Monday, July 27, 2009

Trail Review-Pleasant Hill Lake

Another review from Brenda....
Last weekend (July 19) Beth and I met our friends Carla and Tom for a ride on the new trail at Pleasant Hill Lake that connects to Malabar Farms. It is about a 1 1/2 hour drive from Powell. When you get to the park, you have to pay a $3 per person day riding fee (I think the overnight camp fee is $16) at the front entrance. They then direct you to park at the end of the beach parking instead of at the horseman's camp (which is only for overnighters). There is a big grassy area by the beach parking, so we just backed the trailer onto that.

After you tack up you walk down the drive and across a stone bridge to the horseman's camp and catch the trail head there. We rode for about 3 hours (roundtrip) at a walk and trot and still didn't quite make it to Malabar. I think you would have to commit a whole day to do both.

The trail we were on was hilly, but not steep. There was one ~ 5 foot wide creek crossing that had very deep mud on both sides, but was fine at a walk. Most of the trail is in the woods. There is a section after about an hour of riding that goes right next to the fence of a campground (spooky), then you have to ride on a road for about 10 minutes to get to the next part of the trail (we found out that empty boat trailers rattling behind trucks are also spooky). Most of the trail is very well marked. We turned back after the big soy bean field trail which is a loop.

There is no gravel, but there are remainders of big tree stumps in the trail here and there that stick up just enough for your horse to trip over if they are tailgating the horse in front of them. I would say this would be an intermediate trail. It's a beautiful area with a lot of new things for the horses to experience (people playing volleyball, boats and fisherman right by the parking lot, etc).

Added by Beth...
The trails go through a variety of terrain although it is mostly woods. If you have a horse that is not used to cars, this may be a bit challenging as part of the trail is on or near a road. The bean fields were quite an easy ride. We did see deer a couple of times so watch for those if your horse tends to spook at them.
To date, there is no map for this trail so you have to keep your eye out for markers, ribbons and marked trees. All in all, I would highly recommend this trail to riders looking for a bit more of a challenge but one with few major obstacles and intermediate level trails.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Trail Review--Shawnee State Forest/Ben's Happy Trails

The following is a trail review created by Brenda....
Ben's is about a 2 1/2 hour drive from Powell mostly down SR 23. There are no real scary roads (everyone who pulls a horse trailer knows what I mean by that). A few hills, narrow bridges, tight turns right before you get there, but not too bad. There is plenty of parking across the street from the main office by the cabins. However, the barn for the horses is behind the office. The best thing to do is park by the cabins (if that is where you are staying) and walk your horse over to the barn. We just left our tack in the trailer and brought the horses to it.

The cabins were nice (but had a layer of dirt/cobwebs). They are very small though. The bathroom is actually outside the front door on the porch with it's own door. There is a small bedroom and a futon in the kitchen - no real living room area. I wouldn't put more than 2 people in one.

Ben has about a half hour worth of trails on his property right behind the cabins. These are fairly steep/rocky loop trails. The Shawnee Forest trails are about 15 minutes away by horseback on rural roads. Those trails were also very steep and rocky, and most seemed to incorporate gravel roads as part of the trail. Our horses feet were pretty sore after the second day.

This would be a good place to ride if your horse has shoes on all four feet - otherwise, they will be sore. Even Liz's spotted saddle horse (who has been barefoot his whole life) got sore, and that was a first for him. Ben was a great guy and very helpful. He lives on the property and takes good care of it.

I would recommend this for an intermediate to advanced rider with a road safe horse. Keep in mind that the trails in the park are long, so don't start out on one you are not familiar with after about noon. We made the mistake of heading out for a second ride one afternoon around 4pm and didn't make it back until almost 9pm. The trail wasn't well marked, the last 1-2 hours were gravel road, and at times we were just hoping that we were going in the right direction. I'm sure you could hire one of the guides from Ben's - it might be worth it if you don't have a good sense of direction! Also, Ben will let someone in your group rent one of his horses for the day (if they pass a riding test) and take it out on their own.

