I went to the barn yesterday and saddled up Moe. He hasn't been ridden in about a week and a half, so I intended to run through some dressage work and hop over a couple of fences. Our dressage work was okay. He spent most of the ride behind my leg; when I ask him to get on the bit, he does, but his impulsion drops to just above zero! Now I remember why I have a little pair of nubby spurs in my tack trunk.
I decided to jump him over the split-rail fence and the log pile just a couple of times. The last few times we've jumped, it's been a mixed bag. Sometimes our distances are good, sometimes they're long, and they're rarely short.
Well. Yesterday was just a huge, awful mess. Every distance to the split rail fence was terrible. Every distance was also short. At one point, I felt like Moe was heaving himself over a puissance wall! I tried my very best to be quiet and supportive with my hands and legs, but without fail, every approached ended with us chipping in.
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"The only reason you didn't fall is because I'm applying for sainthood." |
Moe isn't a horse who usually refuses, so I knew I must be doing something really wrong. I set him to it again, only to have him slide to a halt. I couldn't even be very annoyed with him. I sighed, picked up a canter, and very firmly put my left leg and hand on him- he sailed over it (after chipping in) and I called it a day.
Definitely not one of our finer moments, but it made me grateful I have a horse who'll usually pull me through a bad distance. He's forgiven for stopping a couple of times, because I'd be sick of awkward jumps too!
4 comments:
I do that sometimes with Simon. It's like the fugly just keeps growing jump after jump and it's hard to break the chip pattern.
I always feel like the less I mess with Henry and the more pace I get (and keep constant to the fences), the better our distances are lol! But some days I can't do anything right!!!
Yes! Exactly! The fugly just won't stop!!
I think yesterday was just one of those days!!
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