This entry was posted on 7/22/2007 10:33 AM and is filed under uncategorized.
Sunday July 22 2007
Friendly people, beautiful countryside,
thick green wet forests, old well-preserved houses and castles, perfect
lighting, not least the mild weather... Belgium has grown on me and the
Raven quickly.

Leonard and Carole live in a little village,
Gesves (say “zhev”) 70 km from Brussels, putting them in the southern
region of Belgium, the Wallonian French-speaking part. Leo's lovely old
house probably originally dates back to the 1800's – he's lived in it
for 10 years. There's a few old stables and several paddocks rich with
grass for his 4 horses. Many of the village dwellers rebuild the houses
from the 1700's and 1800's in the old stone style.

Many were big old
farmhouses, half of which the family lived in and half which was the
stables for the animals. Belgium has more castles per square mile than
any country, and I saw a number of them driving to Leo's house from
Brussels (“Oh, there's another castle”). Most people keep up their old
places in meticulous condition, taking much pride in landscaping them.
Brilliant, bright-colored flowers inhabit many brick and stone
windowsills everywhere.
It's lovely and cool at night, and
not-hot during the day, although if you don't like the weather, wait 10
minutes and it will change: sun, clouds, rain, rain and sun, wind,
storm, not a breeze. It usually starts off perfectly clear every
morning and starts clouding up by noon, and by evening, you can hedge
your bets that it's raining somewhere in Belgium. And always, at about
8 PM for about an hour, brilliant golden evening light filters through
either haze or clouds or moist air, accenting church steeples and
castles, highlighting the folds of hills and the leaves on trees. Even
if you're not a photographer, it makes you stare with your mouth open
in amazement.
The wet forest is much like the Pacific Northwest:
wet, green, thick, ferns, moss, mud, slugs (a twinge of homesickness
here?). It can be hard to get a horse fit training in the forest here
because of the mud, and the rocks in the mud, and the very slick up and
down small wet hills, but Leo has the option of stabling his horses on
an old racecourse (10 minutes from his work in downtown Brussels, so he
spends lunch 2 or 3 times a week riding his horse for an hour or two),
adjacent to a government-owned forest with 10's of kilometres to ride
on well-maintained, groomed, non-rocky trails. It's great for canter
training, but, as Leo points out, it's also good to take the horses on
rocky trails in the home forest, so they learn to walk over rocks –
learn to balance, balance, learn the best place to put their feet.
The
Raven and I rode in the home forest a couple of times, and over the
groomed track and trails through the forest just outside Brussels. On
our second ride near home, squeezing along an overgrown track, suddenly
beside me, a hawk feather fluttered down beside me and my horse! I
reached out and grabbed for it - it touched my fingers, but slipped out
of my grasp and floated to the ground. I called to Leo - “Wait!” and I
started to get off to retrieve it. Then I thought not; sometimes, you
have to leave a feather – you can't take them all. So, I thanked the
hawk that dropped it, and rode on.
The next day, riding along
the old racecourse

, there, right in front of us on the grass... another
hawk feather! You don't turn down 2 hawk feathers in a row. I hopped
off my horse, picked it up, and stuffed it in my pocket. It looked much
like a red-tailed hawk to me, and Leo said it was a “buse” - which I
looked up. It's also called a Common Buzzard, and is central Europe's
most common bird of prey; it looks similar to our American Red-tailed
hawks or Swainson's hawks. Nice! I think the feather was a gift from
the hawk to the Raven!

The Raven and I've ridden Carol's young
horse Bicai, Leo's 6-year-old qualified horse Dario, and, the star of
Leo's stable, 18-year-old Orfeo: a horse that's been to 2 European
Championships and 4 World Championships. More on Orfeo and Leo later...
Orfeo and Leo will be part of the Belgium team riding at Compiegne,
France – probably one of France's two top rides - on August 25, and I
will be helping Carol to crew – now THAT is going to be a big
experience!
http://www.endurance.net/merri/stories/2007/07/raven-ii-rides-belgium.html