IRE Thoroughbred Makeover Journies-RRP horses

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IRE Thoroughbred Makeover Journies-RRP horses This page will follow the journey of my 2021 Retired Racehorse Project Thoroughbred Makeover hopeful, Holiday Belle.

This still rings with truth.
07/01/2023

This still rings with truth.

The most disappointed, and often even angry people, are those who come expecting a little tweak, or tip to their riding. When they are met with a rebuilding of their foundation, their ego can become grated.

I have been there many times, and understand. It hurts, and nobody enjoys it.

But mindset is everything- are you going to refuse to see new information and protect your comfort, or are you going to dive in, shed layers of poor habits and misguided beliefs, and be better for your horse? You can’t have comfort and growth at the same time, and you can’t change while believing you are already correct.

21/10/2022

The most disappointed, and often even angry people, are those who come expecting a little tweak, or tip to their riding. When they are met with a rebuilding of their foundation, their ego can become grated.

I have been there many times, and understand. It hurts, and nobody enjoys it.

But mindset is everything- are you going to refuse to see new information and protect your comfort, or are you going to dive in, shed layers of poor habits and misguided beliefs, and be better for your horse? You can’t have comfort and growth at the same time, and you can’t change while believing you are already correct.

“Blessed are the broodmares… especially when they’re a Thoroughbred!” 🥰❤️💪🐎
21/03/2022

“Blessed are the broodmares… especially when they’re a Thoroughbred!” 🥰❤️💪🐎

I will never forget what French 5* rider Maxime Livio said at a Young Event Horse seminar I attended a few years ago, when asked which horse of the group he would choose to take

14/02/2022

Plenty of paddock time can actually reduce soft-tissue injury risk, say NJ researchers studying six years of data.

It’s more about maintaining the right mindset than anything. You have to be willing to correct your mindset as many time...
13/02/2022

It’s more about maintaining the right mindset than anything. You have to be willing to correct your mindset as many times as is necessary to stop thinking about “how many times” 😉

Buck Brannaman said something I wrote into my clinic journal and have been mulling over a lot. A clinic attendant asked how many times she would need to correct something that her horse was doing. Buck said “If you are asking that question it means you have already failed at this whole thing! It tells me and the horse you are putting mental limitations on how many times you are willing to correct it. If you find yourself asking “how many times.......” you might as well quit cause it means you aren’t willing to do whatever it takes to turn out a good horse. You have to be willing to do it as many times as the horse is going to do it and nobody knows how much that will be. Do it till it’s fixed.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I have been finding this quote pop up in my brain in a lot of areas of my life lately. This is one of my favorite parts of riding and training horses. I find SO many areas where this journey is more about me and my character than about a step by step program for the horses. How often do I let my emotions take over and make me ask that question, how many more times will I have to......reassure the horse who spooks.........clean up the kids toys.......wash these dishes.......fold laundry........work thru a disagreement with my husband......correct that behavior in my kid......deal with a difficult go worker.......correct the buddy sour horse........remind the horse to keep out of my space.........fill it in with your own situation.
Learn to recognize when you have set mental limitations and how that self sabotages your progress with frustrated emotions because it isn’t happening in your timeline.

OTTB’s for the win 🏆!!!
07/01/2022

OTTB’s for the win 🏆!!!

This article was updated Jan. 5, 2022, to reflect Kraut's participation in the 2018 World Equestrian Games (North Carolina) and 2021 Tokyo Olympics. The horse that took Laura Kraut to the next level in grand prix classes and her first internatio...

This 1,000,000+ times over!!! 🙌 I think most would think I go too slowly or am too soft with my horses. My sensitive Iri...
05/01/2022

This 1,000,000+ times over!!! 🙌 I think most would think I go too slowly or am too soft with my horses. My sensitive Irish gelding, Cruise taught me early on if I didn’t have the time or emotional breadth to “really ride” that day, to just hack or put him on the lunge for a stretch.

He had NO tolerance for an emotional response to frustration and for what that instilled in me, I could never repay him ❤️

Why trainers PUSH horses TOO FAST

Klaus Balkenhol explains, "Although breeders have created a better horse, the market has created a demand for a stronger, healthier, more powerful horse. It's easier to sell a horse that looks
like a carefully developed eight-year-old, and not like a three- or four-year-old just beginning his career. If you force it, you can get a three-year-old to physically look like a developed eight-year-old. Too many colts remain stallions which, if approved, promise breeders higher prices as three-year-olds. Now 250 to 300 young stallions are presented each year, when only 40 or 50 will be approved.
Few breeders have the sense to geld the yearling stallions and leave them on the pasture to mature naturally. Instead, yearling stallions are brought into a stall, fed too much grain, and at three, look like six- or seven-year-olds. They have muscle mass, but not enough bone structure to support it. They look mature from the outside but aren't . . . and when started to work, degeneration sets in. Competitions also create pressure to push horses too fast as competitions are now scheduled throughout the year without any breaks."

