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Saturday, July 22, 2000

Fryeburg 2 day 50 CTR Fryeburg, ME July 2000

Well, here I go again! Bonnie is not bringing a horse but came with me and will be working the ride. She is such a good friend for doing this. It takes so many volunteers to run one of these rides. Bonnie has returned her new horse, Max,to the dealer and traded her for a nice pony mare that I think she will have a lot of fun with. Since this mare is in her teens, Bonnie will still be looking around for something else but she wanted something to ride now while she was looking. Though I think this little mare will surprise her and do fine with this sport. I took her out a day after Bonnie got her and loved her. She is spirited but sane and steady. I must have looked quite a sight riding down the road on this pony with my legs handing nearly to the ground. I was hoping Bonnie would show up early enough Friday morning so we could sneak out for a quick ride before I dragged her away from her new pony for the weekend. She did arrive early enough and we had a nice little ride to the alpaca farm. Bonnie really like her new little mare.

I was a little apprehensive about going to this ride. We had to use my truck and I've never trusted it. We have had it in to two different mechanics and it still hasn't been running very good. We finally took it to a third mechanic. I don't like the man that owns the last shop we brought it to but his mechanic finally seems to figure out what was wrong and the truck is running great right now. Better then it ever has since we bought it. It's almost a 2 hr. drive to Fryeburg. We arrived at the fairgrounds about 11:00 AM. Not many people had arrived yet. They have opened up the new barn that they were just finishing last year when we were here. We had our pick of stalls. the fairgrounds are beautiful. It is in a valley with mountains all around it. the grounds are beautifully maintained and landscaped. The bathrooms are pleasant and clean and there are even showers. the horses stalls are roomy and there is water piped in between every two stalls. And the barns are lovely shed row barns. You can camp right in front of the stalls which is great and so convenient. I filled up Marie's stall with shavings while Bonnie cleaned out the horse trailer and set up our cots. Camping in our trailer is working out great. It is simple and it makes us keep the trailer spotlessly clean. It is secure and dry in bad weather and has nice window screens keeping the bugs out. When we get to a ride, we clean out the manure, rinse the floor, give the walls a quick wipe down and ta-da, our home away from home is ready. I even made some curtains that we put over the windows with velcro. Someday we'll have a trailer with living quarters but for now this is great. Anyway, after I got Marie all settled into her stall, I got a stall ready for Susie. She was planning to arrive between 3:00 and 4:00 PM. Bonnie and I went into town to gas up the truck and get lunch. We stopped at a nice little restaurant of which I can't remember the name. we both ordered the fresh fish sandwich special and it was SOOOOOOOOO good. Best fish I can remember having in a long time. When we got back, we walked Marie for a while so she wouldn't be stiff when we vetted in. The vet judge, Don McLean was an hour late. The vetting was supposed to start at 3:00 PM. Susie arrived at 3:30 PM and the vet at 4:00 PM. Don was the same vet that judged this ride last year. Marie is his worst nightmare. He just hates the way she travels. It really bugs him. Both Marie and Cody vetted in ok though I did see Don roll his eyes are Marie. He remembered her from last year, sigh. Bonnie got the job of scribing for the lay judge. I was jealous, that is a good job and such a great learning experience. The lay judge is Gaynor Coassin. She is a great lady and has been in this sport forever I think. Steve and Dinah Rojek are here this year. I believe they come to this ride every year. They are legendary in the sport of endurance riding. They are both on the US endurance team and have competed all over the world. They use CTR's as training rides for their horses. They travel around in this enormous custom bus camper with a slide out and pull a trailer behind. It is very impressive. Susie did ask Steve today what he did for work. He just replied that he was a business man. Steve and Dinah are both such nice people. They both make a point of talking to everyone and encouraging us newcomers in this sport. After Bonnie was done with her scribing job for the night, the three of us went over to the food trailer and had hamburgers, salads and cake. We set up my tent for Susie. She had hers with her but mine is easier to set up. We sat around camp for a while and chatted. The electrolyte controversy continues. Susie uses electrolytes on ride day mostly because that is what "everyone else does". I've read enough to feel that electrolyteing is not completely harmless and in some cases may be more harmful then beneficial. Especially if your horse does not drink well. And Cody is not the best drinker. I have read one theory suggesting giving electrolytes several days before a ride. Since you are likely resting the horse the days before the ride, you wont risk electrolyting when the horse is dehydrated and/or tired but will prompt the horse to drink and hopeful have him "super hydrated" before you get to the ride. Marie always drinks like a fish anyway. We invited Heather over to our campsite. She has been at all the rides and seems to be a very nice girl. She has a little Mustang mare named Lady. We headed to bed when we couldn't stand the mosquitoes anymore, they were ferocious. We had a quiet night.

