Showing posts with label eventer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eventer. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Strapping on the life preserver
Wow, can't believe it's been almost 2 months since I updated the blog! I've had QUITE a few good rides, I'm still riding Kiara every Wednesday and LOVING it. I got to ride Trainer's CCI3* horse a few weeks ago ... NOT at the walk for an hour, but for an hour w/t/c. He's coming back from an injury and has a very specific regimen of dressage stuff he's supposed to engage in on a daily basis, and I learned what it felt like to REALLY get a 17.1 hand horse trotting forward enough to a good dressage test. Let's just say it's NOT Like hacking a hunter ;)
Did a few gymnastics over the last few weeks. Cantered through 5 one strides with a placing pole; that was FUN, and good. The jumps ended up around 3', so a fun ride. Another gymnastic I did was trot a vertical with 5 placing poles; it began as 2', ended up at 3'6. WOW! She was amazing through it, as the jump got higher, I found I could really just sit still and she was right there for me. The cantering gymnastic was trotting in; a placing pole to an x, one stride to a vertical, one stride to a TALL crossrail, 2 strides to another TALL crossrail. She was actually pretty spooky, and I really had to work to help her make it through the distance AND keep her from getting wiggly. Trainer didn't make the last big X an oxer since Kiara is a little ... um, FAT right now. Besides, she was pretty looky-loo with those tall crossrails.
I titled my blog post "Strapping on the life preserver" because today I FINALLY zipped myself into my xc vest! It has a belt that clicks in the front, and I always feel like I'm putting on a life vest, lol. I've been riding for a year and a half at a fabulous facility with a FULL xc course, Intro to Prelim, but I've never ridden out on it. I had a chance once, but it was knowing full well I'd have to be "beating" the horse over every jump, so I bowed out of that one.
2 weeks ago, I hacked Kiara down the course and rode her on the tracks between fences at a walk. Holy heck, she felt like she'd spook and spin right out from under me pretty much every second of the ride. She spooked at the tall mustard growing, the tall grass, the jumps, the wind, the rustling of leaves ... she felt VERY tense. I kept at it until she FINALLY stretched down into my hands and took a deep breath. Back to the barn we went.
Today, I showed up when trainer said to, only to be told I was supposed to be ON at that time, not just arriving. Grrrr. So I had to run to the pasture, grab Kiara, knock the dirt off, and rush rush rush. I worked myself up a little bit, because I'd hoped to somewhat zen out, but it was not to be. To top things off, I could NOT find my neck strap, so I grabbed a loose stirrup leather and put it on, but it was much tighter that I typically like; however, it was better than nothing.
As we walked down, she was working HERSELF up, head up and snorting. We made our way down, and she spooked at the other horse that was already down there throwing a hissy fit. We made our way past the other horse, found a track that wound through the mustard, and picked up a trot. We approached a series of jumps, and she spooked. Approached more jumps, another spook. Kept going, and she finally began to focus on the job at hand. I made it all the way to the end of that particular lane, and had some room to work back and forth a little. There was an Intro log right by the start box. VERY tiny. Walkable in fact. So, we walked over it both ways. She relaxed a little more. Trotted back the other way with MUCH less spooking this time, turned around, and walked the log again. No biggie! Trotted over it both ways. I snagged the neck strap just in case, but she hopped over with no drama. Landed with a bit of a head shake and a crow hop, but came right back to me. Walked over 2 more Intro logs on the way back, and she was starting to feel pretty good.
Made it back to Trainer who was at the smaller water complex. She went over my position at the canter. I had to bridge my reins, lean INTO her neck, move my stirrups more towards "home" position, and stand straight up to stop. I felt VERY awkward leaning on her neck, but Trainer insisted this way allows the horse to just fall into rhythm and YOU not to pick and pull on the way to the jump. Makes sense to me! There was another tiny Intro log that we trotted over, and I worked on keeping my knuckles in her neck the whole time. Strung together a baby hanging log, canter thru the water. She CHARGED into the water w/out a single hesitation. Trainer told me to go trot an Intro Palisade jump on a path we hadn't gone down and gave me the "rules" on the course for when a horse stops. You clear it 3 times, and you GET THE JOB DONE. I gulped a little, headed to the jump, and she was so busy spooking at the mustard that upon arrival at the jump, she popped her shoulder and attempted to canter right by it. I pulled her up, put her nose right on the middle of it, and reapproached. She hopped over it big and crow hopped on the landing side, but we were over. Came again and it was better. Came the 3rd time and no problem.
Strung together log at the water, turn and go thru water, over hanging log, then down over an arched Intro log about half way down my warm up lane. She ate the distance to the log and b/c it was so small practically tripped over it. After the hanging log, she tried to crow hop so hard that Trainer hollered at me to fix it, but I was so busy laughing I couldn't do anything about it. Finished up by doing the hanging log into the water to a BN coop, then on around to a BN green painted roll top type jump. Coming to the coop, I sat down, got in the "back seat", pressed my knuckles in her her neck, and she jumped it well despite being a little surprised. The turn to the rolltop was a PERFECT spot for her to duck out to the right b/c it was off a left hand turn, but I sat back, growled, closed my leg, and OVER she went! I walked her back to Trainer on a loose rein w/ LOTS of pats and praise, then we did that one more time for good measure. The 2nd time, she was like a BEAST. Flew over the hanging log, charged through the water, took the coop like a star, and was looking for the center of the rolltop. GOOD GIRL! I had SO much fun, she was GREAT. Pleased, proud, and excited to go out again soon!
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
It's PAST time for a little update!
Well. Sorry for the lapse in coverage lately! I've been travelling to FL for work, and the time change has had me all tired as soon as I get off work. I'm sure the time change hasn't been helping things either! I've ridden a few tricky horses at Event Barn that a year ago, I would NOT have achieved good results on. Still to this day I tend to go to my hands before I go to my seat, but thanks to Trainer, I've begun to slowly back away from pulling so much. I rode a tricky dressage pony last week that kicked my butt! He picks up this AWFUL half tranter thing that feels so yucky. And when I put my leg on he just wants to canter. And when I tried to hold contact, he just stiffened his jaw against me and went around like a 16.1 hand moose. Ugh. After about 10 minutes, I was actually really frustrated and questioning my ability to "ride ANYTHING on the flat". These dressage horses really are MUCH different than the hunter rides I'm more used to.
