Showing posts with label gmha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gmha. Show all posts

Thursday, November 13, 2014

GMHA Winter Warrior Series

These all sound amazing, and I've put them on my calendar. I'll do as many as I can - we'll see!
December 11, 2014: Bits and Bridling
Bring your bits or other headgear and share stories of what worked when (and what didn't!). We will discuss the families and actions of different bits/bridles and how they work. 
January 8, 2015: Yoga for Equestrians
Get ready to have some fun and learn some great exercises to improve your riding. 
February 12, 2015: Trucks and Trailers
What do you drive, what do you haul, and why? Learn about the importance of trailer safety, tips for truck/triler driving, and maintenance. New technologies and innovations. 
March 12, 2015: Horse Agility and Groundwork
Simple and fun things you can do with your horse that will help to prepare you both for riding season, improve your bond, and your horse's manners.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Green Mountain Horse Association, here I come!

Happy Birthday to meeeeeeee!


Also, hooray for boyfriends who take explicit instruction. :)

Monday, January 6, 2014

Green Mountain Horse Association Sleigh Rally

The Green Mountain Horse Association, or GMHA for short, is a really special organization. They steward hundreds of acres of horse property in South Woodstock, Vermont, and host dressage, eventing, hunter/jumper, endurance/trail rides, and driving year-round. Their barns, offices, and other outbuildings are wonderful, and they are set in some of the most beautiful country in an already beautiful state. I've never been to another facility quite like it (and that includes the Kentucky Horse Park).

Yesterday, Hannah and I met up to spectate at the GMHA Sleigh Rally. We weren't sure what we were getting into - other than a stated goal of seeing some cool sleigh driving - but it was an incredibly special day. We saw most of the classes through the day, and I couldn't stop staring at the gorgeous horses, gorgeous sleighs, and seriously fancy outfits. I remain a bit mystified at what they were judging - class list is here, if you're interested - but it was cool to see. Some basics carry over across sport: even driving horses ran the gamut of engaged, obedient, coming through their back, etc. Some things confused me a great deal.

In short: amazing day. If you are even remotely close to GMHA - and we met people who drove 3+ hours to spectate - I can't recommend it enough. We even got lucky with the weather: sunny, clear, and no wind, comfortable weather to stand outside for 4-5 hours even if it was in the high teens/low 20s.

On to the pictures!










The last of the light. Note Hannah taking video in the middle ground. 

The streams at GMHA are pretty even in the winter.


I don't know if the above picture really captures the utter gorgeousness of that particular sleigh, and how seriously fancy the horse was with his matching not-quite-quarter sheet.


I was absolutely enthralled by the way the trailers had been modified to hold carriages and sleighs. Every one was different.







This pony's name was Mr. Wee. I am so not making that up.


Look closely. Yes, yes that is a greyhound in a top hat and Baker sheet rocking the sleigh dog class.


These guys came out of nowhere and absolutely crushed the Currier & Ives class. There were audible gasps in the crowd when they drove over from their trailer to enter the class. It was the only class they did all day, I think. They clearly came to win!



This pony's name was Edward. Look closely. There is a Corgi wearing a scarf in the sleigh.

Later, when they came back in from the cross country pace, the driver pulled him to a halt and announced loudly "That was so much fun! This is the best pony ever! I have to get out and hug him!" And so she leapt out of the sleigh and gave him a huge hug. It. was. adorable.


GO MR. WEE GO. That quarter sheet was about the size of a regular horse saddle pad.

Go and check out Hannah's blog for more photos and a video. Joan of FlatlandsFoto was there, too, and I'm sure she'll post some gorgeous stuff, so if you don't follow her on Facebook you should do so.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

GMHA Events

Note to self: stuff happens in the winter, too!

Here's a great list of upcoming events at the Green Mountain Horse Association through the winter. I'm hoping to go to at least one of the Winter Warrior events (weather allowing) and one of the sleigh rallies. it's a bit far to go all the time, unfortunately, but that January 8 evening on conditioning programs is calling my name.
Winter Warriors

Join us on December 11!

Sign up and put the following dates on your calendar to come and enjoy a ‘horse-lovers’ evening where we can exchange news, share stories, plan for the coming season and learn something too.

The GMHA “Winter Warriors” Club is free, and open to current GMHA members. Members are welcome to bring guests – no charge!  Those attending are encouraged to bring and share nibbles and drinks that we can all enjoy.  Meetings will be on Wednesdays in the GMHA Members’ Room at 5:30pm.

December 11: Breed Versatility: Pros and cons of different breeds for different disciplines       
Bring along: Photos of your horses (past and present) and stories of their accomplishments.

