of 2010, I should say. But I was so excited I could hardly sleep last night!
Anja (my show-jumping next door neighbor) came over and told my man a spot opened up in a group lesson and I could come to Gut Luchtenberg Friday morning. My man wrote me a note:
Riding. Friday. 9:30. 9:00 Grooming.
I was so curious, What, huh, what kind of lesson, and what kind of horse? One of those giant German horses? Oh no! And most of all, what if I cannot understand the riding instructor? I was pretty worried about that. And what if she's mean and yells at me in German for being an idiot American who doesn't know anything!
(In the German language if often appears that I know nothing because of the language barrier, when in reality I know more than nothing.)
So this morning at 7:45 AM I walked next door in my newly oiled Ariat boots and halfchaps, and my grippy Irideon breeches. (No way was I gonna wear spandex on leather!) I had my helmet in hand. I felt like a rider again.
The riding instructor arrived and introduced me to the other ladies. One, Ulrike, was especially kind to me. I was just anxious to get my horse and get started so I could get a long warm up but that was not to be. We all headed to the mare field together and found our horses in the farthest corner.
Black and Beautiful
My mare, Amanda, was gorgeous! She was jet black and sweet-faced.
We took our mares to the barn and groomed them. The more I brushed her, the more like satin her coat shone. It was unreal! She has very good manners and I didn't have to yell at her (I heard some cussing in German coming out of the other stalls).
She had pretty tack to match her prettiness, I wish I had a photograph! She had a burgundy pad under her black dressage saddle, and a simple french link bridle (no flash, hooray!) with a purple browband. I didn't know what to do with this odd martingale thing that wasn't a martingale. What could that be? Another lady showed me how to toss it over her neck until we were ready.
I have to admit I was annoyed at first when the riding instructor corrected me for not holding onto my reins while I tightened the girth in the middle of the arena, where my mare stood still half asleep. She wanted the reins hooked thru my arm as I worked but that mare was not going anywhere. I was a little worried that I would be micromanaged in every way.
I needed a mounting block, embarrassing to say, even though the mare is only about 16 hands. That is still bigger than I'm used to and I'm not at all fit right now.
Then the instructor affixed the martingale, which wasn't - it was draw reins of some sort, but no, side reins?!!! (Sort of a mix of both. From girth underneath, between the forelegs, thru the bit and connected back to the girth under my knee.) Crazy. All the horses had them on. And later when I asked why, they said it's just a rule, all the school horses wear them. I was appalled because drawreins are a handy tool to use sporadically but not permanently, and draw reins are not fixed - you hold them. How would a student ever learn to ask for roundness if the horse has no choice? If I continue riding there I will have to insist that they be taken off at some point. (I understand that it allows students to focus on other things, but still..)
I started riding off and realized I hadn't signed a release waiver in case of injury. I stopped and came back to the instructor and she said in Germany it's not necessary because everyone has personal protection insurance (I do) and every horse is individually insured. Aha, I see. (Even dogs have insurance, Anja said that if I'd like, she can submit a claim because her dog killed my cat! I said no thank you.)
We started doing warm up without stirrups and stretching our arms around. I find that arm thing ridiculous but good we didn't have to do it too long.
So here I am riding this pretty mare and it was as I feared - she's a typical school horse with dead sides and not much steering. AGH am I spoiled, I rarely had to look for the gas pedal on Baasha, our problem was getting stopped.
After 15 minutes I was sweating and exhausted and I had to come to the center to rest. Pitiful. The mare kept trying to follow the other horses, if they were on one end of the arena during "free riding" time, she'd just veer across and I'd be turning her right, and she'd be turning left - kind of like you see Shetland ponies do, they just harden their necks and blast whichever way they like. I'm used to ultra sensitive Arabians, oh dear.
I had to whine to the instructor. "She won't go forward, and she won't turn. She has no gas pedal nor steering wheel!" The instructor said I need to be sure to lay the outside rein on her neck to block her shoulder, and raise up my inside hand high, and try to use my weight. For a moment I thought, "Oh, it's not her, it's me?" but later I thought, "No, it's her. I've never had this issue with other horses!" I'm the type to put the blame on me before blaming the horse, but not this time.
