This entry was posted on 2/25/2010 7:27 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Thursday February 25 2010
Little
did Keith Urban know, I bet, that when he gave his 2006 album this
title that it was the perfect theme for Endurance riders.
There's
no question most of us love our horses and love the opportunity they
give us to get out and ride, and ride far, and it's pretty obvious many
of us are obsessed with it. Even if there is a little pain involved.
Look
at Melissa, who broke her leg pretty badly a few months ago, and got 3
accomplices to sneak her out to her horse and put her on board. She may
not be done with surgeries yet, but she's already making plans to ride
Tevis (of all rides!) this year and is having her horse taught to lay
down so she can mount easier. Her doctor isn't excited about that, but,
what's he going to do?
Is she crazy?
Not any crazier
than, say, Karen, who rode Tevis (of all the rides to do this!) with a
broken rib, and a punctured spleen in questionable state of repair.
Karen
II got jumped on by her horse, spent a day running errands before she
went to the doctor and found her leg was broken. She rode once with a
broken arm too.
Five miles from the finish of the 2009 Pan
American Championship in Guatemala, a Malaysian rider's horse fell 5
miles from the finish. The rider was hurt and couldn't remount, but as
his team was in contention for a medal, he walked the 5 miles in on
foot leading his horse, and remounted (with help from his team) to
cross the finish line before he was hauled off in an ambulance. He'd
broken his collarbone. (They won the medal).
I heard a rumor that one US rider rode a loop with an IV needle in her arm, but i haven't been able to confirm that yet.
Julie
Suhr, our 'First Lady of Endurance,' broke her shoulder in a fall from
her best horse, HCC Gazal +/, 5 weeks before the Tevis ride that could
have, with a finish, given her her 20th buckle. While the doctor told
her she'd be fine in a couple of months (!!!), Julie rode Tevis anyway.
She compromised by riding a borrowed horse, not Gazal, who tended to
pull her arms out of her sockets. Her arm hurt the day before, and the
day after, Tevis, but not at all on the day she became the first rider
ever to receive a 2000-mile Tevis Cup silver buckle.
One of the
world's top endurance riders from Australia fell off a horse last year
and was in a coma for nearly two months. She's determined to get back
to riding as soon as possible.
One gal broke her foot out on a
loop on an endurance ride... but she didn't quit when she got to the
vet check. She sucked it up and went out on the second loop and
finished her ride... and only afterwards removed her shoe and dealt
with the damage.
I myself am guilty of the Whole Crazy Thing,
although I am definitely wimpier than a lot of tougher riders. I had a
sorry accident 10 years ago, and was desperate to ride again. I had no
business getting on a horse 2 1/2 months after the accident, but I was
consumed with an almost deperate need to do so... and I did.
I
broke a middle toe in June and, sad to say, totally wimped out from
riding 2 days. I'm still miffed about that - I should have just cut the
top of my shoe off and sucked it up and rode! (I mean - really - it was
one toe, not even the big one!)
When I broke my rib in
September, I climbed right back on my horse and rode him some more
(before the breathing got too difficult : ) to make sure he knew he
couldn't just get away with dumping me and running off. However, I just
couldn't bring myself to do a 5-day ride a week later. (I
could
have dealt with the pain, but not the chance of worse injury, and the
expense, and the extra time off I would have been forced to take.)
I
have a knee that's about shot, but I keep riding - I can't take the
time (or money) to get it looked at. I figure I have quite a ways to go
before the pain gets really bad.
Why do we do it? Because we
love our horses. We love riding. Even though there is 'always another
ride,' we don't want to miss one. I don't
think we are masochists. Or are we? I know we're addicts. Count me as one.
What
about you - have you ridden with pain, broken bones, damaged organs?
Or, I should probably be asking, how many of you HAVEN'T ridden without
pain and damage, when you definitely shouldn't have?
Are riders of other disciplines as Crazy? Or is it mainly endurance riders that have a lack of judgment?
