Wednesday, March 26, 2014

March Weather and the Road to NASTR Triple Crown

On Monday it was 80°F (27°C)... now we're having tornado warnings:


(Hint, we're smack under the orange yolk)

My rain gauge picked up 1/2" of rain yesterday and it hardly rained. This evening's activities should augment it impressively.

* * *

Because we were too floppy to ride over the weekend (weekends need to be three days long - one to sleep, one to do non-horse activities, and one to ride), I opted to take a mini-vacation and sidle off on Monday afternoon and join pft at the Auburn Overlook to ride as far as we could in the daylight available.

We managed a respectable 19 miles in four hours - including the side-event of pft amusing himself playing weave poles with the parking notices at the Confluence, followed by dodging a park pickup and an ambulance on the river road for a downed mountain biker at the lower quarry (broken leg + slid along on their face, by the looks of things), followed by scuttling away before the evac helicopter landed. We thought the horses would probably be OK, but didn't really want to find out.

Horses as long and large as Fergus do not wind around weave poles.
I tried it with lil' Roop, and he didn't fit neither. Needs work. 


So now we should be ready for NV Derby 50 (at Washoe Valley this year) in a couple of week's time - the first ride of the NASTR Triple Crown. Hopefully both pones will be fit and well, and qualify themselves for the other two legs - NASTR 75 and Virginia City 100. Not that pft wants to ride VC, but I'm working on talking him into the 75 miler. Fergus could use the work to be ready for August (you know...) and it would double my chances of having a horse with four legs come VC-time in September.

Roo has started two 100s - Patriot (2008) and Tevis (2009). He finished Patriot and was pretty whupped at the end. But then we also rode a big chunk of it on our own in the dark after we lost our riding buddy and he wasn't a happy camper about that (too many large rocks looming by the side of the trail), so maybe that contributed to his tard-ness. At Tevis, he was pulled at Chicken Hawk (65 miles) when his rear end tightened up. I suspect he had something going on back there, since vet Larry Goss said he was moving a little funkily at vet-in, but we attributed it to his newly-glued boots. There was probably operator error to blame too - do not let the not-very-fast pone go very fast in the first 10 miles, no matter how much fun it may be. Live and learn.

If Roop and I finish all three rides, I get the jacket.
If I have to switch over to Fergus, then pft gets the jacket for contributing to the exercise.

Assuming, of course, we manage to finish all three. So far, I'm 2 for 3 on that in year's past.


Roop is the grubbiest of horses right now, and has neglected to shed out his winter coat properly,
unlike Fergus and Uno who are smoothy and clean-looking


'Twas a lovely afternoon/evening, and the frogs were frogging and owls hooting by the time we got back up to the Overlook. Fergus is practising for riding it in the dark in August. He does good work. 

1 comment:

  1. How lovely to do an evening ride! It's always fun out on that trail, but I think a helicopter evacuation might have put my horse over the top. There is always good people watching too. When I did that trail a couple weeks ago there was a woman walking along the river carrying her cat. We just did a double take and kept trotting. Fun times. Those "weave poles" are new, but great idea!

    Good luck with your upcoming rides, sounds like you're ready!

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