All in all it was a great trip. We had perfect weather, awesome food, and a LOT of riding. Our horses were happy to see their home pastures at the end of the weekend!

Thursday, June 25, 2009

A Giddy Up Weekend is about to begin

Our numbers have dwindled down to four for this weekend but it is still going to be a Giddy Up Girls Getaway..I guess we are the hard core group. We had two drop out....one that is understandable given her circumstances and the other one...well, let's just say that we found out a day or so ago and she was the ride for one of the horses. We have figured out a way to still make everything work, but that one really did make things alot harder on everyone.
We are heading down to Ben's Happy Trails near Portsmouth, Ohio and the Shawnee State Forest. The most I have ridden in that part of Ohio is in the Hocking Hills (Smoke Rise and Spotted Horse Ranch). I am imagining it is pretty hilly but people say it is a nice place to ride. I'll report on our trip when we get back.
I have been quite lax about posting lately. Since April, we had had a good amount of trail riding and other activities. So stay tuned for posts on
  • Equine Affaire wrap up
  • Horse Grooming Clinic for Enrichment Day
  • Knox County Cowboy Challenge (twice!)
  • Julie Goodnight Clinic
  • Riding at Deer Creek State Park
  • Memorial Day Pace and Chase
  • Smoke Rise Cow Clinic
  • Fulton County OHC Obstacle Challenge at Maumee State Forest

Yep, it has been a busy 3 months...I love riding season. Now if I can only remember to bring my camera, I might actually have pictures to share. I do have some for a few of the events. Back to work for now....

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Raising a glass to Jim


We lost a friend last week. This is Jim Shaw.
He was 85 years old when he passed on. He died from complications from a fall a couple of months ago.
I really knew Jim through other friends and did not spend alot of time with him, but considered him a friend. He was a fixture at many parties we had. He always had a funny story to tell and a glass of red wine in his hand.
Jim was very involved in the Hunt community in Central Ohio. He was the MFH at the Rocky Fork Hunt Club for a number of years.
I will miss Jim...happy trails, my friend.

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

A note from Brenda

Brenda wrote the following....
CLINIC JUNKIES

It has been a whirlwind of lessons and clinics this spring for Doc and I and Beth and Rio. I am starting to feel a little like a clinic junky. I am also starting to wonder why I feel the need to go to so many clinics. I am by no means an expert at riding, but it seems like once you get to a certain point (you’ve read all the books and magazines, you’ve been to several natural horsemanship clinics, you’ve watched every show on RFD-TV, you’ve surfed the net for all things horse related, etc) basic clinics may no longer suit your needs; especially when they cost hundreds of dollars and involve travel and time away from your family.

Our first big outing this spring was Equine Affaire. It was my first year taking Doc, and I was really looking forward to it. Beth and Carla had their horses there, and it’s always fun whether or not you take a horse. That being said, next year I’ll probably go without my horse.

My first clinic was with Barbra Schulte. She talked basically about centered riding concepts (which I was already familiar with from taking lessons from a centered riding instructor). Having those concepts reinforced would have been fine if we had also been riding while she was talking. Most of the clinic (except for 2 times up and back the arena) we were just sitting on our horses doing nothing. I could have saved my $75 and just sat in the crowd.

My second clinic was Tommy Garland’s obstacle clinic. I was very excited about this one, because Doc sometimes leaps creeks (which I told Tommy about in my application video). Unfortunately, there was no water obstacle. Instead there was a bridge, ball and ground poles. Doc did all of those in the first minute. So, basically I watched Tommy work with the other horse and rider in the clinic. Once again I could have saved $75 and watched from the crowd.

My third clinic was with Julie Goodnight. This was definitely the best one. She helped me keep Doc in a trot without nagging him (by swatting him on the rear end if he slowed down unauthorized). The better part of that clinic for me was when she stepped outside the planned presentation and helped me with Doc’s horse aggression. He pins his ears and will kick if another horse get right up behind him. She told me not to let him socialize in any way (good or bad) while I’m handling him. She also said to work him HARD if he actually did get aggressive with another horse. Another tip was to turn his nose towards a horse he is seriously threatening which will turn his hip (and his kickers) away.

