Sunday, 18 October 2020

Day 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56 & 57 (videos)

Monti's first ride after his restarting. Incredibly lazy, but he's a lot better now!



Emmy letting off some steam in the round pen. Notice her expression change when she chooses to follow me at the end. Her ears flick back, her nostrils soften and she steps around and towards me.



Bundles getting his first workout...



Chuy spinning Holly.





Day 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 & 36 (photos)

Tegan spinning Oscar...




The royalty being crowned on the football pitch. The stands in the background are on the visitors' side - the home ones were 3 times as big and were completely full.




The amazing rainbows at 7am this morning. My phone camera doesn't do them justice!




And a video of me with nunchucks. I'm going really slowly as I'm trying out new moves, but doesn't it look cool!?


Day 21 (photos)

I swear I work on a film set...




Day 6 (photos)



This is Emmy at the end of our session. It was before 8am, so cloudy and cool. She's so tall that she's right at the limit of what I can get on from the ground. Probably about 16.3hh. Such a cute horse though. Despite freaking me out on our first couple of rides she's really growing on me.


Day 47, 48 & 49 (photos)

This is Albert, Warwick and Robyn's horse, playing with a stick he managed to find his turnout. The turnouts are small (about 20x20m) and basically just dirt, so aside from running around to burn off energy, they tend to play with whatever they can find. Still, it's 100 times better than being stuck inside!



These are 3 of our 4 pretty buckskins, in size order! L-R is Oscar, Bullet and Coastal. Just need Gidget in there now...




Day 37 (photos)

Day 37 is my halfway point. It's weird - I simultaneously feel like I've lived here forever and for no time at all.

We had a good day today. We slept in until 8am (what a lie in!) and then lazed around eating breakfast, watching TV and deciding what to do that day. I did laundry and tidied up, as well as making apple and cinnamon muffins, which are amazing if I do say so myself.

We settled on a short roadtrip to San Juan Bautista, to see the Christian Mission. It's one of the few old buildings for miles around (it's true - the Americans' idea of history is very different to ours!) and is one of the only ones left intact. They were chapels and priest residences, built a day's ride apart all over California when conversion to Christianity was the most popular. California feels very Spanish anyway, but here Spanish was spoken as a first language, and the architecture, gardens and olive groves made just like being back in Mallorca or Southern Spain. It was a bit déjà-vu! 

We had a good time wandering around the place. There was a funny moment when we walked into one of the chapels: it was pretty fancy, and Tegan just stood there with hands on hips and said "****, eh!?" I cracked up laughing, saying "could you get any more Australian!?", at which point she started giggling too and we left before anyone noticed...

Anyway, despite our childishness, it's a really pretty place. I'll probably wander back when I have a spare afternoon and take lots of photos. Hopefully the sun will last! It's really pleasant at the moment - high 20s and sunny during the day, cool and misty overnight. Apparently it rains a lot in November, so I'll need to squeeze in some sightseeing early on!





Days 21-26 (photos)

A random selection of photos. A lot of the ones from Rancho Murieta are still on my fancy camera, so I'll post those when I get hold of them.

This is a view from Pacheco's Pass. It really doesn't do it justice. 



A couple of shots I took, wandering around Rancho Murieta on that first afternoon. Bit different to an English showground!




And finally, Matilda and I, goofing around today. She likes me a lot, which is sweet, and her favourite trick is to lie on my shoulders! I'm looking very pink because I've just been hauling heavy stuff around the tackroom...


Day 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45 & 46

Okay, so I've been terrible with updates again! There's been a fair bit going on!

Monday and Tuesday were pretty normal days, working at the ranch during the day and chilling out in the evening. We've had a few new reining horses come in which are keeping Chuy busy. It also means that Tegan and I have been given all the "problem" horses!

Wednesday was slightly odd, as I babysat Alli and Brendon's 8 month old son for a few hours. It was so stressful! I didn't take my eyes off him the entire time, and he's at the stage of bumping into everything so there were a few tantrums. Tegan bailed on helping me, as she claims she doesn't know what to do with kids. Eventually the main babysitter arrived (40 mins late!) and I could get to the ranch. Tegan and Chuy were already riding, so I got on Albert. Tegan saw me and cantered over yelling "So... how did it go!?" and I slumped on Albert's neck going "I'm so tired..." She laughed, yelled "so glad I didn't go!", stuck her tongue out at me and got back to working the horse. So much for sympathy!
Thursday was more of the same - another morning babysitting Casyn (including a crash course in changing nappies and how to dress a wriggling baby) then off to the ranch. That night was Tegan's farewell dinner. She was annoyed that Chuy couldn't make it at the last minute, but he had to supervise a client picking up her horse from his place. All in all it was Robyn and her parents, Alli, Casyn and the two of us. It was  a really nice dinner, with great food. We all arrived separately, so Robyn went home with her parents, and Alli took Casyn back. Tegan and I sat in the bar (I drank Black Russians as per usual) until it closed, swapping stories. It was a little bittersweet as we both kept remembering that she was about to leave, but it was a really nice evening.