Trainer was finally able to turn her attention to me and help me, so after about 15 more minutes, I was FINALLY able to get some semblance of a nice, round trot. LOW hands, but still have elbows bent, shoulders back, LOTS of half halting, but NO pulling. Wow. I actually felt like how it feels to physically push a wheel barrow uphill while riding this horse. I thought the feeling of PUSHING a wheel barrow on a horse was impossible. Nope, in fact, when you're properly riding a dressage horse, you should ALWAYS feel like you're pushing a wheel barrow! His canter was actually quite lovely, I had no problems with that; it's always that trot work that's hard for me to REALLY nail and do it perfectly correctly. At the end, I felt like a tired, sore wet noodle, but I got pony going nice and forward and round, so it was all good:)
I've had some LOVELY rides on the mare, most notably after switching up her bit. S ordered a litle 2 ring gag bit, and I slapped that puppy on my bridle ASAP. Switched her from a running martingale to a standing with the gag because I've always thought pressure on a gag rein to bring a head down is silly. Yes, I know you're supposed to thread just the snaffle rein through the ring, but with a 2 ring elevator, you ALWAYS have some gag action; it's not like a normal snaffle gag. The standing has done it's job perfectly. The one or two times she threw her head in my face, it kept her from smashing it, so I'm happy :)
Last week, I worked with Jade on counter canter for the first time. I only did it on the long sides. I practiced picking up correct lead/counter lead on the long side, switching up which one I wanted. She got it 90% of the time, I was very happy with her. I think her LH is getting stronger, because I used to have problems picking up her right lead. I still do on occasion, but she's gotten better. Got in some VERY good lateral work from her, as well as a bit of shoulder in. I decided to break down the jump work for her and trotted virtually everything, circling inside the lines so we didn't have the shoulder bulge and drag, and EVERY jump was 2'6/2'9. Height is NO problem for her, and the jumps don't bother her. If I could just FIX her in between bulge and run off crap she'd be AMAZING to jump around. Little gag bit worked GREAT and when she decided to land and bolt, I sat her on her BUTT so fast it made her head spin. Finished up with a lovely track with good approaches, quiet landings and a great attitude.
Most recently, she flatted up nice and quiet so I threw in a few crossrails, which she took to beautifully. Did NOT canter on the flat, just gradually progressed from random x's to a full course. I cantered EVERYTHING. We had one issue where we often have issues, coming left lead away from the in gate. She bulges and drags right to the rail. It's dangerous, it's stupid, I don't know WHY she does that. So I kicked her butt to the point that she got upset every time we came around the corner and began hopping up and down so I just patted her, walked until she chilled, then jumped the jump out of a trot. I didn't venture to that spot any more, but I did have a few issues with jumping a line or 2 once she got tired. Jumps the first jump great, just hauls and drags right on landing, never sighting in on the 2nd jump in the line. So, I trotted in, cantered out after jumping in, circling right, jumping in, circling left, etc about 5 times so when I went straight ahead it surprised her and she was beautifully straight so I quit there. LOVE the brakes, speed was not ever an issue. Even though she can still frustrate the heck out of me, she is 148% improved over the mare she was a year ago. I would LOVE to run her xc, I think she will LOVE it because at the BN/N level there's no need to worry about lines. She can gallop in, gallop away, no worries. It's currently on the bucket list :)
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Sunday, September 14, 2014
Positive Progress is always good :)
Well, Ms. Mare is making positive progress, as is the Muffin Man w/ his kidlet! They made their first Recog. T debut this weekend, and finished a strong 6th place :) Dressage score was a 32.5, then they had 3 rails in stadium. I know from experience that if you're a little nervous, sometimes he hangs a leg and catches a rail, whether it's 3'3 or 2'. Probably some nerves there, since she had not ONE rail in their T CT they did a few weeks ago. Clear with a few seconds of time on XC. Poplar Place has some scary looking T XC jumps, so to jump around clean is amazing! That means Tiki man in ALL his Recog outings has only had ONE XC jump penalty, and that was at his very first one for both of us, and I can tell you for a fact that HUGE nerves were in play that day. So proud!
As for Jade, rode her last Sat, and it was quite literally the very first time I ever approached every jump with a LOOSE rein. Normally, I'm trying hard not to pull on her as we head into the jumps, but I definitely always have contact. Last week, it was hands forward and kick. So proud of her, that was a huge step in the right direction. Jumped everything w/ a little bit of height, and she didn't care at all. The one jump she actually gave a little bit of attention to was the little red box she's hopped over a few times. I let her first steep crossrail oxer, and she didn't even LOOK at that one, lol. I was expecting her to make a fuss at that one, but nope!
During her flatwork, I purposely came across a diagonal and asked for a change; a little late right to left, but PERFECT left to right; opposite of Tiki man! I did just the one change each direction, then didn't ask for any more. Lots of pats and praise. Didn't get to ride at all Wed due to having to help my son get his school life organized, but I'm hoping this week is finally back to normal. Excited to be making forward, positive progress w/ the mare :)
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Sunday, August 24, 2014
Busy, busy, busy!
Love my smile here. This was the first time I REALLY felt her trot to the base and rock back nice and easy:) |
Rode Ms. Jade last Sat. She was pretty much a rock star. She's been on the back burner as well until after the show b/c all my free time is spent planning, writing emails, trying to coordinate EVERYTHING on my one day off, but I have ridden her on my off Saturdays. A few weeks ago, we did the grid and she was so amazing. Last week, I decided to mix things up and canter. A LOT! I haven't been doing a LOT of canter with her, really it's been a lot of trot. And her trot is MUCH better than Tiki's was. (I say WAS b/c his new kidlet is out there scoring 32's in dressage, woot woot!!!) She CAN get on the strong, quick side, but lately that tendency has been pretty much non-existent.
