Welcome to Barnmice and our little group. As you no doubt noticed, the group is very small - not a surprise, and not very active - also not a surprise. I had the best of intentions starting the group, but now it seems we actually have less to talk about than I anticipated.
I guess I just get tired sometimes being the only guy in the barn, and the only guy I know personally who even rides. At local shows, I occasionally see a male trainer/coach working with a competitor, but they seem very unfriendly and unapproachable. I don't know what that's about.
I don't compete, but I attend quite a few dressage events here in South Eastern Ontario, and I have had some dressage training in the distant past.
My primary riding activity is trails and pleasure, with occasional forays into the arena - outdoor or indoor depending on the weather for training and refresher rides. My horse is a retrained standardbred. I never set out to have a standardbred but after I started volunteering for the Ontario Standardbred Adoption Society, it was suggested I should "walk the walk" and luckily there was a horse that the (then) coordinator of the organization said was the one horse in the program she would personally choose.
He's a really good horse - does everything and is incredibly responsive. He's also not one of those old fashioned clunky headed standies, which is good as I am more used to thoroughbreds and warmbloods. I love him a lot and we ride together four or five times a week, sometimes even every day.
I looked at your blog, but didn't have time to read much yet. I will. I did pay attention to the food items - the salad recipe and your breakfast sandwiches. I guess weight and body image are issues for many of us and I'm so aware that the major international dressage riders are almost always thin - like Edward Gal. Why can't I look like him?
That reminds me of a topic I have had a chance to discuss with a couple of guys, and that is where do major male competitors come from. They seem to pop up out of nowhere. As the husband of one of my contacts said "they certainly aren't in Pony Club".
I'm attaching a recent picture of my horse, Zuckie (Kendal Patrol).
Jackie Cochran
Welcome to Barnmice Christopher!
I am a handicapped (MS) Forward Seat rider ala Littauer. I really liked your blog on Stabilization!
I look forward to your contributions on Barnmice.
Oct 6, 2011
John Freeman
Hi Christopher,
Welcome to Barnmice and our little group. As you no doubt noticed, the group is very small - not a surprise, and not very active - also not a surprise. I had the best of intentions starting the group, but now it seems we actually have less to talk about than I anticipated.
I guess I just get tired sometimes being the only guy in the barn, and the only guy I know personally who even rides. At local shows, I occasionally see a male trainer/coach working with a competitor, but they seem very unfriendly and unapproachable. I don't know what that's about.
I don't compete, but I attend quite a few dressage events here in South Eastern Ontario, and I have had some dressage training in the distant past.
My primary riding activity is trails and pleasure, with occasional forays into the arena - outdoor or indoor depending on the weather for training and refresher rides. My horse is a retrained standardbred. I never set out to have a standardbred but after I started volunteering for the Ontario Standardbred Adoption Society, it was suggested I should "walk the walk" and luckily there was a horse that the (then) coordinator of the organization said was the one horse in the program she would personally choose.
He's a really good horse - does everything and is incredibly responsive. He's also not one of those old fashioned clunky headed standies, which is good as I am more used to thoroughbreds and warmbloods. I love him a lot and we ride together four or five times a week, sometimes even every day.
I looked at your blog, but didn't have time to read much yet. I will. I did pay attention to the food items - the salad recipe and your breakfast sandwiches. I guess weight and body image are issues for many of us and I'm so aware that the major international dressage riders are almost always thin - like Edward Gal. Why can't I look like him?
That reminds me of a topic I have had a chance to discuss with a couple of guys, and that is where do major male competitors come from. They seem to pop up out of nowhere. As the husband of one of my contacts said "they certainly aren't in Pony Club".
I'm attaching a recent picture of my horse, Zuckie (Kendal Patrol).
Cheers,
JohnZuckieHeadCrop10-11.jpg
Oct 6, 2011