Common Mistakes In Pushing Too Fast
Tightening the noseband: "A horse resists by sticking out his tongue. Tightening the noseband too much puts pressure on the nose and on the poll. If it is necessary to tighten the noseband very tightly, then something has gone very wrong in the basic training of the horse. The horse cannot be relaxed, the first step on the training scale," warns Klaus.

Specializing too early: "Drilling every day in the indoor arena is too intense for the young horse. It's very important, especially in the first two years of training, not to specialize the young horse. Training should include a variety of activities, including trail riding, which is good for the mind as well as building strength with hill work. It should include jumping, either free or low jumps under saddle, including small natural obstacles on the trail, and cavaletti. A variety of work will allow the horse to stay mentally fresh and to enjoy his work. Only when the horse is happy can dressage become art."

Not checking tack frequently: "Saddle and tack need to be checked constantly for proper fit and adjusted as the horse's body changes with growth, and as his fitness improves with the
training. If the noseband gets too low, for example, and the skin between the noseband and the bit is rubbed and becomes sore, this causes the horse discomfort and loss of relaxation.
Regularly check for sharp edges and bit problems in the horse's mouth and teeth."

Working too long: "The goal of our training is to build the horse's mind and his muscles. Suppleness and relaxation require adequate muscle strength. strengthening requires both contraction and relaxation. Blood flow and oxygenation occur when the muscle relaxes. If the muscle is kept in a constant state of contraction, it loses power and strength, and actually becomes smaller.
Frequent rest periods, especially for a young horse at a free walk on a long rein, are necessary. The rest periods are not for a rider's fatigue, but to allow the horse to stretch and relax his muscles. The rest breaks will give you a completely new horse. This is the systematic gymnasticizing of the horse."

Riding when the horseman is tense: "Horses are particularly sensitive to the rider's mood. A rider shouldn't ride if she is under undue stress or doesn't have the time to ride. If the rider has a bad day, give the horse a rest day or go for a relaxing trail ride; don't work in the arena. The horse mirrors the rider's mood."

Not praising the horse enough: "The horse must perform from joy, not subservience. Praising a horse frequently with voice, a gentle pat, or relaxing the reins is very important to keep the horse interested and willing. If the horse offers piaffe, for instance, because he's excited, praise him for it. You shouldn't stop the lesson at that point nor make a big deal out of it. If you don't want piaffe, quietly urge him forward into trot, but you should NEVER
punish him for offering the piaffe.

14/12/2021
This is a harsh reality that horses would truly benefit from more people facing and accepting. As it was so aptly pointe...
02/12/2021

This is a harsh reality that horses would truly benefit from more people facing and accepting. As it was so aptly pointed out on someone else’s post, OTTB’s are the perfect scam for these kill buyers because they’re so traceable and in many cases have an array connections who might recognize and nab them.

Your love is killing America’s horses. Literally.

It’s time we talked about “Kill Pens”. It’s time to take the gloves off and share some painful truths with you all.

You can call them “kill pens” if you want… or you can call them brokers. It’s the same thing. The one thing you CAN’T call them is RESCUE, and here’s the many reasons why-

1. Buying a “kill pen” horse doesn’t save horses. True kill buyers hold a contract with a slaughterhouse which demands how many horses they must provide. A kill buyer with a contract for 40 horses will ship 40 horses, every time. You buying that horse does not mean he will ship 39. He will just ship one you didn’t see.

2. Most kill buyers don’t sell their slaughter horses. Most get their slaughter horses USDA export tagged at the sale and ship out quickly. The longer they hold the horse, the more it costs them in food and housing. Holding a group of horses for any amount of time significantly multiplies the chances that the horse will get sick or get injured and will fail EU inspection.

3. No reputable, ethical, honest rescue or “rescuer” is acting on behalf of the kill pen to try to save horses. This is not altruism, it is capitalism. If anyone claims that they are advertising kill pen horses to save the horses or from the bottom of their heart…. Think three times about that and then think once more. These “rescuers” are often hired people working on behalf of the kill pen to make them huge profits selling B grade horses who have no other profitable market.

