Red Barn Run – March 2011

Red Barn Run
March 2011

You know the old story about the battle being lost for the want of a nail?  Mammals don’t function well with foot problems.  The same is true for human mammals.  When I was in my 40’s, I was the runner of the year in Southern Illinois.  Then a trailer hitch failed and dropped a fully loaded band trailer on my left foot and crushed it.  I was told I would never run again and would end up in a wheel chair. The Dr’s were wrong, as I completed two Iron Man Triathlons after their prophecy of doom.  Prayer and hard work won the day and I learned to never give up.  My license plate is “Triagn”.

Shortly before Red Barn Run in Ga., I had to unhook my diesel truck from our stock trailer and hook up the live aboard.  The ball hung up on the transfer as I tried to raise the stock trailer and I found it would not release it.  I stepped on the truck to use my body weight to jostle the ball out of the hitch. The problem was that I stepped on the hitch instead of the bumper.  The truck came lose, rolled back into the chocked stock trailer and pinned my right foot against the stinger of the stock trailer.  I called out to my wife Sandy and told her I was in trouble and needed HELP!  She walked my direction.  I suggested pointedly she should hurry as my “good foot” was being crushed.  She carefully used the brake and gas pedal to pull the truck off of my foot.  It was very bruised, but not broken, as far as I could tell.

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17 degrees and snow in the Shawnee

Okay here goes. The temp here has been silly cold and snowing. I had planned to spend Sunday afternoon riding with a friend and then camping in a cave I had found and then riding all day. Sandy suggested that a guy with asthma trouble might not be wise to sleep on the ground if the wind chill was 10 degrees and besides that Kate would be cold if cross tied all night.

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Winter Riding in the Shawnee

Winter Riding in the Shawnee
Or
2 mares, a wife and a frozen stream

It has been cold and frozen here. To do what we are trying to do, which is to prepare and endurance a variety of gaited horses, we ride several thousand miles a year.  I love it.  Throughout the winter, I ride at night with lights on my helmet after I get home from work.  So, if there are more than a few days I can’t ride, I start to get withdrawals.  Maybe the wrong phrase, but you know what I mean?

Saturday came and I talked a friend into going to the Shawnee with me.  We have a pretty large and hardy gaited group of local riders who will usually go on Saturdays.  All of them said “no”, including my better half Sandy.  I am getting Kate, my favorite twh mare,  ready for another 100 mile ride and she needs the work. My friend Jeff rode another of our TWH mares, Niki. We had a wonderful 11 mile workout with lots of racking.  The trails were just clear enough to see the trail from the surrounding snow and occasional patches of ice.

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Eagle Ranch 2010

Eagle Ranch – 2010

Somehow, I knew the last ride of the year would be special. I had lost my Dad, my brother in law, and Sandy’s favorite uncle shortly before the Thanksgiving day ride and we decided we would rather go ride than look at empty chairs at the table.

We were all ready to go except loading up the three we were taking and as I went to let them catch me the sky opened up into a gully washer deluge. We were into a 3 month drought and this was the moment for it to end.  It rained so hard I was drenched under a poncho. It was about 60 degrees when we left Southern IL.  By the time we hit Springfield Mo., it was snowing. A misunderstanding in the directions, coupled with a road closure turned a 7 hour drive into a 9 hour drive.

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Skymont – 2010

Skymont Nov 2010

The Cumberland Plateau is the southern part of the Appalachian Plateau that stretches into Tennessee.  The plateau averages 420 feet in height and while the views are fantastic, you definitely would not want to ride off of it on a horse.   Skymont is actually a Boy Scout ranch and only allows riding during this ride.

I had a chance to speak on endurance at the national FOSH convention in Louisville which was moderated by Rick Lamb, so Sandy hauled the horses in the big rig down to Tenn  by herself.   My little wife is amazing.  Camping is primitive at Skymont, so you  need to be self contained.  The ride is well attended with about 45 riders in both the 25 mile Limited Distance event and the 50 mile endurance event. Meals were provided by the Boy Scouts at the main lodge.  The trails where vintage old school and by that I mean you followed ribbons in what a friend calls
“bush wacking”  through woods where there was not really a trail.  This makes for a real need to pay attention. However, the trail was the best marked of any event we had ever done.  You would have had to fallen asleep in the saddle to get lost.