Our next clinic outing was to Smoke Rise Ranch with some girlfriends to do some cutting practice. This was FUN. It was fun because it is completely different from what we normally do, it didn’t cost a fortune, and I didn’t go in expecting miracles. I still learned some things along the way, and I am looking forward to doing it again soon!

The latest clinic (this past weekend) was a two day Julie Goodnight clinic near Youngstown, OH. I had high hopes for this one since I liked Julie so much at EA. I have to say I was a little disappointed. There were 14 pretty quiet horses and very nice riders. The first morning Julie talked to everyone for about 1 ½ hours about horse behavior and our goals for the weekend. Already it was heading in the wrong direction for me – I live to ride (just like the song says). Then we got our horses out for ground work. We spent a couple of HOURS on having our horses stand still (which is Doc’s favorite gait) and leading them around (not a problem for us). Finally we rode after lunch, but it was basic skills review. The other problem was that she didn’t have a microphone and it was hard to hear at times (one of my pet peeves). The next day was more of the same – half day of ground work, which she never made anyone get perfect (Clinton would have been appalled). It turned out to be more of her presenting general concepts (saying that you could learn more about them if you bought her videos) and not enough individual evaluation and help. I can’t say that I learned anything new.

So, the lesson in the end for me is not to take non-specific clinics. I’d rather save the hundreds of dollars that clinics cost and use it for private lessons where I know I’ll get feedback and be able to work on the things I need to improve. I would still recommend any of these clinics to a beginning rider, but not a confident rider who already understands basic horsemanship.

Happy Trails,
Brenda & Doc

Friday, May 22, 2009

A new "horse house"





Not quite a "house" but at least a place to get out of any crazy weather that comes our way. Isn't it awesome?

Thursday, May 14, 2009

A big step...

A few weeks ago, Brenda and I started discussing the prospect of having Doc and Rio live at my house for the summer. We are happy at Jane's but really like having the horses more conveniently located. My schedule makes it pretty tough to get up to the barn, clean stalls and then find time to ride. Sometimes I don't make it home until after 8:30. This might not seem late to some of you, but I normally still have to feed my kids (and myself maybe), spend some quality time with them and get them to bed by 9pm. You can see my dilemma. So frankly, I have not been riding nearly as much.
Currently there is no shelter out there for them with the exception of a very large tree that has a great leaf canopy. I don't know why this bothered me so much, but I really wanted them to have some type of shelter they could get under if need be. The last time they were home it rained and hailed and rained some more. They just stood out there like no big deal. I was more bothered than they were. This was keeping me from really making a decision to move them.
We saw a great run-in with a tack room made by McArthur Lumber at Equine Affaire. Loved it...and it was very well-made and affordable. We figured that with what we are saving in board, the run-in would pay for itself by the end of the summer. We are still not making any money on the situation though as we will still need to buy hay and grain (which is included in our board today), but that was not the point.
So, we took the plunge, ordered the run-in and gave notice. The horses will live with us all summer starting in June! I am really looking forward to it. It will be work but I'll save a tremendous amount of time not having to drive anymore. Plus, it is really cool to look out my back window and see them there..oh, and they nicker at me in the morning. Yes, I know they are just telling me to hurry up with the grain, but they never nicker at me in the barn so it still makes me smile.
I have the day off tomorrow --yippee and I get to do horse stuff. We were asked to participate in Enrichment Day for one of the elementary schools. We are presenting horse grooming/care to two different groups. The kids had to sign up for stuff they were interested in--we have about 15 kids total in our class. We are bringing the horses with us to demonstrate grooming and talk about general horse stuff. The weather is supposed to be really nice. Brenda put together some fun goody bags for the kids. Definitely something different to do with our horses. Here is hoping they are on their best behavior otherwise the kids will see what longeing for respect looks like...!
So happy that the weather is finally decent and that horse activities are picking up. Liz and I are going to run a Hunter Pace on Memorial Day, we are going to Smoke Rise Ranch for "cow day" on the 27th and then on to Julie Goodnight clinic for two days, May 30-31...oh, and my birthday is sandwiched in there too. What a week that will be.