We had an uneventful morning. We were up early and got the horses fed. I heated up water for coffee and oatmeal. The ride provided coffee and pastries but just not early enough. we had a brief pre-ride meeting and the ride started right on time. Susie is only doing the 25 mile ride but we got paired up together for today. Four miles out, we had to cross the Saco River. It was chest deep to Marie and is quite wide. It was a lot of fun. I had to put my feet up on the saddle to keep them from getting wet. Marie had her head down in the water drinking all the way across. It was funny watching her. I was wishing Bonnie was here riding with is on her new pony mare, she would have had to swim! Last year we'd gone down the road and crossed the river on the bridge. This was much more fun. Marie has to work hard to keep up with Cody. She is so in love with him though, that she would follow him to the ends of the earth even if it killed her. We never saw the sign that the hold was coming up and we were moving pretty fast when we suddenly there it was. Oops! We waited for a couple minutes just outside the hold to give the horses time to cool down. We usually walk the last mile in. Marie was inverted at the 10 min. check. That can be a sign of trouble but not necessarily. The P&R person didn't think she looked at all distressed and wasn't too worried. He told me to let the vet know when I went for my trot out just to be safe. By the time I did my trot out, Marie was just fine and I was cleared to go. the vet was still rolling his eyes at the way Marie travels. I told him that I knew there was nothing wrong with her, just a matter of imperfect conformation, but he didn't look convinced. Susie and I rode with Carl and Irving for quite a while. Carl is new to the sport. Irving is a man in his seventies and had been doing this for quite a few years. He had a stroke last year but had made a good recovery. He is great to ride with and a wealth of knowledge on this sport. We passed one woman who was having a very bad time with her horse. She looked terrified and exhausted and her horse looked the same. She swore to us when we went by that she was not going to bring her horse home with her. Well, she was right. Carl offered her $900 for the horse and took her home. We forded the river again on the way back. We had to wait for some canoes to go by. Marie thought they looked quite scary. I heard that one woman got bucked off in the river on the morning crossing. She didn't get hurt, soft landing. At the finish, Marie's P&R's were good. I only had to do a quick trot to pass for the second day's ride. Well, the vet just couldn't' stand it anymore the way Marie travels. He made me trot, then trot again and finally he said I would have to come back for a re-check in the morning. The lay judge spoke up and asked him why. She said she didn't see anything wrong. They discussed it for a while and the vet finally relented and said I didn't have to come back for a re-check but he'd appreciate it if I would. I agreed and that turned out to be a mistake. After everyone was vetted and Bonnie was done scribing, we went over to the food trailer. They had a nice meal of baked ham, baked potato, salad, mixed vegetables, bread and cake. Steve Rojek sat with us for dinner. He wanted to personally thank Bonnie for being a volunteer worker at the ride. He knows how hard it can be to get enough volunteers. Bonnie and Steve got to talking about horses (imagine that...) and Bonnie was telling him about her first horse, Shannon and how Shannon had tendinitis and she'd had to make the hard decision to give her up to do this sport. Steve told her she did the right thing in deciding to move on to another horse. Bonnie then told her of her bad experience with her next horse, Max and she mentioned that she would prefer to have a pony rather then a big horse. Steve looked at Bonnie kind of funny and asked her if she was serious. She told him that yes, she was. He then asked her if she meant a real pony and Bonnie said yes, a pony. Steve asked a pony under 14H. Bonnie said definitely. Well, it seems that Steve has a pony that he just might be willing to sell. Bonnie got all excited. Steve told us that he had bought this very talented mare years ago. She'd won everything he'd entered her in. He'd tried for years to breed this mare without success. Finally, he did get one foal from her and it was a pony, even though both parents were horses. Steve didn't do much with this pony mare for her first five years. Then he broke her to ride and tried her as a hunter jumper thinking she would make a good pony for some 4-H kid. She did ok but finally someone talked Steve into trying her at endurance since that was what she was bred for and both her parents were champions. He got someone to ride her and she won a reserve championship on her first 100 mile ride. Then did it again on her 2nd 100 mile ride. This pony mare is now in contention for the Florida Cup. This is a ride that you are invited to if you get three high placings in three 100 mile rides in one year. The next qualifying ride is Labor day and if she places high in this ride she will qualify for the Florida Cup. After this is done, Steve said he might consider selling her to the right person. He wants Bonnie to come to his farm and try this mare out. I hope she does. Bonnie is quite excited about this.