Anyway, I w/t her and she was good, so I picked up the canter. All was well; her bulging and dragging on the flat has gotten WAY better, and she's learned how to respond reasonably well to a half halt. So ... I cantered her to a jump! Landed, circled, cantered some more. She was so shocked, she backed herself off, lol :) All in all, I spent about 12 minutes (I checked my watch) just cantering different jumps. I cantered tall crossrails, the red box w/ a pole, a small brush box, a gate w/ a pole, and a vertical sitting about 2'3. There was even a crossrail/vertical/vertical combo. 1 stride to a 3-4 stride. Eh, that was just OK. It was set heading STRAIGHT to the barn, and in the area where she likes to pop that shoulder at the last second and DRAG to the rail. She quickened a few times through it, but also had a few really good moments. I had the 2nd vertical up at 2'3, the 1st crossrail was TINY, and the 3rd element was a 3'3 crossrail. A little awkward, but overall not too bad.
Not going to lie, there were a few moments where I had to literally stick my right spur in her on landing, and I did have to really haul her around a few times turning left (that RIGHT bulge, ugh!), but for the most part I was very excited. The jumps weren't an issue at ALL, it's now just working to improve the overall quality of the canter and eliminate that drag to the right once and for all. The spooking has become very much a non-issue, and her work ethic has improved tremendously. Very proud of the mare! S will be taking her to her very first OFF grounds show next weekend :) I'm very sad I'll miss it since I'll be working my tail off all weekend at Event Barn. Until next time!
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Saturday, August 2, 2014
On horses maturing
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First grid! |
I went through it with Tiki, and now I'm goin through it with Jade ... maturing :) I believe maturity has nothing to do with age; it has everthing to do with "getting with the program". When I first sat on Jade last year, the thought of jumping never even crossed my mind. I remember vividly with Tiki watching a friend jump a haybale at Joyce's and wondering if we would ever get to that point. When the horse underneath you is so inconsistent on the flat, it's hard to think about all 4 feet off the ground, but when you're an eventer that thought eventually crosses your mind!
I'm not afraid of flatting horses. Unless they're flat out dangerous, I feel as though I can ride through most anything. So over the past months, Jade has pulled every evasive trick in the book; spooking, bulging, above the bit, behind the bit, under the bit, fast, slow, jigging, etc. But through it all, I've remained consistent in my treatment of her. Leg on, insist she take the contact, don't take "no" for an answer ... and it's paid off! S can comfortably w/t/c/jump her now, and when we first began this journey, she was actually riding her in a western saddle for security! I think it's been a combination of consistent riding, warmer weather, and supplements.
When I get on her, I put on my leg and push her up into my hand. No jigging, no curling behind the bit, and a MUCH improved work ethic :) I wear my spurs now to help really fine-tune control that right shoulder and it's certainly helping. Now that S and I have been able to get her back in work, the bulging is beginning to minimize again. That is always going to be her achilles heel, for sure. This past week, I continued the idea of ramping up her jump work and jumping more "real" jumps vs just puttering over 18". I actually cantered figure 8's over a crossrail, and she was super, even offering up a few flying changes. I rode the canter to the crossrail trying to think about which lead I wanted to land, but she is still pretty strong at the canter, so just focusing on a rhythm was my primary objective.
There was another person in the ring with me, so I could only have 2 jumps "up". I made one of the brush boxes a tall crossrail, and I put a pole over the brick. I also dropped a trot pole in front of the little gray box to work on her trotting to the base. I still don't do much jump cantering, that will come with time. After cantering the crossrail in the figure 8 pattern, I moved on to flatwork, trot a jump, flatwork, trot a jump. After every jump, I halted straight then flexed her right and moved her off my right leg. All was pretty good until I was trotting the little box and I felt it; the right bulge. She landed and DRAGGED me to the rail, nearly running into the other horse in the ring. It has been MONTHS since she pulled that little trick so I jumped her case HARD. I circled, growled, and gave her nice bump with the spur. We then proceeded to jump that jump 5 times, with slight improvement each time. I gave her a break, then did a little course involving a right hand turn after EVERY jump. She did that well, I was proud. Not a bulge to be found!
Today, she did her VERY FIRST grid :) Yay! It went much better than I even could have hoped. I set a trot pole, crossrail, 9' to a brush box w/ no standards, 9' to a pole, 9' to a crossrail, 9' to a brushbox, 9' to a pole, 9' to a final crossrail. S helped me, and we built it gradually. She took everything in stride, pardon the pun. I even approached in my 2 point, which I have NEVER done w/ her before. The distances were actually more like 8'; I'd set everything short w/ the hope of making her wait. Predictably, by the last she got a little on the quick side, but I chose not to jack the final jump up to back her off. That will come next time ;) I was so pleased with her understanding of how to handle it; there was no stops/bulges/runouts/bids/awkward moments. Once or twice she was so nice and light and foot perfect I was just thrilled. I believe she has really gained confidence, which is translating into maturity ... I'm excited to see how she does once the days get shorter and the winds kick up. I hope we continue to move forward and progress; she's turned into quite the fun horse to ride!
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Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Overall theme of the day is ...
... Improvement! My lessons w/ event trainer have been literally life changing, in the riding sense. I got to ride both her stallion again!
AND ... I finally got to sit on the 4 star horse, woop woop! Granted, the 4* horse was a trail ride followed by 45 minutes of walking, but STILL. My butt sat on a horse bound for the Rolex CCI**** next year. How lucky can a girl get??
So, I'm so thankful for the opportunity just to be able to experience that upper level feel and movement. My old hunter trainer said her daughter didn't get to be the amazing rider she is today by riding the "bad" ones, as so many people say. She got to where she is by having the chance to ride NICE horses, that taught her what a "nice" horse should feel like.
I've been riding lots of ponies; Puffin the puff ball Icelandic, Kiara (not so much since she got purchased. BOO for me, but yay for her new owner!), and Kimmie (the gray Connemara).
