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- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Path: sparky!uunet!brunix!cs.brown.edu!sjh
- From: sjh@cs.brown.edu (suzi howe)
- Subject: another bio
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.211609.15267@cs.brown.edu>
- Followup-To: bio
- Keywords: bio
- Sender: news@cs.brown.edu
- Organization: Brown Computer Science Dept.
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 21:16:09 GMT
- Lines: 70
-
- It IS a little intimidating to be bio-ing my soul (so to speak!)
- before the net, but here goes:
- I grew up in the North of England, in Sale, Cheshire. My sister
- and I took riding lessons when we were 5 & 6, then my father
- bought us Shetland ponies, (Queenie and Jeannie-more like big dogs!)
- At 8 & 9 we were shipped off to a boarding school in Herefordshire
- which had a marvelous riding program. We both won cups and prizes
- --riding certainly made life bearable! We spent summers riding
- in Wales (Benllech Bay, on the island of Anglesey). The barn had
- dozens of horses (mainly hardy Welsh Mountain ponies which
- carried adults as well as kids) - afternoons were given to 3-4hr
- picnic rides - our favorite was crossing the bay (about 3 miles)
- to a farm house on the other side where we turned the horses out
- and had a wonderful farmhouse tea, complete with homemade
- 'barrabrith' (?sp), Welsh fruit bread. The trip across the bay
- included an exhilarating flat-out gallop to the wreck in the
- middle - best to be on the OUTSIDE of the herd or you'd be
- plastered with wet sand! The return trip could be tricky if we
- ran late because the tide would be coming in and the
- river, a trickle on the way over, would deepen FAST with the
- incoming tide. Many a beginner would have to have their pony
- urged forward as he stopped to paw and hoped to roll!
- No horses in college, then I left for the USA. One son and two
- marriages later, I got back into riding (aged 42).I joined the Brown
- University equestrian club and started riding once during the
- week, then on weekends. I became friendly with the instructor,
- and she asked if I'd like to ride a horse at her barn and take
- lessons out there. The owner was in college and hadn't been to
- see Oscar (Octavian) in 2 years. This was my first opportunity
- to TAKE CARE of a horse and I learned PLENTY. I showed dressage
- at training level (tests 1-3)and evented novice. I think white
- must be MY color -- most of my ribbons were 4ths!
- 5 years ago, one of my instructor's other students with whom I
- was friendly, decided to buy a new horse (Indian Bow had a
- paddock accident and needed a year off). She wanted one big
- enough for me to jump (I'm 5'7" and she's a pipsqueak!) but
- quiet enough for her. With our instructor in tow, we went to
- Strain's in CT and bought a 10-year-old QH/TB cross. Well,
- those were her criteria, but with 20/20 hindsight, I realize that
- ANY animal they trotted out would have been whatever she asked
- for! We learned later that Kody was barely 7.
- I just LOVED this horse! Soon after we got him home, she asked if I'd
- like to share ownership, and we began a great partnership: Suzi,
- Maryann, and Dakota (Kody). We had some super times with him, but it
- soon became clear that he was more mine than Maryann's since she rode
- Bow and I rode Kody. He was pretty green but showed great potential.
- Unfortunately, Maryann was always afraid of his size (16.1), and I'm
- a pretty green rider, plenty of courage, but no finesse! The perfect
- rider for him would have had my guts and Maryann's talent! We enjoyed
- him for 3 years, then I got divorced from my 2nd husband and things
- financial started to fall apart. We free-leased him for a year, then
- tried to sell him, to no avail. Then he came up lame with navicular
- and the barn where I started riding with the Brown club took him as
- a schoolie -- the Johnson & Wales Equestrian Program uses the barn, so
- he was ridden by GOOD riders. Although he was 'serviceably sound' at
- the outset, the problem worsened to the point where they couldn't
- carry him any longer. Since we couldn't bear to think of putting him
- down or taking the $1/lb route (he weighed 1500lbs!), we gave him to
- 'The Last Chance Corral' in South Country, RI, where they find adoptive
- owners who are aware of any problems and ride accordingly. Within a
- week, Kody had found a young lady who was as nutty about him as me, and
- who planned to hack and hop over the odd log on the trails now and then (he
- LOVES jumping).(he's in bar shoes and takes weekly doses of Isoxoprine).
- So, now I'm 47, have been remarried for a year already. I live on 22
- pine/oak acres in Coventry, RI, with a corral, barn, pool, and baseball
- field the EXACT dimensions of Fenway Park! We plan to retire when
- my husband is 55, (I'll be 52), buy a couple of easy keepers and cut
- trails through the woods - no more showing.
- That's the DREAM, and that's all, y'all! :)
- Enjoy the net daily, but post rarely.
-