometime soon and see if she’ll cross that creek now, while the experiences are fresh in her mind.

I can’t say enough good things about this park. On two different days we saw seals swimming near the shore, and once Julie galloped her horse out within ten feet of one inquisitive seal. We had campfires every night and the food was awesome thanks to Kelly, who is quite the camp chef. The only unpleasant surprise for me was how cold it was. A chilly marine layer hung over the whole area for four of the five days we were there, and I froze my butt off the first two nights. On the third day we drove into town for more ice for the coolers, and I bought a sleeping bag (the air mattress and single comforter I’d brought with me were just not cutting it). After that I was toasty warm at night. On day four the haze cleared and the sun came out, and I was so unprepared for that I got a blistering sunburn. Sigh.

Here’s our campsite:

Here are Kelly (seated), Julie, and Jake, one of the two dogs Julie brought:

Dueling cameras!

By the end of the trip, Mahogany was looking lean and fit:

I’m so glad we did this. It was even worth coming home to a house that looked like flying monkeys had been living in it for five days (Steve stayed here with the kids while I was gone). I’d love to do more stuff like that, although ideally I’d like to be able to bring the kids along so they can share the experience. This is something every kid should get to do, I think.

I can’t believe the Summer Of Adventure is almost over. School starts back up in less than two weeks! We’re going to Knott’s Berry Farm tomorrow for Luke’s birthday, and then it’s back to the boring old grind. I think we made pretty good use of our summer though, all things considered. I’m aaalllmmost ready for Fall, and cooler weather. Almost.

Categories: Animals, Horses, Life, trail rides, Travel | 7 Comments

Wild-Eyed Rebel

The Hamilton Museum And Ranch Foundation, a local institution dedicated to documenting Anza’s rich history of cattle ranches and native Cahuilla culture, is always looking for new and creative ways to raise funds. Right now they need a good-sized chunk of change to do some major repairs/renovations on one of their main barn structures there at the museum site. They asked board members for suggestions, and Steve brought up the idea of putting on a big trail ride through the reservation, with dinner and music and the whole shebang. The plan was approved, scheduled for May, and Steve’s been hammering out the details ever since.  

One of the things that needs to be done is to actually clear a trail through scenic parts of the reservation near the museum. We keep trying to do this, but the weather keeps forcing us to reschedule. It’s no fun blazing trails in the rain and snow and howling wind. We’d planned to try today, but it looked like we were going to get rained out yet again.  

And then this morning dawned gloriously sunny and mild. The trailblazing expedition was on! Steve and I scraped the mud off of our wooly horses and loaded them into the trailer. The third member of our party, a fellow named Tom, met us there at the museum.  

Mahogany was very keyed-up right from the start. She didn’t want to be caught, didn’t want to be groomed, didn’t want to be handled. I don’t know if it was the weather or if she’s in season or what. At least she loaded up in the trailer without a fuss.

When we got to the museum I saddled and bridled her while she danced around impatiently like an unbroken colt. Finally, we all headed out. She jigged and shied and generally made a nuisance of herself the whole time. The ground was muddy and soft, and she didn’t like the way her hooves sank deep with every step. Now and then she’d try to bolt, and I’d pull her head around and make her do tiny circles until she was ready to walk again.  

Tom, who used to make a living training horses, commented that I was being too easy on her. “Next time she does that, don’t just pull her head around,” he advised. “When you pull that left rein, dig your left spur into her, hard! Let her know you mean business. She’s taking advantage of your good nature.”  

Mahogany is very sensitive to spur pressure; I’ve never used them on her with any great force. But Tom is a veteran trainer, and if he thought Mahogany was taking advantage of my unwillingness to treat her roughly, then maybe a bit of tough love was in order. The next time she bolted I pulled her head around to the left and slammed my left spur into her ribs.  

She pretty much levitated to the right, and with her head pulled around to the left she was unable to regain her balance or her footing when she landed back on the soft, wet sand. Down she came, with me underneath her.   

She lurched to her feet, looking around wildly. Steve started to go after her, but she ducked away. “Don’t chase her,” I gulped from where I was taking inventory of my damage. “Let her calm down.”  

Turns out my advice was worth about as much as Tom’s. Mahogany gathered her wits, then up went her head and her tail and off she went, in the direction of where the horse trailer was parked. Everyone groaned.  

To my own surprise, I had taken no damage at all. My shoulder and head had hit the ground pretty hard, and Mahogany had pinned my leg, but the soft sand was very forgiving and nothing was broken or even bruised. We all headed back to the trailer, me and Steve riding double on Marshall, all of us talking about how unusual it is for a horse to leave other horses behind and take off alone in unfamiliar territory. It’s downright unhorselike.  

And then, the final blow: Mahogany galloped right past the trailer and kept on going in the direction of home! This was just plain nuts. She was a good seven or eight miles from home, with several trafficky paved roads between her and her destination. Now the situation wasn’t just inconvenient, it was scary. Anything could happen — she could hit by a car, or damage her hooves running full-speed barefoot down a paved road, or even just put her head down to graze and get a leg tangled in her reins. All sorts or scenarios ending in my beautiful filly being killed or permanently crippled were playing through my head as we finally reached the trailer ourselves.  