When I rode Kimmie, it took me about 5 minutes to get her round, soft, and in front of my leg. The previous 3 times I rode her, I EXHAUSTED myself TRYING to get her forward and round, and achieved maybe half a lap of actually having her engaged and her back up. This last time, it was quick and simple, and she stayed nicely between the hand and the leg for most of my 40 minute ride. The pony Puffin is mostly about WORKING him. He's pretty fat, but he's super athletic. I love to jump him around, and trainer is working with me on doing as little as possible. I tend to want to "help" him by jumping up his neck, and we all know how that works out.
I took a lesson with honorary little sis Nicole on Rusty, and it was super fantastic. I jumped around on a horse I'd never ridden, and it was just NICE to be able to focus mostly on ME, and fixing the myriad of bad habits I've developed over the years. Rusty is another Pluto; an ex upper level horse of trainer's that is now a super lovely lesson horse that I don't get to ride hardly at all b/c she has to use him for her other students! A year ago, I would have politely declined to jump around, focusing instead on flatwork, but I'm finally being brave and going for it!
I rode a SUPER nice older BTDT hunter named Partner last week. He's another big, gray Trakehner, and though he has a bit of a spook to him, it was a lovely lesson. Our first jump was almost enough to zap my confidence b/c he apparently HATES to trot jumps, and it was a horribly awkward and painful jump, but I took a deep breath, pushed back the fallen down brim of my helmet, pushed my heels down, and persevered until I was able to canter back and forth through a line perfectly. He's just BIG, and I don't feel all that comfortable on a BIG horse. Flat, yes. Jump? Not so much. But it ended great, I'm happy. :)
Overall, I'm SO happy with the progress I'm making, and trainer treats me like any other part of the team. I get to ride her 'fancy ponies' (for which she actually THANKED me, what??), I get to ride the nice sale horses, and I have my fun little pony project, which I'm loving. Even though I miss my sweet, sassy little muffin man like crazy, it warms my heart to see him out competing with his new child at N, finishing on his dressage score like a good boy. She's thinking of moving up to T this Fall, and I can't wait to hear all about it! I'm lucky that I can still keep up with him, and I'm lucky the sale worked out and his new home is every bit as good as his old one was :) I am very grateful for the situation I'm in now, and looking forward to continuing to improve and to sit on more fancy ponies :)
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Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Yet another *amazing* day!
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Look Ma! A big oxer with a little pony! |
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The "box" |
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Gymnastic line |
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The 'out' oxer of the gymnastic |
I tell ya ... I am loving this whole "take lessons" thing! It has been a serious desire of mine to get back to receiving regular instruction, but it's definitely a difficult thing to get worked out.
I rode Jade this morning. She was OK. I have difficulty sometimes because she really can just be a witch with a capital "B". It's frustrating because when I throw her in the roundpen to longe her, she canters BEAUTIFULLY. Balanced, rhythmic, and easily. When I longed Tiki, he would fight me every step of the way. Jade is happy to oblige, all the time! When I throw a leg over her, though, all that changes. She gets tense, rushes, evades, and generally acts the part of a pissy mare. I don't know if it's hormones, pain, general attitude, or learned actions. Her saddle appears to fit EXTREMELY well, but the sweat patterns are a little wonky sometimes. She sweats more on the left side of her body, it's weird. I've tried using my Thinline pad instead of the fleece half pad, and it seemed to make a difference, but now she's just like she was before. She just fluctuates like CRAZY! I've had a few amazing rides on her, but lately I've been fairly unimpressed. Maybe once the days get a little longer, S and I can alternate days and get her ridden 4-5 days a week instead of 1-3. It may be that for her level right now, she just needs more consistency. Were she mine, I honestly would probably start supplement tinkering, beginning with the U gard stuff by Cortaflex I had Tiki on for the first 2 years I had him. She is an OTTB, it's not unreasonable to think she may have a little bit of an "ouchy" tummy. I don't know. I've never owned a mare, so suggestions are always welcome!
All that being said, she wasn't bad today. I truly don't take any crap off her though, so when she experimented with trying to canter off and swishing her tail when I asked for a trot, I hauled off and yanked her up in a circle and paired that with growling at her in "angry voice". As SOON as she gives me what I want, I release pressure and give lots of pats and sweet voice praise. Switched up the bit today and used the mullen happy mouth loose ring. Meh. I like her better in the waterford. S said she'd been heavy and curling up behind the bit her last few rides, so I was curious which mare I'd have today. Heavy, yes, but I've also changed the way I've been riding her. I feel like when they're learning, they do go through the "heavy" stage before they learn 'self carriage', and lightness. She MUST learn to accept the leg contact, she MUST learn to be forward but not fast, and she has to figure out balance. I've done the loose rein thing like I did with Tiki, but instead of that I've been focusing on accepting the aids. She felt quite like she could be a bottle rocket if the circumstances warranted, so I didn't push my luck and jump. I only did about 4 canter transitions, and literally cantered about 3 strides before pulling up. Kept the ride to 20 minutes, and ended as SOON as I got some good, honest attempts to be submissive and have a good attitude about it.
At Eventing Barn, I got to ride my chestnut pony again. I WANT TO WIN THE LOTTERY SO I CAN BUY KIARA! She is my pony. I love her. And literally, she's a 14.2 hand pony :) I got to join in with another person and jump her today. Like, not just hop over a crossrail, I mean JUMP :) Trainer had a "box" set up of 2 diagonal lines with 2' verticals; 30' between one line, and 40' between the other. Exercise was to make a figure 8, doing 3 in the 30', and 4 in the 40'. Holy hard exercise, Batman! Lessoning again is a humbling experience. That dang left bulge got me again, as every time I cantered over the single cav pole, I was too far left. GRR! Lol. Finally got straight, and we moved on. Thank the lord I had the awareness to NOT drop my leg at the base. I kept my awareness at all times, and for the most part the leg was there. My first few attempts at the exercise were a great big FAIL. Kiara is a little bit "hard" and generally unsensitive through the bridle, so it became a challenge for me more about using my body instead of my hands. After a few epic misses when she didn't quite add the step, she finally figured things out and added in. Got a few GREAT trips through, and we were both pretty exhausted.
