Because I am actually starting to feel positive about riding
Echo again (and thanks to all of you who listened to me whine and mope about HS
essentially being a death sentence), I went and looked at some videos of our
last jumping and dressage lessons. I’d never gotten around to posting them
before, because shortly after the lessons, things went downhill dramatically
and I stopped riding. Plus, it’s hard to look at videos when you think you’re
never going to get to ride your very lovely horse ever again.
As I watched, I noticed that was had some really nice
moments. And then I saw the really, really bad moments. Moments where he
flipped his head. Moments where he bucked and bolted. Moments that I now know
were his reaction to the pain he experiences from headshaking syndrome.
Hindsight is, as then say, 20/20.
I don’t actually remember the head flipping much, but I do
remember the buck-and-bolt thing getting worse and worse. At the dressage show,
he “spooked” at a horse doing tempis, at another horse in the mirror, and a few
other random things. But Echo’s not a spooky horse, so why would he suddenly
have such a dramatic reaction? When we went XC schooling, he did it several
times, and I thought it was in response to another horse coming at him – except
that in the worst instance, the horse was 50+ yards away, so it didn’t make
sense. Now, I don’t think he was spooking at anything other than the pain in
his face.
So here are the videos. First up, jumping. Please ignore my
form and look at my lovely gonna-be-an-eventer-not-a-hunter pony. And look for
the head flip at 7 seconds in.
Second, our dressage lesson, in which we have the best canter transition EVER at 3 seconds. Didn’t see that one coming, did you? But lest you get too excited, watch him start to suck back as we come around the circle, tuck his head to his chest at 12 seconds, then buck and bolt at 14 seconds. I yelled at him and he came back to me, but still, it’s not the kind of behavior you want under saddle. Plus, how can you reprimand a horse for a response to pain that he cannot control?
My hope is that with the Mg he's now on, and with a second round of Dex Pulse Therapy (we started today, per my vet), that his symptoms will be much better under saddle. In fact, I have a lesson scheduled with a new eventing trainer on Sunday! My plan is to ride Red (YAY FEERLESS WAR PONY!!!), but bring Echo and longe him and ride him lightly in the (relative) safety of an arena. Hubby is traveling again, and so are all my regular riding buddies, and I don't want to get on Echo unless there's someone there to dial 911. Just in case, lol! We'll see how the HS symptoms are then... it will be the first real test.
Keeping my fingers crossed for Echo.
ReplyDeleteThanks! We need it!
DeleteOo, that is a lovely canter transition! He will get there. Can't wait to show in Waco with you in the h-u-n-t-e-r-s!
ReplyDeleteHow about you ride my cute BRH in hunters and I'll take Simon eventing? That would be a fair trade, don't you think?
Delete:) Optimistic.
ReplyDeleteHahah, what a change, right?
DeleteSending lots of energy and prayers that this will come right for him.
ReplyDeleteKaren, I really appreciate it. Echo needs all the help he can get!
DeleteNice transition indeed!
ReplyDeleteVal, why is it that I need magic trainer dust to make those happen? I really wish I could do those all by myself!
DeleteSending good thoughts and prayers your way!
ReplyDeleteGlad things are improving. You can go crazy on the Mg if you want - for feet, I send horses home with instructions to owners to feed at least 50g MgO per day (roughly 25g Mg) and I know people who have safely doubled, tripled and in one case quadrupled that when grass went mad and they had horses go footy as a result.
ReplyDelete