4. “Kill pen” horses are often grossly misrepresented. There is no accountability for the description or condition of the horse. A kill buyer is not dealing in honesty and the value of their good name. They are dealing in a world of a-sucker-born-every-minute and huge profits with no repercussions. If they tell you the horse is 10, dead broke, and sound then it is more likely 25, dead lame, and an ex-bronc rodeo horse. Use some common sense- if the horse WAS 10, sound, and dead broke why wouldn’t they sell it themselves for $5,000? Because that is what a horse like that would be worth. It’s certainly not because they have gentle hearts, it’s because they are LYING.

5. The “kill pen” horses you see online are often not even slated for slaughter. They are the cast-offs of the auctions which sell dirt cheap. They sell even cheaper than the slaughter horses. These are the lame horses, the thin horses, the old horses. They are purchased for this intent specifically- to be sold at huge profits sight-unseen online under threat of slaughter. It’s an emotional manipulation that pays huge dividends.

6. Despite the literally MILLIONS of dollars well meaning people have spent “bailing” these kill pen horses; slaughter rates are largely unaffected. The same number of horses get slaughtered, you just don’t see those horses online.

7. Kill pens are stupidity at its finest. The concept that buying kill pen horses will end slaughter is like saying PURCHASING ALL THE PUPPIES WOULD CLOSE THE PUPPY MILL!!!! No it WON’T!!!! All it does it train these guys to do this more and make more money!

8. Horse slaughter is not really all that profitable right now, and your support of “kill pens” is keeping these guys in business.

And it’s killing our horses. Literally.

People aren’t adopting. The adrenaline rush of making offers to meet fake deadlines all the while with a cheering social media crowd adding to the frenzy and excitement is almost an addictive high. It’s not thrilling to make an appointment, visit a rescue, test ride a horse or two or three, have the one you like vet checked, fill out an application, and have your farm visited, and sign a contract to adopt. I mean…. That’s RESPONSIBLE. And responsible stuff is BORING.

And a second trend has started that is even worse. Well-meaning horse lovers are crowdfunding the “bail” of horses on behalf of strangers they don’t know who openly say they CAN’T AFFORD THE HORSE!!!! Why on god’s green earth would you want to BUY a horse for someone who admits they can’t AFFORD a horse?? What happens once it arrives? What happens when it needs a vet? What happens when it needs training? What if it is pregnant and now there are two? What happens when the “gelding” is actually a cryptorchid stallion and needs a $1200 surgery?

This is how hoarding happens. This is how some lunatic yahoo ends up with 180 horses on their 40 acre farm that they can’t feed. This is how horses end up starved and dead.

So please…. If you love horses STOP supporting kill pens.

Supporting kill pens is giving money to the devil. Support your reputable rescues who outbid in the auction ring and won’t give a $1 of your money to a kill buyer.

Let’s put these guys out of business.

This is SO important!!! Few people truly understand, some partially do and many do not at all.
27/11/2021

This is SO important!!! Few people truly understand, some partially do and many do not at all.

A brilliant set of photos in Animal Therapy Magazine so show the difference in movement, way of going and balance in the racehorse vs the dressage horse.
Defiantly worth digesting when re training your ex racer and the questions/asks of them when re training and what muscles are weaker/stronger/need developing.
The biggest change is the direction of movement and how much we have to change and alter their balance when re training and how/why dressage is so polar opposite to racing!

RRP 2022, we’re coming for you!
21/10/2021

RRP 2022, we’re coming for you!

30/07/2021
11/07/2021

Tinkerbelle had a huge end of the week! First gallop on Wednesday, first JUMPS 😱 on Thursday, first ba****ck ride on Friday!!! She was absolutely phenomenal for all of it and I am so impressed by the development of her self confidence and maturity since arriving at Stoneleigh! This little mare is coming along so well in this new chapter, I can’t believe how quickly she’s settled in and been able to truly progress right off the bat; This transition was 10x smother than last time she moved barns and I can’t help but notice the only major difference in her managment program is that she’s steadily been on products. Tink started on DailyGold just after moving to a new barn a couple months ago and she was emotionally a MESS for over a week post shipping. She also noticeably lost weight and it took me the entire time we were there to build it back up again. Tink has looked great from the moment she got on the trailer all the way through the first two weeks in this new environment. Praise 🙏

07/07/2021

Love horses? Then you'll love volunteering at the Thoroughbred Makeover!