I could do serpentines easily with her - when she wanted to. But when she wanted to be with her friends, the rider became a passenger.
Finally the other ladies told me, "It's our fault that she does that" and I see that perhaps enough students have simply followed the other horses with her that it's a habit.
But I love this free riding we were doing - almost having multiple collisions, but remembering "left knee to left knee" as someone came toward me. It gave us time to work on what we wanted. I worked on steering but didn't get far before a change was called for.
It's called "Departmentalizing" (Abteilen?) where the riders all do the same thing. All leicht trab (rising trot). All hand wechsel (change hand). All circle (I think the word is the same.) I am not sure it's such a good thing because the horses copy each other and don't listen to the riders as closely. Then there was the cantering.
I thought Lord don't let us canter today cuz I can barely make this overgrown Shetland trot! But we cheated. While we were in Abteilen (I think that's the word), the first rider takes off "gallopieren" until she's at the end of the line. Then the second rider, and so on. I thought "There's no way" but my mare did it. Aha, she knows this copying routine. It's not my canter cue at all. (A canter cue that was zapping all my strength before she finally relented and cantered.) Thankfully her canter was not hellish (like another school horse's). The instructor was lavish with her praise and never corrected my position at the canter, woo. (She did correct me at the trot whenever I was posting on the wrong diagonal, oops.)
Almost the entire time I felt that my mare was downhill. How could she not be with her head in place like that?
The riding instructor kept calling out to me instructions in English and I'm not sure that helped. Her English is OK but I need to hear the German words for things so I can learn them. At one point I had to stop and correct her because it really bothered me that she kept calling it "lope." I said, "We don't say 'lope' - that's Western. We call it 'canter'" and she felt stupid and said "Oh, I watch too many Western lessons!" I bet the Germans find it odd that we have different words in the same language, for the same exact things, depending on your riding style.
There's a certain thing you have to yell if you want the short end rail by the bleachers so you can take a drink of water. I have not caught what it is exactly.
The other ladies stopped halfway thru to drink water and I wished I had mine but more, I wished I'd picked a shirt that didn't show all my sweat. In the large arena mirrors I could see my back was completely soaked, and under my arms and boobs, too. Horrible, had I forgotten that I sweat during riding lessons?
The riding instructor wanted to know the English word for the various arena patterns - I don't know, do we have a general word for serpentines, circles, figure 8s, etc? I guessed patterns but I'm not sure. They call it "Hufschlag" meaning the tracks you ride in.
I told the riding instructor how difficult this mare is to move and she said "OK to be honest I had to give you the laziest horse because I didn't know your level." AHA.
Well I know how to give a horse a gas pedal, it will just take me a few minutes (and about 30 swats with the crop).
During the next "free time" I got to work.
How to get your gas pedal back - from my old Dressage trainer Deborah Nelson
Transitions and repercussions. Oh, you knew that. Well, it worked on Amanda. I asked for 5 steps at the walk, long relaxed ones, and then I gave her the trot cue I would like her to respond to. That is a little vibration of both calves at the same time, with a little heel squeeze too. She ignored it. Whack with the crop (I think I kept hitting the saddle pad due to her lack of reaction). We would trot 10-20 paces on a loose rein, I wasn't about to constrain her during this lesson. Then I would sink down in my seat and she'd say "Thank God" and walk. Beautiful down transitions! Then I'd walk 5 nice long walk steps and then give her my cue to trot again. Whack when she ignored me. The thing about warmbloods*, this lesson seemed to take a lot more cicuits of the arena than necessary. A sensitive horse would have gotten it after perhaps 2 whacks. This mare took forever. I need to get thru her schooling horse haze into her real mind underneath.
(*I don't actually know if this is typical for warmbloods, but I know it is not a hot-blooded breed characteristic.)
Finally she sprung to a trot when my calves vibrated and I reached forward and rubbed on her neck.
