2012 NASTR 75
It took far less time to get to ride camp from there than I
had anticipated. I even stopped for a sit down breakfast. Still we arrived in
camp at just after 9am. There was not another soul in camp. Not even ride
management was there. After scoping the place out, I decided on a decent spot
to set up camp in and got set up. While I was getting situated, ride management
did arrive and I spoke with them briefly. My plan was to get my tent set up and
lay down for a while. There was a storm moving through the area, so I knew I
was going to get rained on. It did rain quite significantly later in the day. I
ate my dinner in my truck while hail pelted the windshield. Fortunately the
rain was largely gone by the time the ride meeting was held, and Sunday dawned
cold but clear.
The ride started at a truly inhuman 5am. For me this meant
crawling out of my sleeping bag at 3am to get Hoss fed. He was truly an eager
eater. He wanted his beet pulp right now, thank you very much, and chowed down
with a will. I got back in my tent, dressed and laid down for another hour or
so before saddling in the dark. I had gotten my pack loaded and my vet check
bag set up. This ride had one place where all vet checks would be held, which
was quite nice. I only needed one crew bag for the entire day, with two bran
mashes and two flakes of hay and my second set of water bottles.
Once saddled up I rode Hoss over and we checked in for the
start. Hoss was quite excited and really wanted to go. I had difficulty holding
him back with just the hackamore. We had quite the battle for the first several
miles of the ride as other horses passed him and he tried to bolt after them.
My new rule has been, if he can’t walk with control, he can’t move up to the
trot. So we walked. Or, at least, I told him he needed to walk and he did an
awful lot of doing everything in his power to go faster.
In the midst of having this little discussion with Hoss, I
realized my GPS had shut off. I turned it back on only to have it shut down
again. The third time I turned it back on I kept it in my hand long enough to
realize its batteries were dead. Not long after that, I realized the batteries
in my camera were dead as well. My phone had a low battery, so I had shut it
down. So I was without my tech devices other than Hoss’s heart rate monitor for
the duration of this ride.
The one and only picture I was able to take |
We rode up into higher elevations, and I realized what I had
thought were water droplets clinging to the ends of the pine needles were in
fact frozen. It was beautiful and cold. I ended up getting my gloves out for a
while to keep my hands warm. We were not up in those elevations long, but it
stayed chilly for a good deal of the first loop. The first loop was 26 miles,
an interval Hoss seems to think it pretty good. He doesn’t seem to feel the
need to stop every 12.5 miles like some rides have us doing.
Because the GPS was down, I had to guess based on our
typical speed when it was time to give Hoss his first dose of electrolytes. I
got off at about 7:30, figuring this was about as near as I was going to get to
knowing we were about halfway to the vet check, and gave Hoss his electrolytes.
We got into the vet check right
around 10am, going a little faster than I’d expected to go. The first hold was
40 minutes. After Hoss had recovered and our hold time started I got my crew
bag and set up an area for us to hang out in. I gave Hoss his electrolyte-laced
bran mash. He was having a particularly contrary day and did not eat it. He was
only interested in his hay. Having only brought along two syringe doses of
electrolytes and depending on three mashes to give him his other doses at vet
checks, I had little choice but to hope he’d be okay despite not getting his
usual doses.
After our hold we headed out on
the second, 25 mile loop. The temperature never got particularly hot, in fact I
spent much of the day trying to find the right combination of t-shirt,
sweatshirt and jacket in order to be comfortable. This did, however, enable
Hoss to do okay without his regular electrolyte dosing.
On the second loop we were caught
up by four other riders, with whom we more or less ended up riding the rest of
the loop. When they caught up to us, we were moving along near a ranch. Hoss
was slowing down as they caught up. Once they passed us, he picked up the pace.
It wasn’t long after they had
passed us that the group of us realized we hadn’t seen a trail marker in while.
It didn’t take long after that to realize we had missed a turn. Fortunately
Dave Rabe was in the group and he was able to get us back on trail.
About halfway through the loop we
came to a water trough with a special treat for the riders in it. Beer. At that
point in the day it was warm enough for a beer to sound just about right.
Unfortunately there was only one left, and Dave split it with me, kind man that
he is. I gave Hoss another dose of electrolytes and we headed on our way.