Friday had a similar emotional theme. Chuy was taking Abby to a friend's place for the weekend (this friend trains exotic animals like elephants, monkeys, tigers, etc. for stunt and TV work) so it was Tegan's last chance to see him. We mucked around with the horses all morning, then went for lunch at a Mexican restaurant before he had to leave. They hugged goodbye in the car park and as we walked away Tegan threw me the keys to the truck. The tears came almost immediately, and she kept cursing and saying "I told myself I wouldn't cry!". I did feel really sorry for her - she and Chuy have a real brother/sister friendship and have got really close in 6 months.

Fortunately, we had the ultimate distraction, as it was Halloween that evening. I dragged Tegan to the Halloween store as soon as we got back, and we picked up the last few things for our costumes. We bought a child size police outfit and put it on Oaky (one of the dogs), and I bought some face paint. It was absolutely pouring with rain that evening (the first time since February) but it didn't put off the trick or treater's! We answered the door in costumes and got lots of laughs. Our first stop was Brendon and Alli's, where we had a couple of drinks before meeting Tyler and his friends who took us to a party. On the way we stopped at the supermarket for me to buy alcohol (which was obviously not for the underage kids. Nope. No way.) That was pretty hilarious - handing the cashier my English ID, which they struggle with anyway, when I was almost unrecognisable in face paint. Anyway, we eventually got to the party, despite some lunatic driving by Tyler. He stayed sober all night but still acted like an idiot - nearly drove the wrong way down a freeway, stopped in the middle of an intersection to steal a traffic cone, forgot to turn his lights on, tried to slide the massive car on the wet road with 8 of us in it, all with cops nearby. I was one more stupid move away from lecturing him on the possibility of crashing and/or getting us all arrested. The party itself was pretty funny. It was full of trying-to-be-cool 17 year olds, smoking weed and drinking liquor from bottles, but also standing outside their parent's house in the rain because they had nowhere better to go! There were about 50 people there though, so predictably, it got busted by the cops after a couple of hours. We were all kicked out, and a few people sat in the back of cop cars. My first thought was "go on then, ID me!" before I remembered that I was leaving with kids who'd got drunk on alcohol I'd bought, and thought better of it. After some more crazy driving, we ended up sat in McDonalds at midnight. Tyler was laughing and saying this was a standard night, and wasn't it awesome, but all I could do was thank my lucky stars that my awesome nights usually ended at 7am, because we could all drink, had our own places, a plethora of clubs to choose from and none of us had curfews! I humoured him though, and to be fair, it was a very entertaining night.

Saturday was a slightly more relaxed affair. Tegan and I worked horses all morning, then went out to dinner with Robyn that evening. We went to the cinema afterwards to see Before I Go To Sleep (Nicole Kidman and Colin Firth). It's another trippy, psychological thriller like Gone Girl. It may have been scientifically wobbly (it involves a rather convenient amnesia where you forget everything that happens the previous day), but the plot was really good and it was certainly tense towards the end! Tegan turned to me at one point and mouthed "what the hell!?" as we weren't really expecting it to be quite so intense!
Sunday was spent relaxing and helping Tegan pack. We ran a couple of errands then just chilled out at the house until it was time to go. She took the same minibus shuttle that I used to get here, so we had to drive a little way to the nearest pick up point. It was sad saying goodbye (I had to try hard not to get emotional!) but she said over and over that I am always welcome at her place in Australia, and she is planning a Europe tour as soon as she can afford it. It'd be good to see her again. That evening I moved all my stuff out of the tiny room upstairs and into the guest room downstairs. It was weird initially - seeing it so empty and feeling like I was in Tegan's room! It's a lot nicer than having to duck under flags and being deafened by Tyler's music though. Tegan was bored at San Fran airport, so we chatted on Facebook til her plane boarded. She had to go via Los Angeles, so it was quite a trek. We talked again on her first day back in Sydney, and she was absolutely shattered!

Monday was weird, especially having breakfast in silence and leaving the house before anyone else was up. Luckily, I was kept really busy at the ranch. Obviously I now have double the work load, so I'm rushing around from feeding at 7.30 to leaving at around 3. I love it though. Chuy has given Monty to me as a project, so I'm doing all the work with him and he's coming on well. He's a typical Dutch warmblood. He's cocky and forward going when he knows what he's doing, but if anything unsettles him, or he didn't know the answer to something, he goes absolutely nuts. He's getting better though, and is generally a big softy to handle.