There we go, we have a gas pedal now. Anja came to watch and got to see me literally cruising at a trot on the laziest horse in the barn. I was doing lengthening on the long sides and collecting on the short sides and she was FLYING down the long sides, it was great! She was actually "hearing" my cues! The riding instructor noticed and said "Oh my, she's running!" (Her English isn't so great.)
But then the hour was up, time to cool down. Oh well, we got that worked out at least.
I was happy that I wasn't the only one covered in sweat - one other lady ran a towel thru her spiky hair to dry it.
I agreed to sign up for 5 lessons (they're so cheap it's unreal - my trainer in Seattle charged 50 per hour, this is way less).
Then Ulrike bought me a cappucino from the Reiterstube (lounge) and we sat around and talked for a while. One other lady from the lesson (didn't catch her name) and Anja were also there, it was nice to be in a group of ladies chatting about random things. Ulrike was trying to give me ideas of where I can work - they seem to want me to come back to their lessons and I said it's a matter of money and I have no job. Anja even said she'd talk to some people she knows who work for an American company. It's nice when people try to help.
Ulrike was saying how difficult English is and I said, "At least we have one word for 'the.' I bought 5 goldfish recently and named them 'Der, Die, Das, Den and Dem' (the, the, the, the and the)." They laughed and admitted I win, German's harder.
Oh, and it was very nice when Ulrike said, "It's obvious from watching you that you can ride.": ) That felt good after all my nervousness.
Anja pointed to her new boots, she has these lovely tall riding boots that have a tie system going up the side with a dial, so the calf is adjustable. Ulrike asked what they cost - guess what - 600 Euros!!!!!! With boots that expensive, I don't want to know what her saddle cost.
Then they invited me to their "Friday morning riders" dinner party! It's only in tentative planning right now but I would love that. I need more contact with people and these ladies seem nice.
I will be so happy if I could do this regularly. I'm ready to give up my monthly Thai restaurant outing for it: )
___
Though I didn't have my camera today, I had it the first time I visited Gut Luchtenberg.
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25 comments:
Sounds like a great experience (minus the draw reins - yuck!). You worked through that dead sides issue pretty handily. I think warmbloods are as sensitive as other horses, but I think it's easier for them to just shut down if they're over cued and stay tuned out - hence the dead sides. Good going!
What a cool lesson! It's neat that they are affordable and that all the instructors are so busy.
I think it's really funny how the Germans all want to practice English on you and you want to practice German on them. And I LOL'd about the goldfish!
Good work with Amanda.
Interesting about the liability issue. I'm working with a group trying to help autistic kids and the efforts in Europe are going much faster because there is no liability concern.
I can't imagine getting a lesson in Spanish (which I know just a bit). I think I'd fall of my horse! Hope you get to do more soon! Thai food can wait!
That sounds lovely. I'm afraid your instructor was naive to think all Germans have personal insurance though. I know many who do not: I was talking about insurance last month and was told how wrong I was when I said everyone has it and that it is quite inexpensive.(We have it and also legal insurance, as Germany is far more litigious than the US.)
@Breathe- I have been told that it because when a sign goes up saying "t your own risk", it really, really is.
I have to tell you what your niece just said, while reading this with me.
Elise:
"Good thing Auntie doesn't have any kids. She writes such long blogs that her kids would be like, 'Mom, I'm hungry.' and then four hours later they'd be like, 'Mom, I'm hungry!!'" hahahaha
-the sister
Oh- I also meant to say- you made me miss riding lessons!
Adrian was reading this with me and said, "the instructor told her how to fix the problem" (as if it's a computer or something hahaha) I explained how it's so hard sometimes that your body almost *can't* do it at first...
so awesome btw that you remembered how Deb would have done it... we were lucky to start with such a gifted trainer, huh? :)
Wish I could take lessons on Baasha again... :) :)
-the sister
Wow, how totally cool. I think others have said already that it isn't the breeding that makes the warmbloods so dead-sided and hard-mouthed, it's the experience--school horses get lots of practice at ignoring the "nonsense cues" of new riders.
Also: that feeling of down-hilled-ness might also come from the big-headedness of Amanda. Riders who are accustomed to warmbloods get on Fiddle and are always surprised that, although her head is huge, she feels more like an Arab with lots of hind impulsion and very tight brakes...I think it's a training issue as well as an equipment and body-type issue.
