This entry was posted on 5/28/2008 7:40 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Owyhee Fandango: Friday
Friday May 23 2008
A
whole slew of riders and officials arrived in Oreana basecamp Friday,
including my pal Gretchen Montgomery from Bridgeport, California,
coming to get her Merri fix. Gretchen and I used to ride together 3 to
4 times a week in the summers in Bridgeport, but now, I get to see her
only once or twice a year. She brought two horses, and as it often goes
in endurance riding, plans change. I was going to ride Bev Gray's horse
True Colours on Day 1, but, it was decided that Amanda Washington could
ride him on Day 2 since she needed a horse to ride, and since Colour
only needed one ride, I could now ride Gretchen's horse Royal Raffiq -
who I've done 750 miles on over the years - with Gretchen and Spice on
Day 1.
Camp steadily grew bigger throughout the day as more
riders pulled in with their rigs, from the fancy 5-horse trailer with
living quarters up to the 70's campers pulling a 2-horse and the little
truck and trailer with a tent on the side. Riders took their horses on
rides or walks around camp,

the radio crew worked hard on setting up their base station at the
house, and horses were vetted in with the veterinarians Robert
Washington and Michael Peterson.
I was dressed for a warm-up
horse ride - chaps on and gloves in hand, when I was called on to make
a last-minute chauffeur run to the airport. Connie Creech was my first
pick-up; she would be serving as president of the Ground Jury in
Sunday's FEI 100-miler. I've ridden with Connie on many Nevada trails
and attended many of the rides she puts on there. We talked horses
(what else) while we waited for the next person, Trish Dutton, who'd be
the official ride secretary. Steph saw her in action at the New Years
in New Mexico ride, and snapped her up for this ride. And, it turns out
that Trish lives just down the road from my niece in Texas, where I
first started my endurance riding 9 years ago.
I never seem to
have enough time at endurance rides to visit with people - old
endurance friends I haven't seen in a while, endurance friends I have
seen lately but still want to visit with, and special old endurance
friends from around the world - like Belgium and Guatemala, and new
ones - like El Salvador and Spain. And this ride was no exception,
because there were pictures to take and upload, horses to ride, horses
to vet in, horses to gather and feed, gear to get ready, (like
attaching my Raven bag to my saddle), an airport run to make, a ride
meeting to attend, and of course, another great dinner to eat, catered
by Owyhee ride regulars, Debra and Al of Blue Canoe Catering.

It
was good to see international riders here, from Canada, Argentina, and
Belgium, for the FEI 100-miler, and it was also great to see many of
the usual local riders - including (among many others) Tom Noll

and his famous Frank; Karen Bumgardner who'd be riding her gelding
Thunder, the horse that got lost for 6 days in November (you can see
the scars the girth left on him); Jim and Vicci Archer who'd be
attempting their first 100s after 8 seasons of endurance riding; and
Nance Worman and Chris Yost who would be attempting the 50 mile-100
mile-50 mile Triple, which they both accomplished last year. Let's take
a minute to look at this closer.
Picture it: getting up early
Saturday morning, doing a 50-mile endurance ride on one horse. Which in
itself can be just enough to pleasantly tire you out. (And, by the way,
after the finish, Nance would have to drive back to Boise for her
step-son's graduation, and return to ridecamp late at night). Getting
up earlier on Sunday morning for a 6 AM start (on another horse),
riding 100 miles, finishing at least 14 hours later. Which, by now,
would definitely wear you out, enough to curl up into a tiny ball in
bed and not move for the entire night, once you got to bed, say, around
midnight. Getting up early Monday morning, getting back on the horse
you rode Saturday, and riding another 50 miles. These are a couple of
obsessed endurance riders, no?
Tennessee Mahoney would also be
attempting the Triple. When she left Colorado on Thursday with two
horses, a few hours down the road she got a call that a tornado had
ripped through her hometown, causing extensive damage to nearby
property including her neighbors, throwing quarter-ton hay bales
around, although luckily her house was not hit. What could she do? She
kept on driving to Oreana.
New adopted local Connie Holloway, a
Fairly Newbie, who just might soon become a resident of Pickett Creek
here, would be riding her beloved Phinnaeas on a 50 on her birthday.
Fairly
Newbies Shana Bobbitt arrived from 7 hours away with her horse MSF
Sinwaan and her friend Lara Hall, for her 3rd endurance ride ever;
Laurie Wells would be riding in the trail ride on Sunday, and
attempting her first ride ever, the 25-miler, on Monday.
Then
there was, of course, veteran endurance rider and local - the Raven,
riding along with me in his Raven bag for his 3100+ miles.