1) riding a young or nervous horse
2) attempting something (usually a jump) that I shouldn't have
3) riding out in the countryside on a horse who suddenly decides that trees (or birds, or fields, or wide open spaces, or stinging nettles, or grass, or just about anything completely innocuous and very familiar) had suddenly become TERRIFYING.
This time it was dust. Next time it will be his own hooves. |
I was going to try out a young (5-year-old) horse to see if I could help with caring for her and exercising her. It sounded like a nice idea, but I knew she was fairly green, and my main concern was that I wouldn't be able to handle her on the ground with my uncooperative body. Funnily enough, I was less concerned about riding - I thought that would be OK. I was wrong! The day I went to try her out, it was blowing a gale across most of the country. If there's one thing that almost every horse hates, it's wind. You'd think that animals spending a lot of time outside would get used to wind in the same way that rain and sunshine do not cause any adverse effects, but no. Wind is terrifying. The stable yard where this horse lived wasn't too windy, so I felt reasonably confident that all should be OK.
I watched the owner ride the horse round. She looked fresh and fast, but not too skittish. The owner came back in from the arena and asked if I wanted to give her a try - of course I did! She warned that the wind was much stronger out in the arena. We swapped the stirrups over (I have toe cages to help stop my feet sliding through when I can't feel my legs properly) and I prepared to mount. My first warning should really have been that the horse didn't want to stand still to let some stranger get on board. It took a while to get me up, partly because of me but also partly because of the prancing steed! However, I did eventually get up and settled and walked gently into the arena.
Well, the owner definitely wasn't making up the strength of the wind out there - I couldn't believe how windy it was! I was trying to keep the horse calm by talking to her in a relaxed, low and smooth voice, but I could barely hear myself over the wind. For about five minutes we just walked gently round the edge, doing nothing more than letting her get used to me, and me desperately trying to get used to her. I was reluctant to use too much on the reins and the bit, because she was so young. However, I definitely didn't need any leg to keep her going. I tried to sit nice and deep in the saddle, to make my body feel heavier and more grounded, hoping that this would keep her calm.
This isn't the one I fell off - but I don't have a picture of her, so we'll have to make do with the pony who lived next door. Somehow, I think most horses would be terrified of this little chap. |
I think it was only a few seconds between the horse bolting and me falling off, but that was enough time to think:
1) Argh!
2) Sit deep
3) Keep toes up (I didn't manage this one too well, which is why I have the toe cages on my stirrups. If I'd had better leg/foot control I might have been OK, but there we go)
4) Pull back on one rein to try to bring the horse into a circle so small that she has to stop (unfortunately, the only way I could turn was to the inside of the galloping loop we were on, because that was my only strong arm - ideally you turn a horse bolting in an arena into the fence and pray they don't try to jump it).
5) Sudden realisation that nothing I'm doing is going to help
6) Curse the wind for not having died down at all
7) Brief moment to consider bailing out
8) See fence rapidly approaching, note horse's willingness to jump this if needed (there was NOT a good landing on the other side)
9) Another brief moment when you realise that this can only end one way...
10) Resignation to one's fate...
11) Thud.
I think I looked a bit like this. |
My initial thought was that my arm would probably be OK again quite quickly - I've had plenty of falls before, and although this was a very fast fall on to something uncompromisingly solid I felt that the injury probably wouldn't be too severe. As I got up to walk away (legs worked!) I realised that my phone had been flung out of my pocket - it also managed to work its way out of its case, which is a wrap around one that holds in place with quite a strong magnet. I was also pretty sure that my pocket had been zipped up, but whilst I was puzzling over that I took a few more steps and realised that my glove was lying on the ground too. It hadn't occurred to me that my painful hand which I couldn't move had had a glove on a few moments before until I saw said glove lying on the ground. Now, these are children's gloves which I'd had for years, and they were pretty tight, so I was impressed that my shoulder had been hit so hard that my glove had flown off. Impressed, but also slightly concerned, because the pain was not going away at all...
It was a bit like this, but more painful and less magical. |
So, tonight I'm getting back on a horse for the first time since the accident. It's the first time I've ever fallen off and not got straight back on, but I really wouldn't have been able to, and the horse wasn't really in the right state for that either (i.e., still cantering around the arena). For the first time ever, therefore, I'm slightly nervous, but I know that getting back on in an RDA environment will be safe and will hopefully give me the confidence back straight away. At least I know I followed this bit of advice:
I love how unconcerned this horse is. |
This just sums it up so well! |
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