Thoughts?
Kate, you're right, it's not a warmblood thing, but Arabians won't put up with that kind of whipping, they either get it right away, or they flip out on you: ) School horses put up with a lot of crap, I'm not used to this!
Funder, they don't teach horse terminology in German class, and I think I need to get some kiddy learning to ride book so I can learn the terms.
Breathe, my favorite grocery checker was washing up spilled water at the store and there was no yellow sign depicting someone slipping. I don't believe those signs exist here. (But McDonalds cups say "caution hot" everywhere.) It is frustrating to not understand certain instructions she was giving out. I must learn quickly!
G in Berlin, I thought everyone had Haftpflicht insurance. I guess she assumed that too!
Hainshome, tell Elise that I am very careful to feed my horse, cat, and husband before blogging! I feed first whoever acts the hungriest, and that's usually the cat. MEOW MEOW MEOW! But then my man will go out to his office and come in and say, "There is a nickering horse out there" and so he'll get fed too. The husband gets fed whenever he asks, whenever he's hungry.
Right, my body couldn't stop that mare from blowing thru my aids at first. How do you keep going left when your nose is cranked all the way to the right!? Oh yah..legs. I rehearsed in my mind my old lessons with Deb before my lesson. How she'd get a horse tuned up with her stop, back, trot off thing. We were blessed to find her.
And the whole time I kept thinking how I wished it were Baasha, he was SO flexible, his body was like a noodle it was so bendy! And he knows my cues so well for everything. *sigh*
Aarene, you're right, I'm not used to that. I don't think it's her head, which doesn't seem that big, but she did have a roach back and I wonder if that makes me feel downhill all the time. Certainly those fixed draw reins did not help
Does Fiddle carry her head high like Arabs do? Isn't it nice to have all the gears smoothly functioning on a horse of your own, trained by you?
I love this blog entry as it's so hard even using a dictionary, to find terms like 'trot' and 'canter'. Isn't canter 'leicht galoppieren'? (Sorry not sure of spellings). I do think it's strange that they are in this draw reins type gadget all the time. And I really know what it's like to ride a non responsive horse, as Barnaby is so much more rigid than Max was. I look forward to learning along with you! I have a german friend who now lives in America and imports German horses, I'll have to ask her for some terms.
I do believe that is a common deal with German riding lessons... I took a few lessons when we were there with a fellow military wife(she was a german married to a coworker of the hubbie's) And that was how the horses there were... I literally couldn't communicate either.. I knew no german (other then enough to order Bitburger) and the instructor really had no english... That was ok, what wasen't was the fact it was brought to my attention that the other riders were talking crap.. espcially after the instructor told me after my first lesson that I could do the hack out rides... Pissed the others off, because they had been riding a few months, and were yet to ride out...
I am afraid I let them get to me enough that I only rode a few times... it really bothered me to have them being witches behind my back... I shouldn't have let them get to me, but, when your young, (18-19) and living literally thousands of miles from "home" with no family and few friends...:(
Oh, forgot to say, I know what you mean on the cost here for lessons, I really would like to get lessons for my kids, but, I can't afford 30-50 a lesson for THREE each week!
:(
Tara
I took jumping lessons for a few months as a teenager and yes, the horses are much harder to ride than your own. I often rode Edgar, a thoroughbred and to move him out I needed to use a crop which also made him buck. lol. I finally decided that I enjoyed riding my own horses much more although the group lessons were fun.
I wish you could have gotten some pictures.
How wonderful! Sounds like a fun day with lots of challenges thrown in. Maybe your instructor should pay YOU, considering you are re-training one of her lesson horses to be a more more receptive, cooperative mount? hee hee!
Five words in German for 'The'?? Yowza!
You made me laugh that you named all of your goldfish 'the'. What did your man think? I bet he thinks you're very clever. :D
~Lisa
I took two years of German when I was in college so I had a good laugh at your goldfish names! No surprise the first German word I learned was pferde. :)
Lytha and Autumn Mist, here are some English to German translations of horse terms:
Let`s ride!
