Winter is… here

The first snow last year was Dec 7th.  This morning, we awoke to this :

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It’s more than two weeks earlier than last year.  Friends who have been here longer than us are saying things like “It’s very early” and “I’ve never seen snow this early before!”  I’m just hoping it’s not an early warning for an extra severe winter.  Gulp.

I’ve been looking at the late roses in the garden for the last week or so.  Maybe I should have picked them…

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Having sympathised with the roses, I took Cookie for a walk in the snow.  She loves it.  There’s lots of crazy “dragging her belly through the snow.”

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Really.  Lots & lots of it.

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And some crazy-dog-fun running around, too.  Whee!

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We visited the local lavender field

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and then carried on down the bike path.

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I think this year’s Christmas card is sorted!  Comtois horse and donkey in Provence :

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In the afternoon, I went up to the horses.  It was c-c-c-cold up there

DSCN4670I have to confess, I have caved.  Aero is now sporting a pretty blue rug.  By the end of last winter, he had lost condition, but it happened so slowly I wasn’t aware of it.  This winter, he’s going to wear a rug whenever it’s wet and cold or windy.

DSCN4671And Flurry?  Flurry is half Aero’s age and has twice as much hair.  He doesn’t need a rug right now.

Anyway, my plan was for some…um…routine maintenance.

DSCN4673Following advice from the Chronicle of the Horse forums, I squidged a bit of KY Jelly Up There and took him off to the round pen for some exercise.  Apparently it loosens up the Guck.  We ran through our Equitation Ethologique stuff.

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He was really good and really tuned in to me.  Clever boy!

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Then we went back to the stables, I warmed up some water and… um… this lady says it far better than I ever could!

Anyhoo, we’re still talking.  That’s good.

On a side note,  to anyone out there who does sheath cleaning on a regular basis.  Just inside the entrance to his sheath, on the tummy/forehand side, it feels very ridgey and uneven.  Is this normal?  Aero has a history of dermatitis Up There.  I’m reading the ridginess and unevenness as continuing dermatitis, but I’m wondering… I slathered a bit of derma-gel on it anyway… think I’ll check out Flurry tomorrow and see if he feels the same.  Jayses, both of my horses will be getting on to the SPCA…

Seeing as I was on a roll with this routine maintenance stuff, I trimmed his feet too, focussing on rounding off the edges on his front feet where there is some white line separation going on.  I’ve also just started packing his very-deep-sulci with some tea-tree oil soaked cotton wool.  It’s all looking very clean right now, but maybe that’s because of the snow.  I’ll withhold judgement for another week or so.

I took some photos of some of the other inmates enjoying the snow.  First, there was Bubu, the two year old anglo/SF, who was romping around his field, looking for someone to play with.

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Next there was Kamsin, an Arabian horse endurance horse, who was convinced my camera was edible.

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Then there was Max, Alexandrine’s TB who is an Equitation Ethologique star (6th in French championships! Woohoo!)  I think he is envious of Flurry’s moustache and decided to try to make a falsie.

DSCN4709He just can’t keep a straight face!

Finally, there’s my lovely boys…

DSCN4692…with Aero saying “I think you have more carrots in your right hand pocket. You’d better check.  Or else.”

On the way home, Le Grand Luberon was looking pretty damn impressive.

DSCN4711Yup.  Life is good.

PS For more photos, visit Tails From Provence on Facebook.

Half-passing towards Le Dressage!

My 300th post!  And I’m so happy to have exciting news to fill it up with!

I had a really brilliant lesson with Aero this morning.  Alexandrine asked what I wanted to do, in-hand work or riding and I said “Ride!”  Aero has been feeling good recently, but I haven’t videoed him for ages so I have no idea what we look like and I really wanted an eyes-on-the-ground opinion.

I explained to Alexandrine that it’s best for him to warm up in walk for a good bit, and that I usually do plenty of leg-yielding as part of his warm-up.  We discussed a problem I’ve been having with him, too.  When I keep my hands in this new-fangled high position she insists on (more correct. peh!  what’s wrong with having your hands in your groin, that’s what I want to know!) Aero unfailingly comes above the bit every time we go from halt to walk.  Persist, she said.  Just keep keep the contact, even if you have to raise your hands higher to do so, keep your leg on and he’ll figure it out.  And, do you know, during the course of the lesson, he improved.

