by Laura Crum
With
Sunny and Henry my son and I began exploring the trails along the ridge near
our home in earnest. My son was seven and a half. I was fifty years old and, to
my surprise, a new horseback passion had entered my life. Because I became quite
obsessed with riding the trails of my home.
And
here, if there is anyone out there who has been reading my posts on Equestrian
Ink from the beginning, is where you came in. Because I began blogging here
just a couple of months after I bought Sunny. In fact, one of my early posts
was titled “The New Horse” (May 2008).
Sunny was always a very reliable
trail horse and he gradually came to accept me as his boss and dropped most of
his “testing” behaviors. I’ve blogged about him here often enough, so probably
most of you have a pretty good idea of this little yellow horse’s personality.
Suffice it to say that Sunny and I formed a good partnership and from the
beginning I was deeply grateful for how steady both he and Henry were on the
trails. These two horses opened up a whole new world for my son and me.
We began riding in the hills
several days a week, sometimes with our friend Wally, sometimes just the two of
us. We rode the trail to the Lookout often.
We also discovered new trails, a
whole network of trails that criss-crossed the wild ridge that we could see
from our front porch.
We hauled the horses down to the
shore and rode them on the beach.
Sunny and Henry were and are amazing
trail horses. In the redwood forest.
Crossing creeks.
In the mountains.
I could never describe, or even
show you in photos, half of the delightful and beautiful things my son and I
were privileged to see from the backs of these two wonderful horses. I have to
say that though it may not sound as exciting as training and showing cutting
horses or competing at team roping, these last five years exploring the trails
of our home and the beaches and mountains have been my absolute favorite part
of my life with horses. It has been a time of pure enjoyment, of taking delight
in both the horses and my son and the wonder of what we were all seeing
together. There has been nothing to prove to anyone, and no need to improve or
train or push. The horses have been our partners every step of the way; they
were competent, solid horses when we got them and they brought their own
confidence and experience to share with us. My forty years with horses stood us
in good stead, and I am proud to say that my son has grown up riding, has
challenged himself as he saw fit (and yes, kicking Henry up to a gallop after a
steer and riding some of the steep, tricky trails we have ridden has been a
true challenge), and has become an adept, kind and secure rider, one who really
understands horses. I don’t know what the future will bring, but we have done
and seen some lovely things. My photos can show our life with these two horses
better than words.
I can truly say that for five
straight years we rode Henry and Sunny everywhere and had a blast. We may be
getting close to a thousand rides all told (I kept track the first year and we
went on 165 rides that year alone). We were never hurt or scared, never even
very anxious—none of us. And it is all due to these fine horses. We have had so
much fun. Gathering and working cattle with friends.
Just loping along in the sunshine.
This year my son turns thirteen and
Henry is twenty-five. We are still riding a couple of days a week, but we
aren’t pushing Henry too hard, and, to be fair, my kid is developing other
interests and isn’t as passionate about riding. And that’s OK. The magic will
always be with us and in us. And Henry and Sunny will be with us until they
die. The gift they have given us is beyond price, and I will always be
grateful.
I wrote my 11th and 12th
novels in the Gail McCarthy series about trail riding along the ridge by our
home (of course the books feature some very dramatic happenings out on these
trails—which I am VERY glad we never experienced in real life). Sunny and Henry
both have prominent roles in these stories and are described very much as they
actually are. So, for a glimpse of this part of my life, and a couple of
exciting mysteries as well, try Going, Gone and Barnstorming.
11 comments:
So many lovely views...
I've really enjoyed this series. Love how you have found such enjoyment of your horses and son in such a non-competitive way. Makes me want to trade in the dressage pony for a trail "plug". Not yet, but maybe someday. BTW your pictures are fabulous...
Just a lovely feeling reading your descriptions and seeing the photos - what a wonderful, peaceful place you're in now with your two fine trail horses and your son.
Dom--So many lovely views is exactly how I feel.
Thank you Anon. There was a day when I certainly would NOT have traded my competition horse for a trail plug. I would, in fact, have scorned the idea. But things change, I find. And I still have the horse that I trained myself and competed on at three different events--my 33 year old Gunner. And thank you about the photos--I'm not really a good photographer, but I love taking pictures of things that I think are beautiful.
Kate--Thank you so much. I have enjoyed hearing what a fine and happy place you are in with your three good horses, as well. It is so interesting how things evolve, isn't it?
Several of these "My Life With Horses" posts have made me cry, and this one is no exception. I have so enjoyed reading about your progression, and reasons for enjoying all the phases! I think I get teary because your love of all your horses shines through (and it makes me so happy that you appreciate them as individuals), and because I'm quite jealous that you've been able to share that with your son so much. My children are well-aware of how much horses mean to me but their opportunities to ride have been few and far between. I hate that. You have given your son a precious gift, and even if he moves away from horses and riding now, he can always come back!
Thank you RiderWriter. I feel very grateful that I could share the horses with my son. I'm not sure if horses will ever be his passion, but he has had a chance to grow up with them, that's for sure. Don't know what influence it will have on his life, but I believe it will be for good.
RiderWriter said my exact sentiments. Just beautiful!
What lovely trails. How very fortunate your son is to live in a lovely place, have a good pony and above all have a generous, adventurous, creative and fun mother to take him riding.
14.1hands and WHP--Thank you so much. I enjoyed writing this post very much--I'm glad that you enjoyed reading it.
Thank you for a great 'travelogue' and life horse story! I hope you and Sunny can keep on riding the trails. Obviously both horses have found joy in the rides as well, which is why they have been such great horses!
Thanks, Alison. And yes, I really think Sunny and Henry enjoy our little expeditions. It makes them great trail horses rather than plugs. Both walk with their ears up most of the time, looking around, alert and interested. They are steady, but not bored. It makes a difference.
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