Another happy lesson post plus some very good news :-)

TableDancer

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Following on from, S_J's post I've just got in from teaching T and S - first lesson for a thousand years just like everyone else, although she has done a few bits of walk and trot around the arena when she could and jumped at Hartpury on 28/12 which was their last proper outing. She (and I
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) are sharply aware that Pony Trials time is approaching quickly and it's a big step up so we are anxious to make rapid progress without scaring the bejesus out of them
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Inspired by S_J (thanks, mate
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) we started with the 5 fence exercise, all on 21 foot for those interested. S is only 14 hands but is scopy with a long stride, and we have to practise making horse distances for BE. On the other hand, this line was approached off a very tight turn in my arena, and the fences were only 2'-2'6" so 24 foot would have been too long in my book...

They did just the first and just the 5th on the angle, then 1 and 4, 4 and 1, then 5 and 2 then 2 and 5. Coped very well, although can't help feeling it's a bit easier on a 14 hand-er than a 16 hand-er
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Then did 1 to 3 with 3 as a pole on the ground, coped fine so graduated to 1 to 3 as a fence, then 4 to 2. Kept them all small, concentrated on rhythm and balance. T's main fault was a tendency to try and turn by pulling on the inside rein rather than guiding him around with wide hands and an opening rein so we worked on that. Didn't try 1-3-5 today as I thought they'd done surprisingly well and I'm not sure they are quite ready yet... They finished, like S_J, going straight down the line, which they found easy and enjoyed so it provided a bit of light relief
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Then I altered the grid to pull 1 up to 10 feet from 2 making a bounce, and pulling 5 to make an oxer with 4, so it was short-ish bounce, 21 feet to upright, 21 feet to oxer. Gradually built the last two parts up to 1.10m. S found it very easy so I was working on T's position and keeping the approach short and bouncy (he likes to come off the turn and gallop
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) S started getting a bit quick so I ended up putting the second part of the bounce up to about 90cm too to back him off a bit, but kept the entry small in case they c*cked it up. They did really well, so cue smiley T and pony, lots of polos and happy Mum
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Sorry no photos/vid, I really must take some but I never think of it and get too involved in what we're doing
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The good news I referred to concerns the 4yo Joe. 10 days ago in the worst of the snow he had an accident in the field. I'd been turning them out for a bit every single day on the basis that it would keep them sane and it worked a treat till then. Don't know what he did but I found him standing in the field drenched in sweat, shaking and holding a hind leg up
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Thinking the worst, I went to gently lead him in and found to my surprise he could weight-bear. Left him in stable for an hour, having cleaned his many cuts, changed rugs etc, to see which way it would go... When I came back he was still bad, very distressed, unwilling to move etc so I called the vet. This was the day we had 8" of snow on the ground. First vet arrived, went to get second vet. We cajoled him to walk once around snowy yard and while he was sore he was clearly weight-bearing once again. In the absence of X rays and scans (no chance of getting lorry out) he was diagnosed as having slipped the tendon off his hock. While the long term prognosis for a return to work is reasonable with such an injury, they never recover as such and obviously there is a long healing and rehabilitation process with not much re-sale value at the end. Joe has been on boxrest all this week awaiting scans to confirm. Finally on Friday I managed to get the lorry out and get him to the vets. Those who know me will confirm that I have been increasingly upbeat during the wait as despite lengthy gropings of his hock, apart from some soft tissue swelling I couldn't feel any difference from the other one. In addition, he's become so cheerful I had to take him off the bute early to stop him beating his stable to smithereens every time the pony left him! But you don't really want to back your own judgement versus that of your vet (highly experienced ex-Langford referral orthopaedic consultant) so imagine my relief and delight when the scans confirm no major injury
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Tendon in correct position and intact, just a bit of a bang and a wrench. 10 more days boxrest 6 weeks in field (which will do him no harm at all as he's a growing boy
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) then back to normal
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I feel a great weight has been lifted from me, so thought I should share the joy
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Oh, and no anti-vets vibe, please, diagnosing correctly in the first place was nigh-on impossible in -6 degree temperature, 8" of snow, semi-dark stable and obviously neurotically pain-shy patient
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They were as delighted as I was at the outcome and profusely apologetic, for which there was no need. Far better this way round than the other. Happy New Year folks
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Oh and congratulations and mojitos all round for the couple of you who will have got this far
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Good to hear that grid exercise works well for various people, i'm going to give it a go when flood in school subsides
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I'm not completely sure i will fit 5 in a row in 20x40 though but can maybe do something similar with 4, or just keep them very small with 5.

Good news on the Joe front too, sounds like a drama in the snow but good outcome
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You should be able to get 4 in fine in a 20x40, five could be tight, mine is 20x50. You could do all the things we did with a four fence line though, you only need five if you're gonna start being really flash and doing 1-3-5 etc...
 
