My lessons with Flossie, a roan Standardbred mare |
FLOSSIE'S 71ST LESSON It was a bitter-sweet lesson this morning with Flossie. She not only didn?t want to walk off when I first mounted, but she balked several times throughout her lesson. I had to really wail on her with the crop to get her going each time. I?ve been thinking about getting myself a pair of spurs, and after today, I?ve decided for sure. Get this; when I did get her going, she gave me the slowest, smoothest, steadiest gaits; both at the pace, and at the canter, and in both directions. We did some sweet circles too. In fact her mouth was wet when I pulled the bit off her. She likes to go around in circles when she?s on the bit; she co-operates fully. If I?m off, or allow her to go off, she gets flustered and uncooperative. Luckily I was riding much better this week. I thought she was afraid to pass a blue tarp that was in the grass on the other side of the paddock near the road, but when a man stopped his car to pick it up for me, (he saw me trying, but I couldn't reach it), I shook it at Flossie and threw it over her neck and she didn't even bat an eye. On the ground, however, was another story; so I kept trying to get her to walk up to it. I took her up to it on foot at one point, mounted, and asked her to walk by; she refused until I spanked the daylights out of her. Gary has a mare with a colt a few weeks older than Bambi?s turned out in the paddock with Flossie, Bambi, and Bambi?s colt. I took lots of photos. Gary has a horse in Magic Harry's old stall, not the same horse that was in there last week, who has an infection on his neck. He had been inoculated andit's now ulcered. I want to cry. Gary doesn't even care. (According to Des). |