Venus turns 12 this year, and I realized I haven’t posted a
word about her quite some time. Why you ask? Because, frankly, she has become known
around the barn as the good girl, and let’s face it, consistency doesn’t lend
itself to good storytelling.
Venus schooling in winter 2011 |
When I bought Venus, back when she was an awkward
coming-three-year-old, SFD hadn’t opened. I was still freelance teaching and
training, and wanted a young, hot, fancy horse to develop and compete. I really
enjoy riding hot horses—for my tastes, the quick responsiveness that comes with
it is worth the potential tension. She
is Dutch and thoroughbred, and a red mare, so I thought for sure she would fit
that bill perfectly. Her sire’s sire is
Roemer, a sire known for stamping his offspring with rideablilty, which I thought
would be a nice balance for the thoroughbred heat.
As a youngster, she was indeed a hot, responsive, could-get-
tense
mare. She showed well, earning a paycheck from the Jumper Futurity for her
scores in the 4-year-old FEI division and a red ribbon at Dressage at Devon as
a 6-year-old.
Venus in the Think Pink ride at DAD, 2012 |
As she has matured, her initial heat has mellowed to a very
ridable response level. In 2011, Scott
and I developed a plan to teach her to manage her emotions, which worked
really, really well. So well, in fact, that in 2012 she and I were included in
the quadrille at Dressage at Devon. She was super. The whole process of going
to practices and learning to deal with flags, music, horses headed straight towards
her and horses tail-gaiting her helped seal the lessons she had learned the previous
year. She became so good in a group that this summer we were asked to ride lead
in the First Level Quadrille at the DVCTA USEF Show at Radnor Hunt. She has become a reliable mount.
I guess this really isn’t too surprising. Horses, like
people, go through different stages of emotional development. Usually around 5
or 6 the horses are going through the equivalent of adolescence. They begin to
develop confidence and challenge their place in the herd, which can make for
some interesting training sessions. Somewhere between 6 and 8 they settle into
their mature personalities—which is why most of us pros advise our students to
not buy a horse younger than 6. Around
that time, Venus became much more tolerant and much less hot.
Venus at NEDA |
She has not become dull, by any standard. She is such a good
girl, and she has developed a patient, schoolmaster personality. If the aid is
correct, she happily does what she is supposed to do. If the aid is incorrect,
she tends to ignore it, or just sorta respond.
Over the winter, a student was struggling with shoulder in, so I put her
Venus for a ride. When the student set it up with too much inside rein, Venus
just went down the long side with her neck over to the right. When my student
figured out the use of the seat and outside rein to set up the shoulder in,
Venus not only gave her shoulder in, she lifted her shoulders, changed her
carriage, and added suspension to her step. It was like Venus was saying to my
student “look, when you do it that way, you get all of this too!” Venus was
practically cheering her student on.
Venus, with Nicole up. |
She is such a good girl that when a couple of students with
young horses were looking for a calm horse to join them on a paper chase last
fall, Venus and I came along to play babysitter. She has not only become a dressage
schoolmistress, she has become a solid-citizen all-around horse.
But, like most things, this comes with a negative side.
Since she is such a good girl, I really don’t get to ride her that much these
days. Over the winter, she was busy teaching a few choice students how to put a
horse on the bit correctly and how to ride correct lateral work. Nicole jumps
her. Maddy, my assistant, earned some
much-needed show miles on Venus this spring.
As Venus has grown up, so has my business. Unfortunately, in
recent years, her competitive ring time has been limited by client demands. Each
year I have started with the determination to get Venus out and do what I
bought her for – show. And each year one of my client’s horses begins to take
off. Competing on a client’s horse not
only makes my client happy, it lets me use my show budget to do exciting things
like buy a tractor for my growing business.
Which brings up that negative side again. I am a
professional dressage rider who likes hot, spicy horses. And my mare has
evolved into a wonderful good girl that anyone can ride. She clearly doesn’t
need a professional to ride her any more. Plus she seems to really like
teaching, loves to jump, and is great on a trail ride. My growing business
could really use a bigger trailer, a better drag for the arena, and a
replacement for the purchase-really-used Toro that we use to muck the barn—the
list keeps getting longer. So I have decided it is time to sell her.
Venus, just turned 3. She was all legs and booty |
Venus now, the pretty girl. |
I half-heartedly put
her on a few sales sites last spring, but didn’t really promote her much. But
now, with the business growing again, it is time to let my good girl go become
a cherished teacher for a new owner that will love what she has grown up to
become.
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