TERA Winter 2016

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The Official Newsletter of the Texas Endurance Riders Association www.texasenduranceriders.org Volume 16, Issue 1 Winter 2016

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Transcript of TERA Winter 2016

The Official Newsletter of theTexas Endurance Riders Association

www.texasenduranceriders.org

Volume 16, Issue 1Winter 2016

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In This Issue:

Ride Calendar - p2

Editor’s Musings - p3

A Note From the Board - p3

2015 Year End Awards - p4

Reminiscing Through the Rides- p5-6

Let’s Talk Some Poop!!!! - p7

Welcoming and Mentoring New Riders p8 - 9

Thank You Volunteers - p9

Trot Out - p10

Trail Markers is usually published Quarterly in January, April, July, and October.

It is distributed solely to members of the Texas Endurance Riders Association, and

is comprised of both their input and the opinion of the editor, neither of which

represent the organization’s views or official stance. Of course, if there is no input from

members, then you’re pretty much stuck with the editor’s opinions. Which don’t amount to much, really, but they can sometimes make interesting reading. Other times … well, the

term “bird cage liner” comes to mind.

Advertising rates are as follows (these are for black and white. Call or email for color rates):Full page - $80Half page - $551/4 page - $32Business Card - $22These are one time rates. Contact Todd for yearly rates.

We are also offering a classified section free to TERA members. Non-TERA members -.50¢ a word.

Deadline for the next issue isApril 1st, 2016.

Wanna be published? Get it in!

Riders water thier horses in a stream at the Old Glory ride in October. Photo courtesy: John Nowell http://www.remuda.smugmug.com

2015 -2016 TERA Sponsored RidesHeart of the Hills

Mar 5-6, 2015 Hill Country State Natural Area

Bandera, TXEron Howell

830-537-4604 [email protected]

Racing StripesApril 9-10, 2016

Priefert Ranch, Mt Pleasant, TXKhristin Seymore

903-563-6639 [email protected]

Spirit of TexasApril 23, 2016

LBJ National Grasslands, Decatur, TXSelena Copeland

[email protected]

The Last HoorahMay 14th, 2016

Six 0 Ranch, Cleburne, TXBo Parrish

936-852-3532 [email protected]

Old GloryMay 28-29, 2016

Parrie Haynes Ranch, Kileen, TXJamie Lemon281-732-0629

[email protected]

Llano EstacadoJune 3rd-5th, 2016

Lake Meredith Rec Area, Armarillo, TXDoug Blashill806-206-4867

[email protected]

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President Vickie Roden

11227 Wild Rose LaneAnna, TX 75409972-978-0072

[email protected]

Vice-President Caryne Edwards

311 Hunters Creek Dr.New Braunfels,TX 78132

[email protected]

Secretary John Nowell

3651 White River Dr.Dallas, TX 75287

[email protected]

Treasurer Russell Betts

6101 FM 1374New Waverly, TX 77358

[email protected]

Ride Manager Director Valerie Bixler3598 CR 406

McKinney, TX 75071214-514-3618

[email protected]

Publicity & Awards Director Khristin Seymore

PO Box 559Daingerfield, TX 75638

[email protected]

Membership Director Kerry Lowrey

163 Fisher McConathy RdAnacoco, La 71403

[email protected]

Education DirectorSelena Copeland

2219 County Rd 2690Alvord TX 76225214-793-0311

[email protected]

2016 Board of Directors

Editor, Todd Hezeau7259 CR 3223 Lone Oak, TX 75453

469.261.8733 [email protected]

The Editor’s Musings...

What an oddball winter we are having. As I type this it is 75°F in north Texas. Well, it is Texas so what’s the saying... “Wait a minute and the weather will change”. Ride season is preparing to go into full swing with HotH coming up and many rides afterward in the month’s of March, April and May so here is hoping we do not have a soggy spring, or season for that matter as we did last year and that we have a successful season for everyone involved in our sport. Let’s get in the saddle and get the ball rolling! See you on the trail...Safe Riding,Todd

A Note from the Board....Dear Members, We all know what a strange ride year 2015 was, with so many ride cancellations due to weather-related issues. Here’s to more sun and less rain for us all in 2016 - especially on ride weekends! The year was particularly strange for me, having broken 3 bones in my right foot in September, when I took a kick from one of my mares that was meant for another mare. For the rest of the year, I couldn’t walk or drive. I couldn’t even get to a ride to help out. And, I wasn’t able to ride until this month. I’m REALLY looking forward to being in the saddle and seeing everyone at rides. We have some great events planned this year. We will - weather permitting - have all our usual great rides, and some possible new ones. Plus, we have several different clinics in the planning stages, so you will want to be looking for announcements on those. From your entire Board of Directors, may the rest of your 2016 ride year be fantastic, whatever your goals might be!

