Toting around a western friend. |
When Moe came to live with me, he came from a barn where he'd been kept inside in the evenings, fed Triple Crown feed, and turned out by himself because other horses chased him. He was 8. My family unceremoniously dumped him in our ~10 acre turnout with our other two geldings, fed him sweet feed, and never stalled him. I remember taking him out to hand graze on the front lawn once; he stepped on his lead rope and tried to move his head. He couldn't, obviously, so he reared up and hustled backwards, snorting and rolling his eyes.
In college, I had many friends who, upon finding out I had horses stabled in town, wanted to come ride. "I've ridden horses before!" they'd say. "You haven't ridden horses like mine before," I'd say.
Dutifully showing my student the ropes of dressage. |
When I started teaching lessons, I was nervous to put my student on Moe. She'd had a few years of lessons and was competent, but I could just imagine my enthusiastic horse merrily galloping away with her. He doesn't mean run off with anyone; he thinks that's what you want him to do!
Letting Fat QH's owner get back into the swing of jumping. |
It makes my heart happy to see Moe teaching green riders. I remember him teaching me all those years ago: teaching me to love galloping, to trust my horse to get me over the fence, to be confident in my ability as an equestrian. I'm happy to be able to share him with other people so that they can learn those things, too.
4 comments:
Gotta love when the horse that taught you can keep spreading the lore & teaching others. ☺
Mighty Moe! What a gentleman
Aw, I always love it when I can teach someone off my horse :)
What a guy. :-)
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