Thursday, April 16, 2009


Woops..meant to post this pic..I like how relaxed we look...
I absolutely promise to post about Equine Affaire and our experience there. I just need to get up the energy to do so...there is ALOT to write about. We have a ton of pictures too as Carla, Brenda and I were all in clinics. I took a bunch of pictures trying to figure out which settings on my new camera are the best for that type of thing. Lots of pics came out blurry and some came out with weird lighting. There are good ones too. So please be patient...I want to be sure and hit all the details.
The weather is finally getting decent around here. We had a spell of good weather a few weeks ago and then it got cold and miserable again. Typical Ohio in April.
Rio is shedding her winter fuzzies very nicely. She was excellent at EA--she is an old pro by now. We had another lesson with Terry Myers on Monday. I have to say I think that some things are starting to come together. We work alot on circles and such and I just could not figure out what that was doing for my riding. On Monday we did alot more and really saw results as Rio got softer and more collected. At the end of the lesson we worked on it briefly in a canter...way more work needed there but at least I get the gist of it now.
We are going to try and bring the horses home this week if we can. The weather is supposed to be nice through the weekend and then a week of rain next week.
The website calendar is really filling up. It finally seems as if I am getting more hits to the site. This is great as people are sending me their showbills to post. I am almost completely done with the integrated trail map. I can't wait to put this on the site. It has all the public trails (county metroparks, state and national parks and forests) on one map. You can click on the map to get directions. I think it is going to be VERY useful for our riding this summer.
Back to work for now.

Monday, March 30, 2009

We are off to Equine Affaire!

Technically we are off to EA on Thursday but its so close, it counts..my head is there anyway.
We are busy making all the last minute preparations...cleaning tack (saddle, bridle, boots, saddle pad), packing up(horse stuff, people stuff) and trying to keep our horses clean! That last one is not easy as it is a bit muddy in the pastures. Rio's white socks look sort of blackish and lumpy with mud. Oh, and she is still very fuzzy. I am reluctant to shave her this late in the game as I'll probably mess it up and she'll end up looking like a shorn sheep. So I am settling for a good go-over with the shedding blade and a good trim on her face and legs.
Brenda, Carla and I are all in clinics this year...it will be fun to have Carla there this year. This is her first go at it and she is a bit nervous. I just know she'll do really well.
Our clinic schedule:
Thursday 1pm Brenda/Beth Barbara Schulte
Friday 9:30am Carla Julie Goodnight
Friday 1pm Brenda Tommy Garland
Friday 5:45pm Carla Tommy Garland
Saturday 5:30pm Brenda Julie Goodnight
Sunday 11:00am Carla Tommy Garland
Sunday 11:30am Beth Julie Goodnight

I think I may have missed one of Carla's on the schedule. I seem to remember her having one on Saturday too.
I applied for Tommy Garland too but didn't get picked...:-(
I am really looking forward to my clinic with Julie Goodnight on Sunday. We will be working on leads, lead changes and flying lead changes...oh, boy.
A friend of ours is in the Extreme Cowboy Race on Saturday. We are going to go and cheer her on.
That is it for now...got to go get my boots shined up and make sure I have lots of advil....
Stop and see us in the barn if you go...

Thursday, February 26, 2009

February is almost over!

I am so grateful that the dreaded February is coming to an end. I can't stand February. There are bright spots...like my youngest son and my sister were born in February. My wedding anniversary is in Feb...today as a matter of fact. And then there is Valentines Day...


However...there is gloom, grey skies, snow, cold, WIND and did I mention cold?? This has been the most depressing winter ever with regards to the cold. We have not had that much snow (well except for that blizzard not long ago) but it has been bitterly cold and darn windy. I hate the wind...so does my garage roof.