Anyway, we proceeded to do our normal walk warm-up and she helped me improve the angle of the leg-yield on both reins.  Then we picked up trot.  His trot was super!  Round, forward and bouncy – I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to sit to it!  Once we had trotted a little on each rein, we went back to leg-yielding, in trot this time.  The left rein was ok, then we switched to the right rein and found that he was leading with his quarters.  So we tried to fix that and then found I was losing the bend;  improved that a bit and then she said he wasn’t bringing his left hind over enough.  “Try it in half-pass” she suggested.  (That’s appuyer in French)

So I carefully rode a demi-volte at the corner and asked Aero to move to the right and stay bent to the right and voilá!  My first ever half-pass!  For three strides, before I lost the bend, but it was a start!  Next time, he offered pirouette – no, Aero, that’s not what I’m looking for!!  We worked on it a couple of times and I really got the hang of it (Aero got the hang of it years ago) and then tried it on the left rein.  His easy side, obviously, it was perfect first time.  Well, not a dressage TEN perfect, but it was a bloody half-pass, right?

We went back to leg-yielding in trot again, just to prove that I am finally developing some sort of feel for where his butt is in relation to his shoulders.  Perfect.  Time to finish, I said, even if we haven’t done a full hour.  He’s been great.  Alexandrine agreed, and then added, thoughtfully “There’s a dressage competition in Manosque on the 1st if you’d like to go.”

EEK!  Yes I’d like to go… I’d like to bring Flurry, I quickly added, for my own peace of mind… but what about my FFE licence?

“Oh, we’d better sort that out straight away, I’ll do it today,” she said.

I thought of another problem, of course.  My trailer is still uninsured and unregistered.  Could she take me in the truck?

“Yes! I’m just taking the two little ponies, there’s room for Aero.”

Um no, not Aero, Flurry…

I’m pretty sure she thinks that Aero could do quite well.  And I agree – if he went like he did today, he would do well anywhere, but it would be my first time ever competing him.  One “first” at a time is enough for me, so I’d rather do my first French dressage competition on my little stalwart, Flurry.  I’m going to be nervous enough as it is!

On that note, does anyone know what’s the French for “I’m sh*tting myself”?

While you ponder on that, I’m off to print out the layout of a 20×60 arena and the FFE Club 3 Grand Prix Reprise.  And before anyone gets excited, it’s like Prelim level, it’s not a Grand Prix in this sense of the word :

But I can dream…

 

 

Feeling Surprised…

(and somewhat undeserving).

I’ve been a member of HayNet for about two years now, maybe a little less.  At the time, my friend Anne and I had set up our Wanderly Wagons blog to document our experiences as we went to France for four months and then rode 500km in a generally homeward direction.

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Anne & Gigi, me & Flurry, day 2 of Le Big Trek!

New to blogging, I found I loved the Bloggosphere, and I enjoyed reading about other people and their horse lives.  I found a few horse blogs via google, but it was hard work as many of the horsey blogs out there have been lying untouched for some time – I wanted to find current, uptodate blogs.  I stumbled across HayNet and my search was over!  Sam had done my work for me and had found a whole load of bloggers and general horse nuts.  I signed up and the rest was history!  Anne and I got loads of support from HayNet members as we did our trek, and I feel I’ve made some real friends there.

Fast forward to now and my current blog.  It started life as Halt, Salute and… because I was competing with Dressage Ireland for the last couple of times in the summer of 2012, just before the LSH and I moved back to France.

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Earlier this year, I changed its name to Tails from Provence, because it seemed to be becoming less horsey and more about life in Provence, and there certainly wasn’t any Halting and Saluting going on!  I wasn’t entirely happy about this, though.  I missed my virtual horse friends.

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Ten days ago, I actually said to the LSH that I was going to try to find something horsey to mention no matter what I was blogging about, because I felt I was moving away from my buddies at HayNet (if I write an unhorsey post, I don’t share it there, it just doesn’t seem right!).

So with this feeling of having become less and less of a horse blogger, you can imagine my surprise when I heard I’d been nominated as one of the ten candidates for HayNet’s Blogger of the Year!  All I can say is thanks a million to Sam, first of all for setting up HayNet as a sort of central repository for all kinds of Horse Blogs, and secondly for allowing me to be included on the list of potential Bloggers of the Year!  Click here to see the other nine nominees, this link will take you to HayNet and you can check them all out there.

And if you decide that you want to vote for anyone (ah, ya know, whoever takes your fancy…) click here… but can I suggest you join HayNet while you’re at it?  You’ll find a whole new world of Horsey Social Media – think Facebook, but without all the annoying crap that shows up in your newsfeed.