Big Ben
Well-Known Member
I'm hoping that others will be able to share my sheer joy at my lesson yesterday.
First Ben loaded like a charm, finally I have got him over his loading issues, big bonus there.
Hauled him out to an arena he has never been to, where they hold rodeo events, so there are strange smells of bulls, and lurking just inside the door the roping dummy, a very scary sight, poor Ben, he had eyes on stalks at that point.
I spent a while just walking him around seeing the sights, then we lunged him for a while. Then I got to long line him for a long time, which meant I put in a lot of walking, and finally it was time to ride.
Ben stood at the mounting block like a champ, I got on, and we just stood still for a few minutes. They brought in one of the school horses to keep Ben company and we walked around after him for a while, then we overtook him, Ben was walking out like a good one. This was so much nicer than my last ride on him, this trainer has me leaving his head absolutely alone, and just getting him thinking and going forward, and it worked really well.
We tried a couple of rounds at trot on each rein, his trot is humongous, I have never ridden anything like it before, I ended up holding a handful of mane, trying to get with it
after the second round I managed to relax and go with it, and at that we called it quits and just let him loose rein walk to cool off. So rode for all of about 20 mins, out of the hour we were there, just about the right time for both of us. I really like the new trainer, I think she will look after Ben and I as we progress, and she is happy to help us both back to fitness.
I hope you can share the joy of one small step in the right direction, there is a long way to go, and a lot of ground work miles for me to put in, but we have started. It has given a huge boost to my confidence that Ben is the right horse for me, and to my determination to become the right person for him, we WILL be a team by the summer.
Oh and have a laugh as well, I had just got Ben up to the block to mount, when the cowboys started arriving for the afternoon rodeo practice, absolutely perfect timing, so the place was alive with horses being brought in through the back door, guys dropping saddles and huge kit bags on the floor in the gallery, so lots of distractions and a growing and unwanted audience, but both Ben and I managed to ignore all that, and concentrate on the job in hand.
First Ben loaded like a charm, finally I have got him over his loading issues, big bonus there.
Hauled him out to an arena he has never been to, where they hold rodeo events, so there are strange smells of bulls, and lurking just inside the door the roping dummy, a very scary sight, poor Ben, he had eyes on stalks at that point.
I spent a while just walking him around seeing the sights, then we lunged him for a while. Then I got to long line him for a long time, which meant I put in a lot of walking, and finally it was time to ride.
Ben stood at the mounting block like a champ, I got on, and we just stood still for a few minutes. They brought in one of the school horses to keep Ben company and we walked around after him for a while, then we overtook him, Ben was walking out like a good one. This was so much nicer than my last ride on him, this trainer has me leaving his head absolutely alone, and just getting him thinking and going forward, and it worked really well.
We tried a couple of rounds at trot on each rein, his trot is humongous, I have never ridden anything like it before, I ended up holding a handful of mane, trying to get with it
I hope you can share the joy of one small step in the right direction, there is a long way to go, and a lot of ground work miles for me to put in, but we have started. It has given a huge boost to my confidence that Ben is the right horse for me, and to my determination to become the right person for him, we WILL be a team by the summer.
Oh and have a laugh as well, I had just got Ben up to the block to mount, when the cowboys started arriving for the afternoon rodeo practice, absolutely perfect timing, so the place was alive with horses being brought in through the back door, guys dropping saddles and huge kit bags on the floor in the gallery, so lots of distractions and a growing and unwanted audience, but both Ben and I managed to ignore all that, and concentrate on the job in hand.