Enough of my incessant whining. It is pretty nice today. Supposed to get up to about 60 or so, but it is cloudy as the rain is on its way. I guess you can't have it all.


The cold has put a huge damper on the horse riding activity. The only real riding we are doing right now is in the arena. Even that I have not been doing much...just no motivation this year. Rio's weight has been great this winter. She seems very happy back at Jane's. Right now she is showing some stiffness in her back, left hock. She was very off the other night. Hoping she just twisted something and that she will get over it with a little rest and some bute.


I have been busy working on Trail Mileage information for the Ohio Horseman's Council. I recently took over as chairman of the Trail Mileage Program at the state level. Its been interesting so far. This is my busiest time of year with the program as I am responsible for compiling all the trail mileage for members and locations ridden. People send it to their counties and then it is forwarded to me to compile. It would be easy if I got everything on time and in the same format, but that is not the case!


I have tried several times to post our video that we sent in for Equine Affaire clinics. I'll keep trying but so far blogger is not letting it go through. We should find out if we were accepted within the next couple of weeks. They typically call and then follow up with a packet of forms to fill out.


Thought I'd post this pic from the Giddy Up Girls trip to Smoke Rise this fall. Even though it was fall, it still gives me hope that there will be better weather and trail riding coming soon!

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

This will make you giggle


Someone emailed this to me the other day. He, He!

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Name Dropping

Because we like to get out and do so many different things, we have met some fun people along the way...both the "famous" and "not-so famous"..well in horse circles anyway.

The first clinic we ever did was with a John Lyons trainer named Richie Wingfield from Kentucky. I had my horse about 6 months and found the whole ordeal to be educational, confidence-building and terrifying. I had little to no idea what I was doing but spending three whole days with my horse was pure heaven. We made big strides in our relationship that weekend. I don't have any pics from that weekend...I was too busy being scared and feeling stupid! Richie is fearless and funny and a good trainer. His little boys are adorable too.


That Spring we went to Equine Affaire for the first time. As I posted below, we participated in clinics with Brenda Imus and Suzanne Shepards and Bob Jeffries. I don't seem to have any really good pics with them. I think we were way too nervous to think about snapping photos.

Next up we went up to Belle Center, Ohio for a clinic with Clinton Anderson. We were scheduled for the clinic with his apprentice but she had a family emergency at the last minute, so Clinton took over for the entire weekend...what a great experience. It was a small group of us...12 or so. We got tons of hands on help (and razzing from Clinton). We learned a ton.

That summer we joined to OQHA for the Charity Ride at Spotted Horse Ranch in Laurelville. Here we are with Mike the owner.


In October 2007, we joined the crew from the Best of America by Horseback TV show as they filmed the episode in Ohio. This was held at Smoke Rise Ranch in Glouster, OH (near Wayne National Forest)
Tom Seay--The show's host Del Shields-Cowboy Poet and Singer

Kerry Kuhn (and Brenda)--Horse Trainer

Derek, Jesse, Liz, me and Nicki

In April 2008, we had some more fun at Equine Affaire. I ran the Extreme Cowboy Race and participated in clinics with Craig Cameron and Julie Goodnight. Brenda joined Scot Hansen and Elizabeth Graves for clinics.




That's us and Tommy Garland and Tom Seay (again!) We ran into Tommy at the expo--he wasn't presenting-just attending. The last picture is Dave and Donna from Legacy Saddles. They made my beautiful saddle for me last year. Here is the finished product...gorgeous!


In May we joined up with the BOABHB team again. This time we went to Midwest Trail Ride in Norman, Indiana. It was a fun few days. Brenda spent some time with Kerry Kuhn getting some help with her new horse, Doc.
In case you can't tell, we really enjoy getting out, doing new things and meeting people along the way. We are getting ready for this year's Equine Affaire. We are applying for several clinics and expect we will have more adventures to share.