There are plenty of volunteer jobs available that let you get up close and personal with the hundreds of recently-retired Thoroughbreds that will be competing at the Thoroughbred Makeover this fall. If you're looking for an insider's view on the world's biggest Thoroughbred retraining competition, then volunteering at the Thoroughbred Makeover is for you!

Learn more and sign up now at https://www.tbmakeover.org/volunteer-home

Miss Tinkerbelle has had a bit of a rough go lately. Her big brother, Cruise, gave her what was most likely a well deser...
14/06/2021

Miss Tinkerbelle has had a bit of a rough go lately. Her big brother, Cruise, gave her what was most likely a well deserved wallop resulting in a good sized hematoma and naturally, a very tender Tink. Thankfully, structurally she seems fine and we have just been managing swelling and a body worker is coming soon to make sure she is back to maximum comfort.

Massive thank you to Redmond Equine for their support and awesome products— the RedEdge poultice was a life saver throughout this injury!!! I treated her with a DMSO mixture initially which, while great for knocking out extreme swelling, it does do a number on the skin so can’t be used in excess. I was amazed by how gentle, yet effective the RedEdge poultice was! Tinkerbelle had been very guarded about anything being applied to the hematoma but stood quietly, loose in her paddock for the RedEdge to be applied! I can only assume she felt immediate relief and it didn’t irritate her already delicate skin!

Tink is now coming back to work and doing well! Stay tuned!!!

Tinkerbelle conquered an array of fears today! 1) Being mounted— for those of you who don’t know teaching her to stand q...
26/05/2021

Tinkerbelle conquered an array of fears today!

1) Being mounted— for those of you who don’t know teaching her to stand quietly to be mounted normally has been a PROCESS. Today I was finally able to mount her in an open space, without someone holding her🙏
2) Cows— she just thought they were loud and very weird but we actually made friends with a young black angus and now we have to stop and boop noses every time we walk past🤗
3) Poles— objects/obstacles around her feet initially made Tink incredibly insecure and nervous and she surely wouldn’t walk over anything without being led and you going over it too to be sure it was safe. Today we trotted poles under saddle👏
4) Tink’s big brother Cruise— he hated her initially (probably jealous and mad to be sharing my attention🤣) but it seems in over a year, she has grown on him 😉🥰

Making big strides for a baby!
25/05/2021

Making big strides for a baby!

Stinky update!!! She’s doing great! Huge thanks to Denny Emerson for all his support and guidance!
25/05/2021

Stinky update!!! She’s doing great! Huge thanks to Denny Emerson for all his support and guidance!

I am so beyond ecstatic to officially announce my partnership with Redmond Equine! Their enthusiasm to get involved with...
22/05/2021

I am so beyond ecstatic to officially announce my partnership with Redmond Equine! Their enthusiasm to get involved with the RRP via the Thoroughbred Makeover has been inspiring and their willing and generous support of my 2021 hopeful, Holiday Belle, is invaluable!

I am also a member of their “Trainer’s Circle” program (which is incredible!) so if you’re interested in trying these amazing products or learning about becoming an affiliated trainer contact me for more information or to purchase, I even have a client discount code!

Swipe through these pics to see Tinkerbelle telling me how delicious she thinks her new Redmond supplements and rock on a rope are!!!

After being a very good, grown up girl in her flatwork, it was bath day for Tinkerbelle!!!! She is looking fine😍😍😍
20/05/2021

After being a very good, grown up girl in her flatwork, it was bath day for Tinkerbelle!!!! She is looking fine😍😍😍

Tinkerbelle takes Tamarack!!! Super fun and top quality opportunity for us!
18/05/2021

Tinkerbelle takes Tamarack!!! Super fun and top quality opportunity for us!

Since it’s vacation week before boot camp begins (big things coming😱), here are some sweet non-work pictures🥰           ...
10/05/2021

Since it’s vacation week before boot camp begins (big things coming😱), here are some sweet non-work pictures🥰

More on contact with young horses...Starting on the ground makes everything we will go to do on their backs infinitely e...
04/05/2021

More on contact with young horses...

Starting on the ground makes everything we will go to do on their backs infinitely easier.

If the horse already has a solid understanding of a concept on the ground and has begun to slowly build the physical capabilities to do it, when we introduce it under saddle they will in turn be less overwhelmed by “newness” and inevitably catch on quicker.