From there, Trainer had us canter a 2'3 square oxer. Considering my pony has jumped only a hand full of times, I sighted in, CLOSED MY LEG, and had a few nice warm up jumps, yay. The next exercise was to canter 4 placing poles, vertical, 4 more placing poles, oxer. Um, the jumps looked HUGE, haha. Honestly, I'm pretty sure they were just 2'6, but I haven't {bigger than crossrails}jumped since ... May or June, maybe? And then it was my 15.2 hander! I haven't jumped a jump of substance on a horse other than Tiki in 10-12 YEARS. That's why I had all my "height" hangups at the beginning of my blog! Too much teaching, not enough riding. And Britain the lesson horse pretty much DESTROYED any confidence I had in my ability to jump unfamiliar horses when he stopped, propped, and popped a bunch of jumps until I finally had to jump off in humiliation ... in front of my peers and my students.
Anyway! I went first, carried in a nice canter to the first pole, had a good vertical, but then pretty much lost it to the oxer. I kicked my way through, and the distance was STEADY, not forward. Ooops. Despite my inadequacy, she managed to get over the jump and I stayed on, and when I came around again, it was MUCH better. She jumps great, very cute and round. I felt GOOD, Trainer said I was doing a good job letting her jump up to me. There is video evidence of this ... it just hasn't been emailed to me yet! Last part of the exercise was to do the gymnastic, then right lead around to a bending line of 2'9 oxers. Square. First time through, I did it directly and got an awkward 6 1/2 stride distance. Tried again with a bend and got a 2nd awkward 6 1/2 stride distance. Third time was a charm, and I put the bend in again AND gave her a nice little kick so she got there at 6 and just a smidge long. She was exhausted, lol!
SO much fun. SO glad I'm lessoning again. SO glad to be "on the other side", it's enlightening and humbling all at the same time. Thanks for reading "the Novel", stay tuned for the next chapter ...
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Wednesday, February 12, 2014
The mare!
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Good girl! |
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Better; more relaxation :) |
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Defensive position, but soft reins. You can see she kind of barrels through. |
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Longer stirrups, quiet hands, SHOULDERS BACK! Go me ;) |
2 more rides on Ms. Jade to report on. Last week, I took her up in the jumping ring again, and she was good! She's getting much more consistent up there since I've basically told her to get over herself, she's GOING to go up top. All was well. Since riding w/ trainer, I have become much more aware of what a horse SHOULD feel like, so I've been riding Jade very correctly lately, and she responds! Before, I wasn't worried about where her head was, I'd let my arms get stiff, and upon looking at my pics, I see I'm sitting really far forward. It doesn't feel like it, but pics don't lie, right?
I get on, sit BACK, and put my leg on. She's gotten SO good about accepting the leg and becoming more steady through the contact. First time or 2 I rode her, she curled up and got behind the bit, which is why I wasn't worried about her head. At eventing barn though, ALL the horses go correctly. Heads down, backs lifted, inside leg to outside rein. I haven't accepted "no" as an answer from Jade, I put my leg on and ask her to stretch into my hand. She's a fiesty little mare, so sometimes she will pitch a little fit, but for the most part she's been responsive to what I'm asking of her. I jumped her a LITTLE bigger last week; over a 2'6ish crossrail (where the poles are set at 2'6 then crossed). Before, it was the SMALLEST crossrail I could possibly set. The 'plain' poles jump was fine, but the one with panels caused her to land and buck the first 3 times I did it.
As a result, I'm coming into the jumps a little defensive. She WILL get you off if you let your guard down, whether it's via a spook, or a sudden hop in the air combined with a flip of the head. That's why the martingale goes on EVERY time, and I've been asking her to round and come into the contact so she doesnt' spook so much. She's developed a habit of landing randomly, then DRAGGING me to the rail, pulling right. She only does it every now and then, but it's a pretty hardcore drag. When she did that consistently the other day, I dropped it to a pole and made her walk it, staying straight. Last week was mostly just coming in over jumps. She hasn't been as good as she was that one time several weeks ago, when I could actually trot in/canter out a line, but she's not been too bad, either.
Today, I kind of kicked her butt a little bit. She's been off about 10 days due to actual rain (YAY!), so I let her run around in the roundpen. She bucked and played for a good 10 minutes before I got on. Rode her in the lower ring due to really wet footing up top, but I'd had no plans to jump anyway today. She was very heavy; I've been riding her in the waterford and she definitely likes it, but the brakes aren't great in it. Wish I still had Tiki's little wonder bit, b/c it would probably be good to slap that on her once in awhile to tune her up. I did a TON of canter transitions today. She sucks at those, lol. As soon as she canters, she tries to basically bulldoze you and run off or run you into the fence. I worked on cantering a few steps, back to walk or trot. I cantered a LOT today, and right now it's just a fight for every single step. She gets so heavy and stiff, and she WILL try to DRAG to the rail tracking left.
As I tend to do, I had an epiphany after coming around the corner, and YANK to the right. Trainer counter bends her horses a LOT. I've been counteracting Jade's dive to the right by actually turning her into the rail and circling right. Today, I just counter bent her! Lol, it made the mare pretty peeved that she couldn't use that method of evasion any more. I even bent her out at the canter on the correct lead, and she didn't try to drag me once after that.:) Tracking left she dove to the rail again, so I yanked her little butt up and circled her pretty hard core. She shaped up after that. When I walked and she rooted, I used both legs and KICKED her. The rooting improved. I finished up by doing about 20 small figure 8's around the poles at the trot, just keeping my shoulders back, posting steady, and constantly asking for her to bend and carry herself.
I wore her out, but when she gets tired, she just gets heavier and heavier. It was tough! She wasn't great today, which S and I expected, but I didn't give her the opportunity to be bad, so overall an ok day today. Probably riding on Saturday, so hopefully she'll remember what we worked on and just improve!
