This entry was posted on 10/2/2008 4:33 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Saturday September 27 2008
Ride
manager Steph had originally planned to ride her favorite horse Rhett
the first 3 days of the ride... but she soon realized that would be
tough, even with Regina Rose helping day-manage the ride. But this
weekend there would be plenty of volunteers, and Regina had everything
under control, so not only did Steph get to ride, but I got to ride
again too!
And it was one of the prettiest days of the 5 days -
if one can really be chosen over the other - the 17-mile loop 1 for
both the 55-milers and 30-milers led to and through Hart Creek,

right up to the base of the Hart Creek Canyon notch, with a climb above
it onto a steep and thin ridge; the last loop for both distances
followed the Hart Creek Rim Trail - a beautiful view looking down on
the morning's trail.
Today I rode Rushcreek Mac and Connie rode
Jose, and in the cool morning we zipped along the trails, over hills,
through washes, weaving through sagebrush and big yellow rabbit brush
to dry Hart Creek. We walked through the rocky creek, below the
cottonwoods and willows with just a touch of yellow in their leaves,
and the quailbush just beginning to turn maroon. There was one little
spot of water when we crossed the creek at the Oreana Savannah (a
hidden cabin), and Mac chose this spot to pee, right when the other
horses were drinking. Argh!
"ARGH!" said everybody whose horses
were drinking just downstream. But what could I do? You don't want to
stop a horse in - pardon the pun - midstream, so, Mac just finished his
business and we moved on. I of course never heard the end of that all
day, "Hey Merri, did you let your horse pee in this water trough, too?"
Argh!
Mac and Jose were both working hard enough this morning
that Connie and I both dismounted to lead them up the stiff climb onto
the ridge. By the time we reached the top, 4 of us were huffing and
puffing, and we were quite hot in the cool air. Whew! That was my Dog
Walk again for the day. Great views of the lowlands behind us and
horses coming up the ridge,

and the Owyhee Mountain range in front of us.

Back
in camp, both horses passed their vet check and settled into their hay
and alfalfa snacks. It's good for them to eat hay before they dive into
their grain. After 15 minutes I mixed some grain up; Mac buried his
nose in his bucket, and Jose turned his nose UP at his. What? Jose not
wanting grain? Something was wrong! I noticed he was breathing fast,
and he had a somewhat glazed glint in his eye... uh oh... you get that
feeling of somebody punching you in the stomach because you know
something is WRONG. And then I heard a weird noise - a gurgling, coming
from his throat - Jose was choking! Connie and I immediately took him
to the vets; Robert Washington, who said he'd never seen or heard a
choke quite like this, worked on massaging his esophagus. The worst
thing you can do is put water down their throat; it's best to let the
horse work it out on his own if he can. Gene Nance asked if we'd been
feeding him leafy alfalfa - yes we had; he said sometimes the dry
leaves get all balled up and can get stuck, so it's better to wet them
before they are consumed. (You can bet that we were over-diligent in
tearing off the leaves of alfalfa and soaking it before feeding any of
it the rest of the ride.)
After several minutes of Robert
massaging, and Jose gurgling and trying to swallow, finally he gave a
big sigh, licked his lips, and his eyes didn't look so glazed. Connie
took him to the grass, where he wasn't real interested in eating but a
few bites, but eventually, after Mac and I went back out on the trail,
Jose went back to eating normally, with Connie keeping a close eye on
him. Poor Jose! He'd never had any problems at a ride, and it was kind
of rattling to watch him choke and to worry about him.
Sometimes
Mac can be a big chicken if he goes out by himself, and it was easier
just to put him behind company. On loop 2 it was my luck to latch onto
good company in Frank and ("his publicist") Tom Noll, and Shahcolate
Chip and his rider Jeff Stuart.