Today is Tuesday, and was pretty hectic (or "bloody hekkers" as Tegan says! I'm probably going to have a half-Australian accent when I get back!). Monty's owner arrived at 8am to see his progress. Apparently he's a Grand Prix dressage horse, and I'm more than welcome to play with him once we start riding, which is awesome! She was pleased with how he was doing, and asked me to give her as lesson sometime soon. My next rode was Coastal, who was fresh to say the least! She's had some time off, so her first canter under saddle (luckily with me on the ground) consisted of 5 solid laps of bucking and leaping around. Eventually I got her settled again, and rode her around for a little while working on her flexion and suppleness. We were in the indoor arena, which was crowded and good practice for her as she easily distracted. She improved a lot over the session, so I ended on a good note. 3rd up was Emmy, who gave me a great ride. Having got into the swing of things with Coastal, I was relaxed and confident with Emmy. I've started working on dressage stuff with her - getting her to move in an outline. It's amazing how easy it is when they're started well. She's been ridden for 2/3 months and no one before me had ever touched both reins at the same time. She's super soft to the left, and super soft to the right because they've been taught well and independently. When I eventually did apply pressure on both sides by picking up the reins, she automatically held herself in a beautiful soft outline in walk, true and canter. Unlike a lot of dressage youngsters, she wasn't being forced with side reins or nosebands, so her mouth was soft and shut the whole time, and she was perfectly balanced and relaxed. I got 3 big powerful strides where she really pushed over her back, so I eased her to a stop and jumped off as that was the perfect place to end the session.



Me hanging out with Matilda this morning. And yes, my hair is getting super long. It looks something like this:



I looked a little scarier on Halloween though...



Luckily Tegan had Oaky!




Day 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 & 26 (photos)

I pinched this photo off the internet, but it gives you an idea of how big the Rancho Murieta facility is!




This is the sunset on Friday night:




And what we woke up to the next morning! They were a lot lower, but by the time I'd got my camera out they'd drifted up a little…




This is Warwick stopping Spooks in the warm up ring before Robyn's class. They gallop flat out down the arena, and just say "whoa." You're looking for the horse to stay relaxed, stretch his head low and keep his front feet moving, while his weight shifts over his back legs. They wear special "slider" shoes that allow them to slide through the dirt. The more they slide, the softer it is on their legs. Spooks stops really well - her tail is almost touching the floor, she stays soft and relaxed, and she slides for about 20ft. With dirt flying everywhere, it's very impressive to watch.





There's quite a lot going on in this photo! Robyn is wearing her show outfit, plus a pink ribbon as the event was raising money for cancer research charities and encouraged everyone to wear pink. She's taken Spooks' bridle off to show the bit to the tack judge, who makes sure it's legal. It looks like a powerful leverage bit, and it is in the wrong hands, but as you can see in Warwick's stopping photo, you hardly touch the reins on well trained reiners. It's all done off your weight, laying the rein across the horse's neck, and your voice. In the photo, Chuy and Warwick are checking her saddle and taking off her bandages - they show in white ones, but we double wrap with black ones over the top to keep them clean in the warm up. They also wear overreach boots, and "skid boots" to protect their hind fetlocks when they're sliding. Some horses go so low they need hock boots on too, to stop them from getting friction burns on the dirt.




Spooks modelling her very expensive show bridle and bit.





A random arty photo of Robyn's hat perched on her saddle horn.





And a shot of Holden, chief face-jumper. He's Yorkshire terrier x mini Poodle. His hair is so soft - he feels like a child's teddy because it's so fluffy.


Day 2 (photos)





A few photos from yesterday. I'll try to take a few more of the ranch - we're surrounded by mountains in every direction except towards the coast. A massive fog bank rolls in and out every day, making the sunsets amazing.

Day 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56 & 57 (photos)

A Corvette driver who clearly wants a Bugati.



The drive along the coast to Big Sur...



The lower part of the hike...




And the higher part! Check out the fog bank rolling back in...



A photo that caught me off guard when I wasn't paying attention, but I like it anyway! Look at my tan...



Redwoods are a little taller than me.



Petey bonding with Matilda after our reining lesson.




Chuy's dog, Moby, trying to tell me something.



Monti and Emmy waiting to be worked...



Chuy riding Blue at the reining trainer's place. It was raining (*gasp*) so we had to share the indoor school. I'm wandering around on Red.


Day 8 (photo)

The very pretty Coastal after our ride today. She's about as tall as Emmy. They are biiiiig horses, and amazing movers...


Day 9 (photo)

My view over the arena today. That's Tegan on Coastal in the foreground. She's taller than me, so Coastal doesn't look so massive! Check out the palm trees and mountains in the background, too...




Day 4 (photos)

The barn...



...and a photo of us this morning. L-R: Tegan on Gidget, Robyn on Spooks, Me on Petey.


Day 5 (photos)

The very beginnings of the sunrise over the mountains this morning, and Petey waiting patiently for me to climb on. Check out his thigh muscles. The reiners are unbelievably muscular.