January 8: Conditioning Programs, Interval Training & Cross-Training    
Bring along: Ideas to share about how to promote fitness and minimize injury risk

February 12: Ask the Guest Experts: Panel Discussion    
Bring along: Questions on training problems you would like help with

March 12: Rider/Trainer Psychology
Led by Jane Rodd Ph.D. Bring along: Pen and paper to complete a fun psych evaluation to learn more about yourself.

April 16: Topic TBD by Members             

Come Sleigh with Us!

Join us for our annual Winter Sleigh Driving Series:

January 4: Sleighing Combined Test
January 5: Sleigh Rally
January 18: Sleighing Combined Test

Monday, April 29, 2013

Volunteering at a Competitive Trail Ride

On Sunday, I spent the day volunteering to take pulse and respiration at their spring 15 mile mud ride. I'm always up for learning new things and volunteering at horse events, and Hannah had come up from Massachusetts to volunteer at the ride to learn more about the sport, so I went along with!

We arrived a few minutes before the riders left, and were taught how to take pulse using a stethoscope and to count respiration by watching the horse's flank. I picked up the knack of listening for a pulse pretty quickly, though the heartbeats were both quieter and slower than I had expected. Respiration was much harder! It took an immense amount of concentration and focus to watch a horse's flank and discern an actual breath as opposed to huffing, or quivering, or just shifting weight. I was not expecting that to be the trickiest part.

Riders set off not long after we arrived, at about 9:45, the four drivers first and then riders in 2-3 minute intervals.
Rider staging area looking down toward the barns.
Riders setting off.
After they set off we were briefed a little more fully on the mechanics of doing p&r and met our fellow volunteers - in yet another indication of just how small the Vermont horse world is, one of our fellow volunteers worked at my college (in another part of the state) and knew many of the same people I did.

The hold was all ready with buckets of water for cooling out, larger tubs for drinking, and some people had come ahead and left hay for their horses. Everyone at the hold had brought their dog, it seemed, and the pack played around for a while until the first horses arrived and then we got down to business.
Drivers watering their horses soon after arriving.
I got to do the p&r on the first riding horse that came in, a very professional little chestnut Arab who was hardly winded and way at the front of the ridden pack. Horses came in a few at a time, and then there was a great rush as many came in at the same time. I didn't quite have the knack of approaching riders and talking to them - I kept feeling like I was interfering, though that was clearly the way to do things! I tended to haunt the edges and wait until a horse and rider pair looked like they were ready, then volunteer myself.
Hold area getting busier!
At one point while we were waiting, one rider who had pulled her horse up due to a sudden onset lameness invited me to p&r her horse, who was out of the competition but was a tricky horse to get a heartbeat on because he had an atrioventricular block - a heart murmur, basically. A normal heartbeat has two parts, lub-dub; this horse would have 4-5 regular heartbeats and then a lub with no second half, followed by a long pause, and then lub-dub normally again. It was disconcerting to listen to, and I'm sure the rider was very used to explaining it to people, as if I hadn't known what I was about to hear I would have been seriously confused.
Riders jogging their horses out for the vet check at the hold.
Once the trickle of riders slowed down, we were among the first to hop in the car and get back to the starting area, where riders had 20 minutes to get their horses's p&r back to acceptable levels. There was no disqualifying pulse, but anything over 42 beats per minute meant they lost points, and any "inverted" respiration (ie anything more than once a second) meant we had to call the vet.

Again, I was not great at seeking people out, but I did enjoy the horses I worked on. One man who was clearly very serious about his final check out asked me to come into the stall with the horse several minutes before he was due, and he stood with the horse's head in the back corner, talking to it and stroking it, while I talked to him as well to get the horse used to me. He was also apparently a bit picky about who did the check; I'm not sure what qualified me, but I liked talking to him and his horse was lovely and exceptionally well-behaved, so I was fine with it.

After the horses got their p&r checked at 20 minutes, they had to report in to a vet check, where they jogged out in a line and in a circle, had their backs palpated, and the vet did a general check-over that included listening to gut sounds. I've seen less involved annual physicals - it was really impressive!
Final vet check,; the chestnut is having its back palpated.
When we'd done all the p&rs we could find, we turned in our supplies and sat down for the competitor lunch, which was fantastic. I'd let myself get hungrier than I thought and absolutely demolished a huge plate of food - I nearly fell asleep on the drive home as all the adrenaline crashed at the same time all the food started  digesting!

Overall, it was a great learning experience and a really terrific community of riders to work with. I'd do it again in a hearbeat!