PRE-FANDANGO: MONDAY
This entry was posted on 5/20/2008 5:51 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Monday May 19 2008
The first Fandango-ers have arrived...
Two-time
World Endurance Champion Valerie Kanavy pulled into the Teeter Rancho
("the boonies," Valerie chuckled) early Monday morning with two horses
and two grooms after a cross country drive from Virginia. Both horses
are half-qualified for the World Endurance Championships in Malaysia in
November - they've each completed a 100-mile ride under 12 km/h (13 hr,
20 min ride time) - and she plans to try to get the second one under
their girths on this trip.
Originally she'd thought Steph was
putting on an FEI 100-mile ride each day of the May 24-26 ride, and she
was willing to ride a hundred on the first and third day (diehard!),
until Steph told her we had only 1 100-miler. So after the Fandango,
Valerie and her crew are heading to Fort Howes in Montana for the other
hundred mile ride for her other horse two weeks later. She hasn't
decided yet who she'll ride where. Valerie and her groom Laura
Vilaregut - from Catalonia, Spain; last month she won the Junior
Catalonian Championship - took the horses, King Ali Gold - who won the
December 31 2007 New Years in New Mexico 100 miler, and Flash Flame -
who won the 2005 Arabian Nights 100-mile ride here with Danielle
Kanavy, out on a trail ride to get the kinks out after their long haul.

After
dropping their horse trailer full of goods off earlier last week, then
heading to California for the weekend, Susan and John Favro of
Healthy
as a Horse returned and set up their trailer and mapped out their shop
set-up, and John played his mandolin for us while I fed the horses that
are now penned up.
Ride manager Steph spent a long time on the
phone finding a feed store that had hay for sale; John T went to pick
up all their bales - only a small truckload, and a stock of gas for the
4-wheelers. 
He also dragged the arena that will be used for the trot outs and set up the pens that some riders will use.
Debbie
and John Knapp of the Boise amateur radio club had already shown up
over the weekend to mark off an area for their radio set-up to cover
the ride.
Wildflowers are mostly wilting in the dry heat on the
trails, but Steph's vibrant garden radiates with colorful exuberance
around the house. The locust trees have finally obligingly busted out
in their new spring leaves, so basecamp is a green oasis in the high
desert, awaiting the arrival of some serious endurance riders for the
Memorial Day weekend.