After the meal, they had the award presentation for the 25 mile riders. Susie won reserve champion!! She got a score of 97 which is great. Susie was thrilled. She assured me that I would do well tomorrow but a lot of really tough competition is staying for the 50 mile ride so I'm not expecting much. I just hope to finish in good shape. Susie left right after the awards. Bonnie and I went back to town to the restaurant for supper. When we returned to camp, we took Marie out for a walk so she wouldn't get too stiff from standing in the stall. She isn't used to being confined in a stall. The ride committee decided to start the ride early in the morning so Bonnie and I went to bed fairly early. Neither one of us was really tired and we ended up talking until late.

Both of us were up plenty early and Bonnie went out and fed Marie for me. At the appointed time, I took Marie over for my 'voluntary' re-check with the vet. After watching Marie trot, he really wanted to pull me from the ride. I knew there was nothing wrong but couldn't convince him. And he couldn't decide if Marie was having trouble with her hindquarters, legs, shoulders.... I told him if he was that unsure, maybe he was nit-picking. The lay judge was on my side and told him to let me start the ride. They watch you the whole ride, he could pull me at any point if he could see a definite problem. The vet gave in and let me start the ride. I know that my horse is driving him crazy, but he is driving me crazy! Heather's horse got pulled this morning along with another horse.

The woman I started with today left me in the dust within minutes. Marie was kind of poking along wondering where Cody was. This is the first time she has ever gone out without one of her buddies. About 3 miles out, Another rider caught up with me. It was Marcy Gamester and Marie decided she liked Marcy's gelding and perked right up. Marcy has been competing for 24 years. Carl and Irving soon caught up and went by us. I thought Marie would want to go with them as we rode with them yesterday. But, she was very content traveling with Marcy's gelding. They are very well matched in pace. We passed one woman leading her horse out ot the road. We were afraid she'd gotten hurt. She said she was ok. She was having a back problem and just couldn't handle her horse for another day's ride. We forded the river again this morning without incident. We had to walk the horses through a city of tents to get to the river today. The horses didn't really like that but were good. At the first watering hole, the vet was there and really tearing his hair out over Marie. He asked me to voluntarily pull from the ride. He couldn't quite lay his hand on the problem and couldn't quite bring himself to pull me. I told him no. I told him when he saw something that he could point out as a definite problem, he could pull me and I wouldn't argue.

Marie was in great shape at the hold. Even the vet had to admit that he thought she looked pretty good. Marie was great on the way back. We left the hold before Irving and Carl. They caught up with us a little later. Irving went ahead of us but Carl was having trouble with his horse and let us go ahead of him. He ended up getting lost, then, when he got back on course, his horse slipped on a rock just two miles from the finish and went severely lame. The horse was trailered back to camp. Poor Carl, it's his daughter's horse and he said she was going to be very upset.

The pace that Marcy had set was just perfect for Marie and at the finish, she vetted out with flying colors. I ended up placing first in my division. I was so proud of my little mutt of a horse. The lay judge later congratulated me. She said because Marie is so laid back and not flashy, it is hard to show her so I could be proud of such a high placing. I was, I love my horse!!

Fryeburg 50 7/22-23 16/S - 12/F
1 Alesar / S Greenall
2 SR Spirit / S Rojek
3 Sage / S MacDonald
4 Marie / C Ross (score 96.25)
5 LWF Paljoe Promise / M Farnum
5 Indevincable / D Rojek
7 Anchor Hill Alan / M Gamester
8 FFC Brigadier
9 HFA Silver Savanah / M Deleware
10 Willows Rahmaan / I McNaughton
12 Sir Narion / S Corr

Fryeburg 25 7/22/00 10/S-F
1 Especial Edition / L Prentice
2 Xavier Sunnyacres / S Reinheimer
3 BAF Cabis Choice / L Pedersen
4 Izuzu / B Lester
5 GBA Karakoram / J Sewell
6 PS Sir Sedgewick / K Brunjes
7 Mighty Frankie / T York
8 Rolling Stone / H Moss

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