Ambers Echo
Still wittering on
Is the quality too bad to see? CJD’s test sheet - blank obviously! Just before she came in.
Is the quality too bad to see? CJD’s test sheet - blank obviously! Just before she came in.
I would have been no good whatsoever as a writer after wineWhat really surprised me at this level though was that 2 riders saluted with their whip hand. Which was very expensive. It was a very educational day. And wow does Somerford look after you! 3 course lunch with wine!! And bizarrely, my dressage judge and I discovered we both lived in HK in the 80s and learned to ride on racehorses. And had friends in common from the 80s! Small world

That is such a shame! You'd think after that issue was pretty high profile at nationals everyone would have checked and re-checked their bits... I know I didFell foul of the ‘arrow facing the wrong way on NS bits’ issue. Such a shame.
He's written a lovely post about you on his FB pageBrain fried after a joint clinic with Joe M. So grateful for the opportunity and hope people enjoyed it. Feedback has been positive.
Now home ready to get prepped for BS tomorrow - 5:30 alarm call. Looking forward to collapsing in a heap Sunday afternoon and chilling on Monday
Palo that is fab and I’d said far more fun than a fun ride.
I feel very far out of the usual training and competing loop but I did want to post about Alw's 'working' life lol. As we are so far from competition venues and because of other things too, competing simply isn't on our horizon right now BUT I am training and working away with all 3 horses that are in work (2 of mine and my OH's lovely horse). Alw is currently being developed as my shepherding horseOH's horse is already skilled in that department but it is sometimes useful to have 2 mounted and of course it means that Alw gets to do fun stuff on her own too. Cattle work may be next lol. But shepherding sheep from the saddle is a skill of it's own. Horse and rider simply must be quiet - less assertive than when dealing with cattle and much more sensitive to the sheep's flight distance and their propensity to scatter in amongst the gorse. Alw is doing so well at understanding that if I am looking for a lamb/ewe, her job is to keep moving forward carefully without much input and to respond really super quickly when asked - all on a loose rein. I do school transitions all the time but it really reveals those weaknesses (and strengths) when we put that into a real life situation. The other thing I am really proud of is how incredibly careful yet bold Alw is over the terrain. She is totally steady and I trust her judgement about teeny sheep tracks/boggy bits/boulders etc so much now that I really don't have to worry about the fine detail of the track if i am trying to focus on particular sheep/problems etc. Ground tying is still a work in progress but on the whole if I am out of the saddle, she will just follow me!! Not sure how that will pan out the day that the hill ponies try to take her off for a party though...Most of today's work was done at trot strangely but we enjoyed some speedy canters over open ground and plenty of relaxing walking too. It's not much but I think we are both really enjoying it and it feels really 'right' and 'proper'. I didn't even get FOMO at my mates going for a fun ride lol!! Brava Alw.
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