Monthly Archives: January 2016

“Don’t Hang on His Head!”

“Don’t hang on his head!” were the words shouted across the arena by Buck, my mentor as I tried desperately as a teenager to learn horse training from the master.  It’s a natural instinct to pull on the reins when you feel unstable.  The problem is that the horsey brain takes that as a sign to resist and the longer you apply pressure, the more he ignores you.  A tug of war between a two hundred pound man and twelve hundred pound horse can only go one way!

The traditional rules for the use of the hackamore were taught to me this way:  no steady pull, only pull and slack, no use of both reins, only one rein, release as soon as the horse gives.

These are a part of a formula for producing a balanced light mouthed horse.  As time goes on I hope to enlarge on these basics to help clarify this type of horsemanship.  Welcome to riding in lightness with balance and signal, the Cowboy School of Equitation.

Fire in the Sky

Last night the sky was on fire with a sunset more characteristic of New Mexico, than Central Texas.  Then this morning its freezing and in the early dawn, the pastures are ashen.  The horses are standing still, waiting for the sun to come warm them.  It is crystal, cloudless, clear — promises to be another beautiful day.  Country living has its merits!

This afternoon, grandkids come to ride.  These are moments that make life worth smiling about.  Horses, dogs, and kids.  Time to walk out barefoot into the front yard with a cup of coffee and welcome the amanacer! Sun up!

Buffalo Soldier Presentation

Yesterday, Sallie and I went to a nursing home in Bryan to give our presentation of the Buffalo Soldiers for the third time.  The audience was surely near a hundred, mostly people over eighty, and none fell asleep, and there were many questions.  The presentation took fifty minutes and the question and answer period took us to the sixty minutes…Perfect!

The pictures in the presentation numbered 114 and Sallie ran the “projector,” a Keynote presentation on our iPad.  Wow, we’re really getting HiTech!

I began the talk: ‘We’re going to talk about graft, racism, corruption, immigration, terrorism, and guns and politics…and it won’t be about the 2016 presidential election!

The presentation brings together Benjamin Grierson, the tenth cavalry, a negro regiment of the United States Army and Fort Davis, Texas during the 1870’s.

I guess what I get out of it is that if we don’t learn the lessons of history, we are destined to repeat our mistakes.  But there are some really super individuals in our past, on all sides of the conflicts our country has survived!