English-German-French Dictionary
"Isn't canter 'leicht galoppieren'?"
Yes, I think so ( I am no rider). Or it`s "langsam/locker gallopieren". The exact german, but little-known term is "kantergaloppieren"
Horse gaits - Schritt - Trab - Kanter - Galopp
Lisa, our sagebrush isn't actually related to cooking sage. They just smell the same!
Hey, drop me a line at big appletobigbear (at) googlemail. com.
I'd love to chat- and I think you are doing really well- I was showing my husband your blog and we were so envious of your farm.
Excellent riding! Sounds like you are finding your riding muscles quickly and new German riding words too - and riding friends. I am slightly behind - not sure why you are not riding Baasha? I missed that part, but this riding group sounds like fun. The facility is gorgeous! And the mare (although with dead sides) sounds like she was so lovely. I hope the side/draw reins-contraption go away!
I'm a lurker, but I just wanted to say I love your blog. Well, and she might be talking about the center line, and quarter lines for your patterns.
Can't wait to hear all your lesson stories and progressions!
Autumn Mist, I think your friend is doing it backwards - America has too many horses and no market, and Germany has a great market and no apparent surplus of papered, purebred yet unwanted horses. I've looked at sale prices in both countries and the difference is shocking.
Tara, that's awful that they were gossipy bitches to you! You can still order a "Bit" right?
FV, I'll get pics as soon as I feel comfortable there: )
Lisa, my man actually did laugh when I told him the goldfish names!
Melissa, I screwed up saying "Pferd" recently at a restaurant, trying to make sure my bratwurst didn't have any horse in it, and the lady couldn't understand me and said "Of course there's horse in them!" and I freaked out and then she realized I said "Pferd" not "Fett" (fat). hehehe
Funder, your sage is better.
G in Berlin, the question is was it practical to buy property in Germany? The situation is so different here, I didn't realize it when we house shopped. As you know people don't invest in property/homes like back home because they aren't an investment prospect. Scary.
Juliette, I think Baasha is retired but I'm not sure. He's got arthritis and this summer it got worse, but it could be all that green grass bothering his feet. I guess we'll see this winter.
Sounds like you had a lot of fun and met nice new people.
I actually wouldn't worry about the "Draw Reins" (Schlaufzügel)just yet. They actually sound very much like "Vienna Reins" (Wienerzügel). They are half as bad as "real" draw reins since they are attached to the girth. The horses have a decent range of motion with them. Left, right, down. They can not lean on them (like they can on sidereins (Ausbinder)) and they can even stretch down (*if* attached correctly).
For now the Wienerzügel give you a chance to concentrate on your aids and riding without being bounced out of the tack (Sattelzeug) on a big moving hollow backed warmblood school horse (Schulpferd).
I used them on the lunge (Longe) on my old mare and will use them on Crispin as well on the lunge before backing (Einreiten).
(See how I use the german translation for the horsey terms ;-) )
How are you today, is every muscle nice and sore? We call that Muskelkater. :D
AmityBee, thanks for commenting, I knew you'd have some answers. Wienerzuegel huh? I did notice the mare could stretch down the the ground with them on. I do consider them a crutch (no idea how to translate that) for riding - they are better used on the longe. Yes, I have had Muskelkater since that lesson, and by the time it goes away I'll be doing another lesson. I plan to basically be in pain contiually then. (It's better to ride several times per week but I'll take what I can get.)
Sounds like a great experience!
I love that barn so cool looking with the rock and the vines!
I laughed at the goldfish names too, LOL LOL.
I took some German in High School, but remember very little. My family on my moms side and my husbands moms side are all of German decent. I remember my great grandma had a really heavy accent.
Bitte ein Bit! We lived where the Bitburger Brewery was within eye sight of our balcony. I can still remember the smell.
If you for some reason ever go to Bitburg, stop by a sandwhich shop called Ofen Frisch (oven fresh?) I drool thinking of their ham sandwhiches with their Remoulade and brotchen!
Looked it up, it is..Bäckerei Ofenfrisch..Stockstr. 26, 54634 Bitburg
065613406
Tara
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