|
    Check it Out!    
|
|
RideCamp@endurance.net
[Date Prev]  [Date Next]  
[Thread Prev]  [Thread Next]  [Date Index]  [Thread Index]  [Author Index]  [Subject Index]
No Frills Ride Report
Sixty-nine horses answered the call to the post for the third running of
the No Frills 50 in Fort Valley, VA, and another 39 started the 25 on a
perfect Virginia spring day amid sunny skies and a blaze of redbuds in
the heart of Old Dominion country. Campers awoke on Saturday morning to
find temperatures just above freezing but warming nicely into the
mid-sixties by afternoon.
For most, it was the first ride of the year, and many chose to ride it
as a training ride. I kept Fine Print away from the crowd before
starting down Hickory Lane on the first loop of 17 miles, which would
take the field to Edinburg Gap before looping back to Hickory Lane,
where all three vet checks would be held. We greeted many familiar faces
along the way, including Judy Van Meter and her durable Diamond Rifazar,
1997 Northeast Featherweight Champions (this remarkable duo is going for
their tenth Old Dominion 100 buckle this year!), Joanna Blackmore, and
Stagg and Cheryl Neuman, recently relocated to the Shenandoah Valley.
On Easter Sunday, I was blessed to have Joyce Anderson, a TTEAM
practitioner (and doyene of Cloud Nine saddlepads) in my crewing corner
and, as it turned out, her magic touch was essential to get us through
the ride. My mare began to shiver in the hindquarters as soon as we
stripped the tack (required at all three checks) and Joyce went to work.
We kept her warm and covered along with the TTouch on the large muscles
and we vetted through just fine. Joyce gave me her balancing rein, a
TTEAM innovation that helps horse and rider stay in balance, to use on
the second loop.
It began to warm up as we headed out for the second loop of 14 miles. We
were heading for my favorite stretch of the trail--Turkey Pen! This
serpentine-shaped trail with a canopy of trees on one side and a gentle
slope on the other is a natural racetrack and a great place to let those
galloping muscles kick in. So away we went. From there the trail went up
Scothorn Gap -- stripped of many of its famous rocks by bulldozers
driven by determined Old Dominion members -- and over Duncan Hollow.
Donıt worry, there are still PLENTY of rocks left for the season! (New
ones grow back every year to replace the ones scraped away, Iım sure).
Fine Print was still keen to run and with the help of the balancing
rein, I let her move on. We plowed through the rocks and mud and arrived
at the second vet check (31 miles out) around noon. Fine Print recovered
quickly but we discovered a slightly sensitive reaction on her right
front splint bone, which she had ³popped² during the running of last
fallıs Race of Champions, prompting her withdrawal after the first 50
miles. Joyce went to work on the splint with some cold water sponge
circles. We trotted her out to satisfy ourselves that she was sound
before presenting her to the vets and I was relieved when she trotted
out sound.We outfitted her with splint boots and I vowed to take it easy
on the final loop of 18 miles which still lay ahead.
We took it easy over Kennedy Peak and were so relaxed that we took a
wrong turn at the top and rode along the ridge until I came to a sheer
rock cliff. Matthew Mackay-Smith (who didnıt ride this year) told me the
next day that if Iıd gone a little further I would have seen the most
amazing view in the valley. As it was, I had to dismount and pick my way
back down the hill. Although it added a couple of miles to the total
distance and another half hour, it gave me a chance to spent some time
in the company of LEADFOOT AND GRANNY, the famous ride and tie duo also
known in some quarters as Lani Newcomb and Kathy Broaddus. In case you
didnıt know, those two are among the top woman-woman ride-n-tiers in the
country and certainly the most engaging -- they rode Rio on the Swanton
Pacific 100 R&T last year, among other accomplishments. Fine Print did
a double take as she saw their wonderful Anglo-Arab first in front of
us, then behind, then standing tied to a tree. It was funny.
Anyway, we finished the ride in good shape and learned that Joy Mahler
riding her Orion had won in a close race with Debi Gordon and Saizahra.
And then I heard that Bob Walsh and his little gray rocket ship,
Houdini, had won BC. This was thrilling news, since Bob has brought that
horse along slowly and carefully, and now those two are ready for big
things. Houdini came to Bob as a castoff two-year-old heading for the
killers and he is now the picture of a classic Egyptian Arabian. And boy
can he fly.
I donıt have the full finish report, but I heard that only 15 horses
were pulled. Other than two horses that ran off in the night (anyone
hear if theyıve been found?), it was a great weekend.
Bobbie Lieberman and Fine Print -- dubbed ³Cleopatra² by her friend
Joyce Anderson for her princesslike attitude
and George, ex-ride manager turned loyal pit crew -- gearing up his
21-year-old Saddlebred, Magic, for his first endurance experience at
Black Horse Gap
Home
Events
Groups
Rider Directory
Market
RideCamp
Stuff
Back to TOC