I'm actually kind of proud of myself.
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Sky. Yes, I got to actually ride this today :D |
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Belle! She has QUITE the engine. |
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Kiara. How cute is she?? |
Hello from Sunny, DRY CA! NOT the wet, soggy, and now iced in GA :D First and foremost, I just got a lovely text from Muffin's new child, and she just wanted to let me know she's done 2 N combined tests with him, and even finished 6th out of 12 in her last one w/ a dressage score of 35! Yay! My best dressage score on the red headed goober was a 38.5, and I was DANG proud of it! They're getting ready to do their first full 3 phase in a couple of months.
Why am I proud of myself? Because I put myself out there to "cold contact" a trainer that I picked out of the air, and I have managed to score myself some AMAZING rides. And trainer is AMAZING! And she's even a super nice and wonderful person too, so SCORE! I haven't had regular, weekly lessons in YEARS, and I'm finally getting eyes on me consistently. It's so wonderful. 99% of my lessons have been dressage based so far, which is just fine. I feel insecure jumping horses I don't know anyway, so I find I'm suffering from a little bit of anxiety at the thought of a "jumping lesson". I rode Kimmie the pony by myself one evening after work, and I carried my crop, strapped on my spurs, and made her go like a good little dressage pony. She wears my leg OUT, haha. Took her over some poles w/out her trying to stop/spook/runout which was good. I got to ride an ADORABLE chestnut pony w/ a stick up mane named Kiara last week. She was SO FUN. And I got to jump her. It was the first time I jumped a horse w/ trainer, and it was really good. Sadly, my endurance has just been so LOW, it's weird. I'm still working out regularly but not cleaning stalls 5 days a week makes a difference I guess. I work SO hard to get them going correctly, and after 15 minutes I'm just dying. Kiara had only jumped a hand full of times before, so we began just w/ a little flower box and she was perfect. It ended up that I took her from crossrails to a little line to a vertical, to a crossrail oxer. I only missed to one jump at the canter, and I only jumped ahead of her on one trot jump, so I would call the day successful! Loved her, she's definitely a favorite. Like Spellbound, she is Morgan/TB.
Today, I rode a fabulous Hanoverian chestnut mare sale horse named Belle and ... THIS GUY: Virginian Sky Holy moly, lucky me, can't believe it. He was super amazing awesome fantastic, etc. etc. I figured I'd be lucky to get to walk around; trainer had me canter tiny circles, PIAFFE, PASSAGE, and do 2 lead changes. I never in a million years thought I'd get to piaffe or passage. Sky is so amazing. He's tricky to handle since he's a stallion and he's pretty big. My instructions were to carry a whip, and once we left the stall to not stop moving. He can't walk through the barn, we had to enter the indoor by one of the side doors.
I feel SO good since I've started riding these amazing horses. They ALL go the same. Soft contact, super responsive off the leg, and obedient in general. They're all a little different; one may be lazy, another hot, one spooky, one bouncy, one not as consistent in the contact, but at the core of it, when you ride correctly, they go beautifully. I still can't believe I rode Sky. He really was a gentleman. There was a mare in the ring w/ us the entire time I rode, and we did have a few "lose the sh*$" moments w/ a bunch of noise coming from the barn, and getting a little too close to the mares, but overall I just felt so lucky to get to ride him.
In short, I'm glad I took the chance to reach out to someone I didn't know at all. She took a chance on me, I took a chance on her, and it's working out! My only goal at first was just to hang out and watch lessons. I have gotten to ride ...7 different horses so far, and I fully expect I will sit on at least 7 more in the next 6 months. I just feel so happy to be here doing this! I'm glad Tiki is happy w/ his child, he looks GREAT. Fat, shiny, and looking better and better in the sandbox. Everything happens for a reason, and I'm happy w/ how things are going right now :)
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Wednesday, January 15, 2014
3 rides; one ok, one awful, and one fantastic!
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Naughty mare! |
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Always so alert ... |
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Somewhat reluctantly obedient |
Ahhh, horses. So blessedly inconsistent! That's both bad and good. Bad, because you never know which horse you're going to get. Good ... because it's like having 4 different horses, lol :)
Last Saturday, S was out at the barn and snapped a few pics. Jade went through her typical thing; started out ok, progressed to not so good, ended up well. I'd decided to put a little more pressure on her, and ramp things up a bit, so I set up the "circle of death" with poles. (4 poles on a 60 foot circle at 12, 3, 6, and 9.) My only plan was just to trot those poles. I set it up in the jumping ring, and she started out pretty stiff and tense. I spent plenty of time at the walk and walked her over the poles in all different directions. When she did that well, I moved on the trotting the circle.
Sadly, things spiraled downhill. She began to THROW her haunches to the outside, blowing by my outside leg, and trying to pop her shoulder and drag me around the poles. She began to rush them, jump them, and became just generally unreasonable. I took her to the opposite end of the ring and worked her down, growling and spinning her until she shook off her "witch" persona. Brought her back to the poles and she was better, but still unhappy in general, so I hopped her over another teeny crossrail off a short turn twice and ended there.
The following Wednesday, she was awful. She just felt peeved off to be working. I was even riding her in her "favorite" ring :( Not sure what was going on, it was a very unproductive ride. I had a few random poles set out to trot over here and there, but no specific "pattern" or anything. Didn't canter, just trotted one of the tiny crossrails and she again tried to blow off my leg and wanted to lose her haunches. I ditched the jump and focused on some lateral work for a few, and finally she VERY grudgingly did what I asked. For the first time, I quit not feeling like I'd accomplished anything. It was an unproductive AND an uncomfortable ride; my back was killing me afterwards!