The whole process becomes less stressful for everyone involved and can effectively avert any major mishaps, meltdowns, explosions etc that are so commonly associated as “just a part of training young/green horses”.

There will be shakey moments for sure but they can look like my last two photos of Tinkerbelle in a “rough moment” rather than the final black and white ones...

Disclaimer: NOT PONY CLUB APPROVED ATTIRE!!! When it’s your day off and only opportunity to catch up on errands but you ...
03/05/2021

Disclaimer: NOT PONY CLUB APPROVED ATTIRE!!! When it’s your day off and only opportunity to catch up on errands but you wanna squeeze in a hack before sundown— there’s no time to change!! You just jump on in your athletic leggings and sneakers!

Now to the point...
When you’re working with a young horse on contact.

1) LESS IS MORE! I took Tinkerbelle (a JUST 4 year old OTTB mare) out on a brisk, walking trail ride through our hay fields for about 45 minutes before I even went to the arena. I then spent maybe 20 minutes having a gentle discussion about contact with her; all still in walk and only periodically actually asking her for the hard stuff.

2) ACCEPT SMALL SUCCESSES and expect them to be few and fleeting at first. A young and green horse does not yet have the comprehension of coordinated aids nor musculature to hold themselves in an outline or stay in your hand very long AT ALL. Moments sometimes, if you get a couple seconds that’s HUGE and HARD for them. Take that and run!

3) PRAISE AND REWARD OFTEN! At even the tiniest inkling, of a good response, the right decision on the horses part— positively reinforce that! How?? Release/give, pat and scratch, coo and gush at them over how clever they are.

4) ROME WASN’T BUILT IN A DAY! Don’t expect a horse to gain physical and mental breadth exponentially from one session to the next. In fact, at first, don’t even assume they will remember a THING from the day before. A lot of times they may, but it is NOT a given. Have patience, think in baby steps and always aim for building confidence!

Work needs to be enjoyable for our horses, particularly those that are learning their jobs. If you don’t tactfully follow a similar method, it won’t be and you’ll have a sour and sore horse.

Hey all! I’ll be posting here as often as I can with new and recent updates on Miss Stinky but for the moment let’s get ...
29/04/2021

Hey all! I’ll be posting here as often as I can with new and recent updates on Miss Stinky but for the moment let’s get everyone caught up so, FROM THE TOP!

When I applied to become an adopter at New Vocations and gave them an out an outline of what I was looking for, in all honesty, it was with a “just to see what’s out there...” or “to get a feel for what catches my eye...” mentality.

I was not anticipating one of their trainers reaching out within a matter of weeks with a possible match. When I received info, photos and videos of a couple new horses they’d gotten into their NY facility, one filly indeed caught my eye.

Not to do the whole star-struck “I could just tell she was special” thing but...

Something about her stance was proud, her eyes were bright yet soft, her movement enthusiastic and, “there was JUST sooomething about her...” 😉 not to mention just an overall nice looking horse.

So before I knew it, I’d signed an adoption contract and Holiday Belle was on a trailer headed to my farm.

She got off the trailer like a champ and had an impressively calm demeanor for a young (not even 3 yet) horse who had changed hands three times within a month.

Full disclosure, I panicked a little when I first saw her in person, as she was MUCH smaller than I had envisioned (I was told she was not large but I hadn’t figured THIS small). I am relatively tall at appx 5’8” and most of the horses I’ve owned and ridden since my first pony have been 16.2-3+ and this filly was a FAR CRY from that stature.

Not to worry, it was an irrational “cold feet” moment and she has since grown some, filled out LOTS, and proven that size truly isn’t everything anyways. Tinkerbelle has become all I’d hoped and more and I am absolutely pumped to continue to produce this cool little mare!

Stay tuned!

Well I would say it’s about time Stinky has a public presence! Holiday Belle is a 2017 Off Track Thoroughbred mare who I...
28/04/2021

Well I would say it’s about time Stinky has a public presence!

Holiday Belle is a 2017 Off Track Thoroughbred mare who I sourced through the wonderful New Vocations Racehorse Adoption program (thank you, NY trainer, Amanda Vance for matching us up 🙏).

She is my 2021 Retired Racehorse Project Mega-Makeover hopeful and I could not be more thrilled to be aiming for my first (but surely not last 😉) year participating in this incredible program and event!

I am so excited to start sharing our journey to the makeover and to build a fan club for this awesome horse; trust me you’ll love this little pixie’s infectious energy 🧚🏼‍♀️🧚🧚‍♂️

Stay tuned!!!

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