Maureen was born in Sebastopol, California, about an hour north of San Francisco. As her family could not afford to own horses, she found a nearby stable willing to let her work for free.
This small Arabian horse farm was then purchased by
new owners who dramatically expanded the facility and it soon became one of the
top Arabian show barns in the country.
Starting as a groom and working up to assistant trainer, Maureen worked
at West Coast Arabians for 8 years, then moved on to work for some of the best
performance trainers in Santa Ynez and Texas before ending up back in Northern
California. Horses
supported Maureen through college in Santa Barbara and at UC Berkeley.
Eulipia
By Maureen Gaffney
While working at Paragon Arabians in Santa
Ynez, California as an assistant trainer (this is code for ‘sacrificial
rider’), we took in two horses from a new client. They were brother and sister, both by the
notoriously hot (and a touch psycho) sire, *Gdansk. I had learned to be a little wary of the
owner who brought in a young horse and cheerily proclaimed “Oh yes, she’s
broke”. Sometimes they were. Sometimes
mom and dad had an interesting interpretation of “broke”. It was time for me to find out on which side
of the line “Eulipia” fell.
I grabbed the requisite fistful of
strawberry and gray colored mane with my left hand, reins short enough for
light contact with her mouth, and placed my foot in the awaiting stirrup.
For the previously mentioned reasons, this one made me nervous. With one
last full in-and-exhale, I checked her eye to make sure we were still on the
same planet, and having been given the proverbial green light, I pushed
off. Somewhere during those yawning, eternal 4 seconds before I was
firmly ensconced in the saddle, the light in her eye flashed red! red! red! and
with my leg at approximately mid-arc over her back, the three-year-old filly
with the hot bloodline lost her ever-loving mind.
She bolted--first up--then forward like a
sleek hide-and-hair covered cannon ball. Having not yet attained a
sitting position much less the second stirrup, I was hurtled onto her neck
which only served to further her profound and deepening pool of panic. My
attempts at soothing words were hampered not only by the imminence of my
impending fall--only the severity of which was now in question--but by the
copious amounts of her long silvery hair winding through my molars. My
soft-toned pleas of "It's okay honey" she heard as "run for the
bay like a bunny" and so we lurched around the arena via the most tenuous
of connections for a few more adrenaline-laced moments before she
unceremoniously threw me over her head where I landed with a thud in a mushroom
cloud of dirt.
Generally speaking, horses--Arabians in
particular--do not like to step on foreign objects in their path of
travel. In fact, they will go to great ridiculous lengths to avoid even a
discolored patch of dirt. A horse that you have finally decided is
physically incapable of performing a simple cross-over move will suddenly
embark on a 40+ mph supersonic side pass if a shadow or stray bit of hay
interrupts his route. For this reason, I was greatly surprised to find
the filly placing not one, not two, but three hooves into the small, middle and
upper levels of my back. I lay there for some time trying to decide if I was
broken. She gingerly approached me, reins and mane all asunder with that
"So....um, hey--whatcha' doin' down there?" look on her face.
I was not broken, nor--apparently--was
she. She persevered and menaced me further, but via a clever combination
of a near starvation diet*, exhaustive pre-ride exercising, and an inventive
program called "let the groom ride her", she never managed to unload
me again.
*not really.
Maureen
has since hung up her spurs and is now a desk jockey working to plan and
implement a long-distance trail around the San Francisco Bay. She enjoys writing, riding (mostly bicycles
these days), cooking, wine and friends.
Maureen has been published in Horse Illustrated, American Trails
Magazine, and Dirt Rag (a mountain bike magazine). She lives in Larkspur, California with her
favorite man.
Thank you so much for stopping by, Maureen, and sharing your story of one of those "memorable" horses. I'm sure many of us can relate, and glad that you survived to tell the tale!
Gosh, Maureen - reading your account of Eulipia is enough to make me remember every crazy, half-broke horse I ever came off of. There were only a few, but I think my old achy bones remember each and every one in the cold weather.
ReplyDeleteThanks (or not) for the memories, and although I enjoy the looks of Arabians (and have known some very calm ones) I seriously get along much better these days with something a little more cold-blooded. LOL
Too funny. I, too, was an assistant trainer (to cowhorse and cutting horse trainers) and I totally laughed at the accuracy of "sacrificial rider." Yes, indeed, we did get put on anything the trainer thought might present a problem, and/or damage said trainer. I had quite a few of those wondering-if-I-was-going-to-survive moments, and I, too, resorted to "let the groom ride her" once or twice. Thanks for a fun post.
ReplyDeleteOops--the above comment was from Laura Crum--I forgot my husband was logged in.
ReplyDeleteAssistant trainer = also known as a test dummy!
ReplyDeleteGreat story - thanks for sharing!
My trainer/riding instructor was just given a three year old Arabian who is beautiful and moves like a dream but oh my! she is hot! and not broken yet.
ReplyDeleteGreat story! I always wanted an Arabian as a little girl, they are the ultimate fantasy horse. I didn't know they were so hot! Thanks for sharing this :) Love your writing style, too! Great sense of humour :)
ReplyDeleteThank Maureen--loved the post. Ya'll come back and write about how you DID survive your second and third ride! (this was just the beginning of the story, right?)
ReplyDeleteThanks all for your great posts!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed every word :)
ReplyDeleteHello There,
ReplyDeleteI just wanted to see if you were currently interested in additional guest bloggers for your blog site.
I see that you've accepted some guest posters in the past - are there any specific guidelines you need me to follow while making submissions?
If you're open to submissions, whom would I need to send them to?
I'm eager to send some contributions to your blog and think that I can cover some interesting topics.
Thanks for your time,
Tess
Tess - the contact info for guest submissions is on the sidebar at right. Please check there. Thanks!
ReplyDelete