Tom had ridden to the museum, so he stayed on his horse and followed Mahogany’s tracks. Steve and I loaded Marshall into the trailer and drove back to the road in an attempt to cut her off before she hit asphalt. Mind you, she was going in a straight line across country, and we had to go the long way around in the truck, but we should have had a pretty good chance of catching her.  

Tom followed her tracks until they came to a barbed-wire fence. She had leaped over it. No sane rider would ask his horse to jump barbed wire, so Tom turned aside and found a different way to go around.

When Steve and I got to where she should be coming out on the road, there she was. She had beaten us there by some time, but fortunately a nice couple had managed to catch her as she tore through their yard, and they’d held her there waiting for someone to show up and claim her. She was drenched, not a dry hair on her, and spectacularly wound up, but completely unscathed. We managed to get her bridle off, her halter on, and her into the trailer, and then went in search of Tom.  

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Needless to say, the trailblazing expedition was rescheduled for next weekend — weather permitting.  

Never a dull moment around here. Ah, the joys of country life.

Categories: Horses, Life, trail rides | 5 Comments

The Hideout

Many years ago, back in my single days, I spent four years working in a machine shop. The pay was decent, but for an outdoorsy sort like me it was a horrible way to make a living. I came home every afternoon soaked with toxic solvents, my ears ringing from ten hours of close-range exposure to deafening noise levels, my back and arms and eyes aching from the endless repetitive motion of feeding stock into the machines at one end and making sure the tiny parts that came out the other end were all within tolerances so tight they had to be checked constantly with a micrometer. As often as not I also came home angry, for reasons that are probably common to many workplaces and way too tiresome to go into on this blog.

Every weekend I cleared my head and unknotted my muscles and my spirit by riding my horse (it was Stormy then, in her exuberant youth) out to the PC Trail and then dismounting and hiking along it for several hours.

(Sidenote for non-Westerners — the PC Trail has nothing to do with Political Correctness or Personal Computers; it’s actually the Pacific Crest Trail, and it runs all the way from Mexico to Canada along the coastal mountain ridges of California, Oregon and Washington. It runs right through Anza, and it’s a wonderfully quiet place to ride or hike.)

At one point my little section of the trail crosses a small creek. Back in 1993 we had some spectacular floods, and that little creek turned into a raging river that carved a deep ravine with sheer cliffsides from what used to be a shallow creekbed. The first time I saw that ravine after the flood, it was littered with cottonwood trees that had been uprooted and washed downstream by the force of the water. Two determined trees had held their ground, and beneath their spreading branches the newly-hewn ravine seemed to me a place of wild beauty and quiet shelter. I felt drawn to it.

It wasn’t easy to get a horse down into the part of the ravine that had captured my interest. It involved sliding down the least steep part of the wall, and hoping Stormy didn’t break her legs on all the loose rocks on the way down. Once at the bottom, though, it was flat and grassy and Stormy could graze beside the little creek while I relaxed in the hammock I’d soon packed in. One of the surviving trees was so old and massive that I could actually tie one end of my hammock to one of its branches and the other end to another branch of the same tree, and hang comfortably up there in its shady heights. I kept a book there too, hidden away in a tiny little cave in one of the ravine’s cliffsides. I whiled away many a Saturday afternoon down there, reading my book and enjoying the breezy shelter of my cottonwood tree. I thought of it as my “hideout,” my once-a-week refuge from the soul-withering stresses of what used to be my life.

And then I met Steve and eventually stopped working at the machine shop and got married and had kids and years and years went by without a visit to my old hideout. Before yesterday I hadn’t been down there once since Elizabeth was born. But yesterday the weather was gorgeous and a family ride sounded like just the thing, and for once we were all old enough and well-mounted enough to go all the way down to that ravine. So we packed a lunch and saddled up!

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The trail was a bit rougher than I remembered it, but all the horses did great. Mahogany is still very green, so I was really pleased with how well she handled herself. I was able to get some great pics from her back.

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When we reached my “hideout,” all the horses slid down into the ravine with no fuss. Stormy remembered the place well — I just pulled off her saddle and bridle and she got busy grazing. Mahogany and Beau were tied to trees, and Steve held Marshall to let him graze.

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The dogs had a blast splashing around in the creek, Luke and Elizabeth climbed all over the rocks and trees, and I soaked up some sunshine.

It was great to be back in the old hideout, and even better to be sharing it with loved ones this time instead of trying to escape reality there. I’m glad we went.

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When it was time to head back we rode up to where the trail crosses the creek. The weeds were as tall as a horse’s back there, thanks to all the rain this winter.

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The only horse that made a fuss about crossing the water was Mahogany. We eventually got her through it, but it took a while.

All in all it was a great day though. Mahogany gained a ton of trail experience, and the kids can’t wait to go back. I think we’ll be doing more of that from now on.

Categories: Family, Horses, kids, Life, trail rides | 6 Comments

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