OMG Tabledancer I rode for the first time for a month today and am already thinking excitedly about my next lesson - dont get any fancy ideas will you, having read this I am trembling
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I was going to ask if we could do some polework/jumping but perhaps not now
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Not that I am a wimp you understand
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Brilliant news about Joe, I am SO pleased for you (and him of course!)
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Well done to T and S - sounds like a really useful session. Like AR says, 5 in a 20x40 is a bit difficult but could give it a go with either 3 or 4.

Whoop whoop whoop about Joe
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I know you were really down in the dumps when he did it (despite us all trying to cheer you up with alcohol-related jibes
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) - that is just the very best news!!

Onwards and upwards for a brilliant 2010!
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lesson sounds really good and positive, excellent!
that's a big relief about Joe, you must have been worried sick.
years ago i found 1 of mine in the field with a front leg swinging, would not weight bear at all. assumed the worst... vet came, couldn't find any damage. managed to get horse up ramp and to vets, a few days later they realised he'd temporarily paralysed the nerve bundle under his shoulder blade (prob done the splits over other horse's back, play-fighting) and he came 100% sound.
amazing how they can come right, even when it looks absolutely appalling...
 
I enjoyed that little 'missive' thank you. Would it be very bad for me to hold your instructions with distances & combinations in one hand whilst teaching??!!
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Your distances worked a treat for me on Friday
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T is a lucky girl to have such a knowledgeable Mummy to help her at home
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Its going to be an exciting year for her.

Delighted to hear that young Joe is ok, phew whatta relief. Horses do give us some grey hairs dont they. You will be heading into glorious spring by the time you get him going and everything will be so much easier.
 
Sounds fab
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I love that exercise- It's definitely in a book I have somewhere!

Great news about Joe too... Everything seems better once the snow has gone doesn't it?

Totally off topic sorry, but what are the dates of the KC clinics now because I've gotten really confused
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(I blame it on the blondeness
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)
 
I am glad to hear about the 4yo, much better to assume the worst and find out it's minor than the other way round.

Do you really teach your daughter
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? My mother and I NEVER saw eye to eye when it came to riding, she was an excellent rider and horsewoman, and a lot of what I do is based on what she did, but her actually teaching me? Nope, from age 5 to 21 that never had a happy ending....
 
Great news, I like a good happy ending! Sounds like T and S are going to have a very successful season! I rode for the first time in two weeks today so grids feels a bit of a way off right now but I can't wait to give the exercise a go, especially as I have no excuse with use of a 30x60!
 
Fantastic news about Joe - must have been hard to keep optimistic the last week
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Glad your school is back in working order again as well - its a great feeling isn't it.

Fiona
 
PHEWWWWW!
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I have always done that exercise wih mine - but only 3 fences as that's all there is room for in my school. Love riding it as a figure of 8 - diagonally over fence 1 then on the other diagonal over fences 2 or 3 etc. just keep swinging round and jumping another one. If I do 1 and 3 it always works out on 3 strides perfectly for me
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.

ps. may have sent you a semi-drunken PM on Fri night - feel free to ignore it!
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Fantastic news re. Joe
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SO pleased all is well with him.

Sounds like T and S are flying, and are very lucky to have your help on tap
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Look forward to hearing about their progress
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Thanks everybody for your good wishes
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m_m I know you were rooting for us and quite frankly alcohol-related jibes are nothing new on my FB pages
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Thanks siennamum, hope your 4yo doesn't give you such scares! and deskbound
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Thanks K, it did look bad, although was always a bit of an enigma because of the fact he could weight-bear and indeed moving didn't even look that painful (think that's one of the reasons they adopted the slipped tendon theory). I have a suspicion he may have tied up too and that accounts for his additional distress/sweating etc. It was one of those super-cold days, and with a bit of hooning around the field, the trauma of the fall, along with lots to eat as we're trying to put weight on him, could well have happened.

Thanks Joss, S_J, igglepiggle and l_p_p. One of the great things about HHO is they way we can all feed off each other, especially at this time of year when inspiration can be a bit lacking
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t_e, at the moment me teaching T is working fine
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In fact, when I asked her which of two instructors she prefers recently, she said neither she prefers me
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Obviously we get other input too and the Pony Programme is great in that it's giving us access to some superb training. I think the mother/daughter thing can work in some cases - I know Cindy Llewellyn teaches/taught Emily until very recently and may well still do... Certainly cheaper
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And thanks Fiona, Megabeast, Chloe and GB
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GB I think 1-3 on three would have been a tad hairy for Sparkie, he was managing a neat 4 every time
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And you did indeed, I promise I will respond - but you know what I'm like
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Kat, thanks and so sorry I didn't respond to your PM last week but by that time I was hoping for good news so didn't want to mislead you or jinx him
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chatter1, must have been your vibes
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And thanks MG
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