Over at the eventing barn, I rode a LOVELY Morgan/Tbred cross I'm in LOVE with named Spellbound. I rode him in the indoor, and trainer was pretty happy w/ the fact that I'm getting w/ her program:) I'm holding my hands correctly, using my seat more effectively, and not getting so still in the arms. She didn't have to tell me to sit back ONCE ... AND I lowered my stirrups 3 holes. Success! Today, I rode another lovely bay gelding, Ricky Bobby (yes, lol! that's really his name). I realized I'm feeling what it's like to have a horse be REALLY engaged and lifted through the back and on the bit. Poor Tiki never really got there, probably because I just never rode horses that went correctly. Ricky Bobby was very responsive to my hands and seat, and my confidence in my dressage skills is increasing daily.
Fast forward to my ride on Jade today. I'd already ridden RB, so when I got on the mare, I rode her exactly like I did him. Shoulders back, elbows on top of hips, leg on, supporting outside rein. I used my seat ask her to lift her back, and my leg to push her up into my hand. She. Was. Wonderful. The BEST ride I've had on her ever! She didn't get fast, she kept her hips behind her shoulders, she didn't root on the reins, she didn't curl up behind the bit, she was on the aids and working perfectly. I didn't spin her once, she was fabulous. I think she was so shocked to be ridden ON the bit, she didn't know what to do w/ herself, lol! I've never honestly FELT what a real dressage horse is like. I thought I had, but really I hadn't. ALL the horses at the event barn go exactly the same, it's so cool. I rode Jade like she was one of them, and it was great :) I jumped her a TON over both normal sized crossrails, and a super tiny little brush box. I made long straight approaches, short turn approaches, AND I did 2 as a line, trot in/trot out. Her canter after the jumps was fantastic; relaxed, rhythmic, and not hauling on me at all. She doesn't overjump at all, but she does leave a little long sometimes. I always work to get her right to the base, nice and slow. She didn't rush, she didn't get crooked, she was great. I think I am going to ride her after the event barn all the time, I think riding those beautifully trained horses are helping me tremendously. GREAT day!
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Post holiday recap!
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Lots of pats for a job well done! |
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Cool canter pic |
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I like this one :) |
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Perfect example of how "alert" she always is |
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Walking from round pen to ring |
The holidays have kept me a little bit busy lately :) My wonderful SIL was in town, so I didn't want to abandon her to go ride, but I DID drag her with me one day to take a few pics, woo hoo! I haven't been to awesome eventing barn in a few weeks because I only have one day to go out, and with Christmas and now New Year both falling on that ONE day ... oh well, it's not going anywhere!
I did ride Jade Friday and Saturday. She was a doll! The waterford bit came in, and I actually love her in it (like I thought I would;)) I put that on Tiki's old 'hunter' bridle with a regular noseband, but still paired it with the running martingale just in case ... I LIKE my nose 'as is', lol. The weather has just been fantastic, great temps and no wind, so I think that probably has had a small effect on Jade's behavior as well.
Friday, S was actually at the barn riding a barn horse and got to watch me ride Jade. There was a lot of cacaphony going on at the barn, but she handled it pretty well. I longed her in the roundpen first (with not much action) and mounted in there. Both days, she stood like a statue and did not MOVE, good girl. :) I rode her in the lower ring, aka her "comfort zone". She began pretty well, with me only having to spin her a hand full of times. From there, she actually tried to throw a little bit of a hissy fit, actually kicking up once or twice in protest to being ridden forward and on the contact. I stuck it out, spun her around a few more times, and she decided to get her stuff together pretty quickly after that.
I tried to do some more rail work with her that day, so not so much figure 8ing ... she actually seemed like she got a tad anxious working around the entire ring like that; when I DID go to a few schooling figures, she really blew out a deep breath and put in some great work for me. I was super happy with the trot work, I feel like we're making progress and holding pretty steady. S has been able to ride her this holiday time, which is GREAT! Went to the canter, and it wasn't even what I would call GOOD; it was just ok. She holds the correct lead, which is great. Other than that, it was fast, heavy, unbalanced, and just overall anxious. I patted her anyway, though, because it definitely could be worse than what it was! We ended with walking the little path around the pastures together; lots of spooks and scoots!
Saturday, I rode her in the upper ring with all the jumps. Leaps and bounds better than the other time I rode her up there. She didn't spook once. She TRIED to, but I sensed the tenseness and immediately asked for shoulder in, then leg yield, then shoulder in, then leg yield, just trying to get her mind on ME and not what ever else she could think about. I rode all around the jumps, making lots of circles, squares, half turn in reverse, trot over poles straight on, trot over poles at an angle, and I finally began to really make transitions. I tend to get a little "stuck" in my trot work, just doing LOTS of trot all the time. I did that with Tiki too. I made her work on w-t-w-t-h-t-h-w, then added in canter. WOW, what a difference in the canter. The left lead felt GREAT, I really worked on half halting pretty aggressively, then just softening and allowing her to carry herself; that strategy was pretty darn good if I do say so myself:) Right lead wasn't too bad, but there was certainly some head flinging going on. Went back to the trot, and was able to actually put my leg on her, and even clucked once! WOW, lol. I only had to do maybe 5 spins total with her that day. In fact ... she felt SO good, at the very end I put her on a short turn, then out of nowhere pointed her at a teeny tiny baby crossrail. She happily hopped over, making a nice jump for me, landed cantering, and seemed quite pleased with herself :) LOTS of pats, loose rein, and all was right with the world.
Took today to catch up on some housework, I will ride her again on Saturday since I'm not working. S rode her today, so hopefully she was a good girl! Having so much fun, just happy to be riding again:) Hope all y'all had a great Christmas and New Year ... I can't complain about mine :D
Saturday, December 7, 2013
Back on the wagon! Er ... horse.