We came to another trough with yet
more beer in it. There was enough for those of us who wanted them and still
leave some for the last rider, who was about ten minutes behind us. Dave and I
even got two a piece. We loitered at the trough until some riders started
feeling a bit cranky about it and went on our way.
As we approached the vet check we
could hear the crack of gunfire. Campers were target shooting near the vet
check. I’m a little less annoyed about my neighbor’s habitual shooting of
ground squirrels. Hoss’s reaction to the gun fire was mostly to pretty much
think, “oh, that freak-o neighbor guy is out here, too,” and keep doing
whatever it was he was doing. Many of the other horses flinched at each shot.
The second hold was one hour. It
was about 2:30pm. I gave Hoss the uneaten bran mash from the first vet check
and left him in search of lunch for myself. This time Hoss ate the mash. I had
a hamburger and some chips and found a bucket to upturn and sit on while I
waited for our hold. Hoss ate well over the course of the hold, and even took a
nap for about ten minutes or so. When our hold time was up, I got us out of
there close to on time. I wanted to get done and not spend more time in the
check than necessary.
The other riders I was with had
better recoveries and should have left the check at least a few minutes ahead
of Hoss and me. Instead they dawdled in the vet check. I really wanted to get
the third, 10 mile loop done in two hours or less, and be back for the third
check by 6pm. So we set out and once I felt Hoss was warmed back up adequately,
I pushed him into a trot. Without other, faster horses to pull him along it was
a bit more of a challenge to keep him moving. I know that he’s got it in him.
He just wants to be motivated by something other than, y’know, me. He did
maintain a reasonable speed over most of the ten miles and we were back at the
vet check in less than two hours and well before 6pm. The other four riders
came in some ten minutes later.
The third hold was twenty minutes.
Once Hoss was recovered I got him to our spot and gave him another bran mash,
which he ate reasonably well. He spent more of this hold resting than eating,
but having been there only two hours earlier it didn’t really surprise me. I
got our gear packed up and moved to where it would be hauled back to camp and
got us back on the trail on time, again ten minutes ahead of Dave Rabe and
crew.
The final leg was 14 miles back to
camp. I figured we should be able to get that done in something around three
hours. The challenge being keeping him moving without the motivation of the
company of other horses.
At this point Hoss had spent just
enough time with other horses to think he should be allowed to wait for others
to catch up to him. We were by now far enough ahead of the riders behind us and
far enough behind the riders ahead of us to be in something of a “pocket.” If
he maintained a decent speed, he would neither catch up to nor be caught up by
other horses. Of course he wasn’t keen on this notion. He told me I don’t know
how many times he was just dying and couldn’t possibly go on another trot step.
But I could feel him and he was bluffing me. He just wanted to be caught up to.
I pushed him an awful lot. I was able to keep him going if at a somewhat lower
speed than I’d like him to be doing until the (now three) horses behind us got
close enough for him to hear them.
Hoss does a rather peculiar thing.
With the exception of the beginning of a ride, when the very idea of being
passed by another horse is a terrible affront, he will slow down when there are
horses behind him. Once they pass him, he’ll cheerfully speed up once again.
While other horses are behind us, though, I’m pedaling like a maniac just to
keep him trotting at all. Now that the horses we’d spent some time with had
caught back up, he was slowing down determinedly. Once they caught up I was forced
to pull him off and let them pass. Once
he was behind them, it was like riding the same horse I’d started the morning
with.
The only drawback to being behind
this group again was they were not keeping up a consistent trot speed. I would
have much preferred to consistently trot all the way back. Instead, partly
because they were rather taking up the entire trail and partly because there’d
be little point in passing them anyway, we had to go at their chosen speed. And
they were faster when they trotted, resulting in Hoss falling further and
further behind and getting more and more annoyed by it. By the time we got back
to camp, I had to get off to keep him from charging after them.
We finished the ride in a
respectable 14 hours and 21 minutes. For reasons I cannot begin to explain the
results show us finishing in 15 hours 21 minutes, but I know we were in at
9:20pm and there were 2 hours of hold time, so somebody got the math wrong. Not
that it makes any difference.
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