One of the challenges of these races is to get the horses ready in the dark pre start and that means getting up around 4:30 am.  We took Blues, my 16 year old MFT racking horse, who was looking for his 10th 50 mile completion for Sandy. The MFT mare she was planning to ride got a stone bruise and, fortunately, we have enough horses ready to provide back up possibilities.  I have been preparing a 5 year old TWH mare named “Jazz” for 6 months for her first 50 mile event.  Jazz is an alpha female.  We bought Jazz as a weanling because Sandy fell in love with her spunky attitude.  Boy , did she get that right.  I did not “break” Jazz, we came to a truce.  The little girl is as tough as nails. She is only 14.2 and 854 lbs but if you asked her, she would tell you she is ten feet tall.

Jazz had completed 2 LDs well and I had 500 miles on her this year going into the event.  I told Sandy to put a breast collar on Blues because of the terrain.  She thought that she would just go ahead and add a crupper.  Then she put a rump rug over it.  Since we had to warm up in the dark I didn’t notice it on him.  Blues had never had a crupper on and decided that something in the dark was trying to eat the underside of his magnificent tail!  During the warm up, he thought he needed to escape the evil butt eating monster and started to bolt off into the woods. Sandy checked him and he started kicking at the crupper.  Jazz was confused by this and thought it best to stand up on her rear legs to get ready to defend herself.

Well, this worked for us during the first pirouette, but during the second one, she decided to do a 180 spin to get ready for the imaginary horse eating bugger. I was on an English saddle and weigh about 170. Jazz weighs 854 and is spinning on two legs. We fell together. During the fall, I managed to clear both stirrups just before the ground greeted me.  I hit the ground solidly but was not seriously hurt. The fact that I was groggy the next day, and it made me glad I had on a helmet.  Did I mention that three people went to Chattanooga, to the hospital, over the weekend from falls?  One had a broken wrist and another had a broken hip.

The start was controlled and about 45 of us went off into the rising sun.  Blues understands what a race is and was pulling on Sandy to get going.  Sandy did not want her arms pulled out of the sockets for 50 miles, so she rode back and put him behind Jazz.  Jazz did super on the first loop and kept moving along easily in her little rack at about 9-10 mph at a heart rate of about 125. There was no problem at the first vet check and both horses were at 60 when we presented them.  We were mid pack and this was just fine with me for Jazz’s first 50.  Sandy was having some blood sugar issues, so I asked her to keep Blue’s with me and Jazz, partly for Jazz, and partly so I could watch Sandy.  One other issue is that Sandy really needs help at the trot out.

The second loop was more of the same.  Much of the “trail” was not really a trail, but was a very well marked jaunt between a series of points in the woods. The views were fantastic. There could have been more water on the course, but considering the drought and how cool the weather was, it was not an issue.

Both horses finished the 3rd loop in the same form and I knew Blues would finish in good form.  My only question was how Jazz would do over the last 13  miles, as it was her first time at the 50 distance.  At mile 45, Sandy and I picked up our speed a bit and carefully watched our heart rate monitors.  We bumped our speed up to 12 mph, which is nothing for Blues.  He has averaged 12.5 mph for 50 miles including stopping on the trail for water.   Sandy let Blues canter a bit on some uphills as it freshens him.  At one point, I even convinced Jazz to break into a gallop.  Her heart rate remained low.  The ride turned out to be 52 miles on my GPS and I did let Jazz walk about a mile at the 50 mile mark.

We finished with a 54 heart rate on Jazz and Blues was at 60 and dropping.  They both did great on their score cards and I was thrilled by Jazz’s performance in her first 50.  She started at 854 lbs and finished at 804 lbs.  I really think our training programs for each horse has worked well and that our supplement program has proven successful.  We have tried to tailor our supplement regimen to the individual horse.

We hope that they hold this ride again, because we want to go back.  The level of competition was very high and it was beautiful.  Jazz proved she could handle the distance and I was very proud of her.  She finished 26th out of about 45 starters and her lowest vet score was b+.  Sandy says she does not want to do another 50 on Blues where she has to hold him back the whole time.  She took one for the team this time.

The ride home back to Illinois had its own excitement as a new trailer tire blew out on interstate 24. I was following Sandy in my little Toyota and dodged the separated tire.  I then got to figure out how to change a trailer tire with two horses standing over it and cars streaming by on the highway.  It was amazing how many people rudely failed to pull into the left lane. The end result was a great weekend and good results and we will definitely go back to Skymont.
Rack on my friends.
Keith

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