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Pretty girl today |
I've gotten in some great riding time! 3 rides in the last week, woo hoo! I rode Jade on Wednesday, and she actually was pretty spooky. When I rode her last Saturday, I was in a T-shirt ... and we both sweated pretty darn good! When I rode Wed ... I was wearing a long sleeved shirt/vest/polar fleece top/a pretty warm coat. Took the coat off to ride, but it was COLD and there was a bit of a breeze. She knew something was up, and pooped 5 times in the washrack while I tacked her up. And NO, that is not an exaggeration;) I took her straight to the ring instead of to the roundpen, and it then took me 15 minutes to get to mount. Le Sigh. She was just spooky and being a bit of a witch. I stayed patient and didn't yank on her at all, but I did progress to making her longe in a super tiny circle at the end of the reins every time she backed up/walked off from the block. FINALLY she just stood there, no drama, and I got on easily. She was very tucked up, and not on any of my aids at all. She either trotted a hundred miles an hour, jigged at the walk, or flat out crow hopped because she did NOT want to work. I never gave up, and I just kept her moving, all the time. The second time she crow hopped, I finally growled at her, smacked her hard with my hand and sent her FORWARD. From that moment, she finally began to get with the program a little bit. She was VERY mouthy with the loose ring bit I was using on her, and she kept rooting around and mouthing incessantly. She didn't get behind it as much as with the kimberwicke, though, so score! I didn't try any lateral stuff with her because she was just so spooky and dramatic. I put her on a constant figure 8, didn't deviate from it at all, and FINALLY she began to come on the aids. It was a massive light bulb moment for me when I mentally shouted at myself to regulate my posting! I quit following her rhythm, posted high and in a tempo I liked, and she began to follow me. Yay! I did several canter transitions both ways, and cantered just like 6 or 7 strides, then went right back to the trot work. That was good, believe it or not, she didn't have time to get hollow/fast/head flingy. Ended when I could feel her settle into the contact, stop rooting, and get in front of my leg. Good girl!
My second ride was completely unexpected! I went over to the other barn, and the trainer was riding. She told me to get a pen and paper, and I wrote down all that was expected of me in order to earn my 2 monthly lessons/weekly riding time. Yay! She is a top professional, so all of her horses are simply lovely. I love the fact that most of her sale horses are under 16 hands, yet her Rolex horse is 17.2! And she's TINY. About 5' flat, and I'd be shocked if she's over 110. I took notes, we basically shook hands (she was riding, after all), and then she told me when she was finished, I could get on. What? Haha, I ran back out to the truck for my helmet, and when she finished I got on the very lovely 15.3 hand TB/warmblood cross mare named Luna. Pretty little bay, a little bit of a spook, and simply lovely. Trainer thinks she will make an Advanced horse some day, but she's only 6. She's completed a few T events, and is almost ready for P. Wow. It was an experience, for sure. Trainer nit picked and commented on my huntery ways for the next 15 or so minutes. I was EXHAUSTED, lol. All I did was trot/canter in a a 20m circle both ways, but the mare is crazy athletic, and trainer is 100% a perfectionist. I was told to sit my canter better, not lean to the left, relax my right arm tracking right, open my chest more, and of course to slow my posting and sit back. I was in a dressage saddle. Her gaits are very athletic, and I could feel the power underneath me. Definitely a sports car :)
Today, I rode Jade again. She was pretty crappy again to begin with. It was marginally warmer than on Wed without the breeze, but it actually RAINED last night, so the rings were super wet. I brought some of Tiki's old equipment to use on her; his running martingale, and his xc bridle with a figure 8 and the single joint Myler bit. The martingale is purely for my safety; several times, Jade flipped her head dramatically enough for me to have Audrey flashbacks (she literally smacked me in the face with her neck, causing me to fall and get a concussion), and I didn't want her to possibly feel "trapped" by a standing. A properly adjusted martingale of any type will prevent a horse from smacking you in the face, but the running doesn't "trap" a horse like the standing can. I wanted to try the figure 8 because she opens her mouth like Tiki did, and it can change the way a snaffle feels in their mouth. I longed her in the roundpen and she was perfect, but when I took her to the upper ring to get on, she did the mounting block dance again, so I just went back to the rp and mounted there. Rode her up to the ring, and she spooked several times. As soon as her feet hit the footing, she began jigging sideways. I kicked her with my outside leg to get her going straight, and she popped her shoulder and tried to yank her head down as far as possible.
Now, to be fair, this is the ring S said Jade doesn't like. I didn't care. The mare should do as she's asked no matter WHERE you are, so I stuck to my guns and kept going. She jigged incessantly until I finally clenched my knees so tightly against the saddle I got a hip cramp, but it got my point across and she finally walked. I was SO glad I had that martingale; she was just beside herself with the puddles/cold/'scary' ring, and she tried to stick that head straight up like a giraffe. The martingale did it's job, though, and she seemed almost confused when she couldn't get her head up too high. I got her walking all around the jumps, then trotted, and she finally quit trying to go so sideways (for the most part). She also tried to drag me around like I was a little kid, and I began to do the Clinton Anderson one rein stops. Gee, I remember a certain little red head I used to have to do the same thing with! She decided pretty quickly that those suck, lol! All of a sudden, I had a mare willing to work :) I kept my posting slow, weaved her in and out of the jumps, kept my outside leg on so she couldn't blow it off and skitter sideways, and rode until she totally gave in and got between my hand and my leg. As a reward, I walked her down to her comfortable ring, and trotted 2 big 20 m circles in the middle of the ring. She was pretty dang good. I had to spin her about 5 times rather than hang on her mouth to keep her slow, but the trot work was better than on Wednesday, for sure. I cantered her both directions on the circle which is a tiny big deal because she is VERY confused about cantering circles. She tries to blow off the outside leg and drag you to the rail. I kept my reins together, my outside leg firmly pressing, butt planted firmly in the saddle, and she cantered well. Ended with another few minutes of trot just on the rail, and let her be done. Just to "torture" her a little bit, I took her back up to her spooky ring for the cool down walk and she did holler for her buddies a few times, but she didn't try to spook/spin me off, so I consider the day to be a success! :D Gave her lots of pats, brushed all the mud off her she'd accumulated riding in the wet ring, cleaned the dirt off the tack, and put her back out. Good girl! Bad start, good finish, it will be like this until she gets in the routine. I will ride her in the same tack setup on Wednesday; the ring will be dry and HOPEFULLY it will be warmer, so I can better assess the bit/noseband set up. Thanks for reading my novel, y'all have a happy Sunday!! :)
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Jade on Wed |
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