There he was, the high-headed spirited Frank, working on his
approximately two thousandth Owyhee mile, dragging Tom along with his
reins double wrapped around Tom's hands (yikes!). "I started him on
Adequan shots a while back, and they took 5 years off his life. Maybe I
shouldn't have done that!" We decided if Frank wrote a book, it would
start out like this: "All I ever heard out of Tom's mouth was, 'Slow
down!' " The title of every chapter would be, "Idiot!" Have you seen
the made-in-southern-Idaho movie Napoleon Dynamite? Frank, we imagined,
uses the same tone of voice calling his rider "Idiot!" when he wants to
go out front, and when he wants to go faster, the opposite of what Tom
wants. We imagined that Frank uses this word quite often.
We
moved right along on the 22-mile loop, across the highway to day 2's
Vet Check, where we had no hold, but we stopped to partake of the water
and hay still out there. It was in the low 80's today, and I let Mac
fly toward home behind Jeff's big-striding horse and Frank (well,
sometimes Tom used us for a speedbump for Frank, who was mightily
insulted by that). I wanted to see what Mac was made of, how fit he
really was, because his pulse rate had always been down to 60 or below
as soon as we arrived at the vet checks in his previous rides. But it
was hot today, and we were moving pretty fast for being only Mac's 3rd
50-mile ride. Back in camp for the second vet check, it took him 10
minutes to come down to the 60 bpm criteria. He hung at 70 for a while,
then at 64. It took sponging with cool water, and standing in the shade
to finally get him down to 60. Frank was a little slow coming down
also, as were several others at this time of the warm day, one of the
pulse takers said.
Mac trotted out well, and ate heartily

during the 50 minute hold, but I was going to slow down on the last 16
mile loop, even if it meant I had to take ol' Spookums out by himself.
But Tom wanted to slow down also (he did not consult with Frank), since
he was aiming to complete all 5 days of 50's on Frank, and though
Jeff's horse was fresher, he stuck with us. In the middle of the loop,
when Mac was really dogging it, I told them to go on, but Jeff said,
"We've been the Three Musketeers for this long, we may as well stick
together!" As we were going out on our last loop on the canyon road, we
saw the leaders coming in to the finish on the trail through the
sagebrush off to our left. Canadian Jan Marsh on Morning Line (they
also won Day 1) was in front, followed by, 50 yards back, Steph and
Rhett. "I'm not going to catch her!" Steph yelled at us when we
hollered at her. Rhett was tossing his head as he darted through the
sagebrush, looking a bit miffed that he wasn't first back home.
Following a few minutes behind them were 9-year-old Barrak Blakely and
his mom Gabriella; Barrak was riding Alias, the same horse he'd been
pulled on for a bruised foot on Day 1. Happily, they completed, Barrak
finishing third. He was the only junior rider at the Owyhee Canyonlands!
Eventually moving up onto the Rim Trail,

apparently we just missed a big fat rattlesnake, seen by Karen Steenhof
who'd just passed us. We were caught by Lynne White, Chris and Kara
Yost, and Nance Worman. Nance and the Yosts were working on their 4th
day of 50's on their horses; Nance and Jazzbo had taken a tumble during
Day 2 and Jazzbo had skinned his knees and his nose, but Jazzbo, tough
little bugger he is, was still motoring right along.
Mac was
acting so weary I insisted they all go on ahead, and only Tom Noll
stayed with us. But wouldn't you know, turning for home, Mac found his
second wind - more like a first wind, and I almost couldn't find the
brakes! Yea - I know what he's made of now! We got to the top of
Pickett Creek Canyon, and I got off to lead Mac down, and I decided to
stay off and walk in, because I knew there would be no holding Frank
back, and I didn't want to fight with Mac's brakes on the way in
either, so, I took another Dog Walk (minus the dogs, who were probably
busy mooching food off ridecampers) back home into camp.
Mac,
former Rushcreek Ranch Cow-Horse, successfully completed his 3rd
50-mile ride; and had we slowed down just a bit, we would have come in
with Tamara and Aaruba, who also successfully completed their 55 mile
ride, Aaruba's second one.
Tom, Nance, Chris and Kara Yost, Kim Black, and Naomi Preston all completed their 4th day in a row on their 50-mile horses.
Besides
the 28 horses on the 55-mile ride (25 completed), and the 18 horses
(all completed) on the 30-mile ride, there were two trail riders who
came to spend the weekend and ride. One was Phil Carroll and his
Tennessee Walking Horse, Timer (Go Gaiters!). I'd met Phil at the Pink
Flamingo ride in July, and again at the Old Selam ride in August. I'd
been talking up the Owyhee trails, and Phil and his wife Margaret were
able to come this weekend. Phil and his friend chose to ride the Hart
Creek Trail - excellent choice! - and from the story Timer wrote, it
appears they all enjoyed it.
Dr Peterson gave another
InfoLecture, this one on the importance of warming up your horse in the
mornings from the physiological perspective; I never had any class in
college where the 'professor' had such rapt 'students'. Dr Peterson
then segued into one of his terrific Cowboy Poems about the wilderness.
If he doesn't watch out, we'll be bringing him here principally for the
Education and Entertainment duties, with a little vetting thrown in on
the side.
