04 February, 2007

On the High Road

Tomorrow, I am going to get my mustang Jemez Dancing. About two months ago, I made a deal with Billy Hibbler to put 30 rides on him. JD was going alright enough for me here in the yard. I could ride him bareback or even a little bit tackless, but I knew that if I ever took him out and about, he might bolt. We'll as I wrote in the blog when it happened, he did bolt with Billy Hibbler on board. I was riding the energizer-bunny, boltin' Cracker Joe, and Chester, the molester, with John on board, started the whole fiasco by jumping into the brush in a panic.

Okay, so Billy Hibbler had put down my style of training so many times, that maybe I started to believe his style was better. Maybe I believed it when he said he could have the little mustang mare, Rita, gentle in 30 days. It took me 30 days just to get her to let me catch her and lead her with any degree of trust, so when he said she was no challenge for him, she went back home to her owner, Billy. Well, it's two months later and he gave up on the mare and the last time he rode my horse, ol' Jemez bucked like a son-of-a-gun and jumped over the pasture fence. To Billy's credit, he didn't fall off, but I am not feeling like there is the reliable mustang coming home that I hoped for. Infact, I would say he is EXACTLY as unreliable as he was. Only now he bucks instead of bolts.

On the good side, I never have to listen to him bragging on his horse training any more. Sure, he is going to blame it on the weather, but I offered to pay for the gas for him to haul him to lower elevations where there is no snow on the ground.

Jemez is far from a hopeless case; I have plan with a 50% probablilty of changing my buckskin mustang permanently into my loyal horse in the next 24 hours, and I don't even have to start until 10 a.m. tomorrow. The plan is to get Jemez out of the unhappy conditions at Billy's where there is no shelter and all the horses are kept in tiny squalid pens. Billy is going to haul me and my horse to the Carrizo, exactly half way home. Then Jemez and I are going to walk the last 10 miles home. I have some grain packed and I am wearing my hiking boots, not my riding boots. We are going to have a picnic on Ensenada Mesa, drink water from all the biggest ponds on the way, and take photos of the lovely scenery. I'm taking a saddle and my riding helmet, but I suspect that Jemez will just be packing them unused. The ol'gray lead mare will make sure her buckskin friend is safe, not hungry or thirsty, and finds his way back to his herd (where he is the dominant horse). It's bound to be an icy / muddy road in places, I am carrying a stick with a yellow flag to slow down the oil trucks, and we are sure to be tired. Maybe I better pack a change of socks?

I will post photos on Tuesday. You can find a map of the roads on the index page to this website: www.dinetahtrails.com We'll be crossing the Carrizo Creek at Munoz Canyon, heading up Martinez Canyon to Ensenada Mesa, dropping off into Ice Canyon and crossing the bridge to the Largo Canyon School. If you are sitting at a desk reading my blog, well, you can wish you were tagging along because it is sure to be a great adventure. Epic adventure even!

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2 Comments:

At 3:57 PM , Anonymous donna said...

Good luck! I thought I'd be there to help out when you walked JD back home.

 
At 10:14 AM , Blogger Tracey said...

Ha...you made me laugh when you said you wouldn't have to listen to his bragging about training any more :) I guess that's one thing in JD's favor, eh?

 

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