Vickie RodenPresident

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Old GloryOct 31st-Nov 1st 2015Parrie Haynes Ranch

Photos courtesy: John Nowell http://www.remuda.smugmug.com

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River Run at Los Caminos NaturalesDec 5th 2015Land Heritage InstituteSan Antonio TX

Photos courtesy: Shane Prevost

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Mileage Awards:Endurance:

Endurance Featherweight1-Kerry Lowrey Takoda 505 miles2-Debbie Betts Manny 200 miles3-Paulette Brehob TMP Vivaaldi 150 miles

Endurance Lightweight1-Manda Morris Misfit Toi 255 miles1-Vickie Roden Jolly Juice 255 miles2-Sylvia Sazama Nordik Star 250 miles3-Todd Hezeau PWF Liberty Valance 200 miles

Endurance Middleweight1-Jennifer Masters Jose Baske 205 miles2-Jim Matthess Beacons Nite Lite 150 miles3-Bruce Burton CR Blonde Bombshell 105 miles3-Michael Campbell AH Zanes Texicinnamon 105 miles3-Vicky Rogers Coin’s Diamond Nugget 105 miles

Endurance Heavy weight1-Al Prescott MA Marauder 405 miles2-Wendye Gardiner Koweta Call Me Lexxie 150 miles2-Lisa Skalski Tamar Quaszar 150 miles

Endurance Junior1-Ellie Nelson Buckos Bay Olena 50 miles

Limited Distance:LD Featherweight

1-Robin Howze April’s Truest 140 miles2-Margaret Dawson Annie 110 miles2-Donna Thompson Thee Jameel 110 miles3-Julia Lankes Rhinestone Cowboy 75 miles

LD Lightweight1-Tracy Culberson VA Lady Lachazka 130 miles2-Nikki Barling Bridwell Deals Kamil Jr 115 miles3-Denise Doucet RDS Halleluyah 105 miles

LD Middleweight1-Kay Conway Painted Perfection 160 miles2-Vicky Rogers Coin’s Diamond Nugget 135 miles3-Robert Ambrose Juan Bad Rockstar 130 miles3-Michael Campbell AH Diamond Bezska 130 miles

LD Heavy weight1-Gail Conway Flashes 160 miles2-Lee Bateman Morning’s Joy 115 miles3-Lee Bateman Desperados Legacy 110 miles

LD Junior1-Ellie Nelson Buckos Bay Olena 130 miles

Overall High Mileage Rider(PLAQUE)Kerry Lowrey 505 miles

Overall High Mileage Horse(PLAQUE & COOLER)Takoda 505 miles

Husband & Wife Award(PLAQUE)Bruce & Louise Burton

Family Award(PLAQUE)Jason & Ellie Nelson 285 miles

Master Rider-*Senior Award(GIFT CERTIFICATES)LD – Lee Bateman 225 miles

Endurance – Al Prescott 455 miles

Nomination Awards:Rookie Rider of the Year(PLAQUE)

Margaret Dawson

Volunteer of the Year(PLAQUE)Nicole Duarte

Ride Manager of the Year(PLAQUE)Eron Howell

Horse & Rider of the Year(PLAQUE & COOLER)Michele Petty & “Kadmon”

(250 Endurance Miles & 615 LD Miles Nationwide)

April Mortl Sportsmanship Award(PLAQUE)Caryne Edwards

Alex Wallis Junior Award(PLAQUE)Ellie Nelson

Veterinarian(s) of the Year 2015 plaques to all Veterinarians:Jim Baldwin

Valerie BixlerGail Conway

Danny DuttonCarter HounselMatt RandallBob Rogers

Dennis Seymore

TERA YEAR END AWARDS

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I’m talking manure, road apples, poop, or sh*t. Whatever you call it, our horses produce a lot of it. Actually between 35-50 pounds a day. Multiply that by 100 horses over a weekend and that’s a lot of manure for a Ride Manager (RM) to deal with if each rider doesn’t do their individual part.

Manure disposal at many of our rides can’t be any simpler than a RM/land owner saying please scatter your hay and manure when you leave. But I have been appalled by the number of riders I see who just drive away leaving piles/flakes of hay as well as two days’ worth of manure. In many cases, the riders haven’t picked up or spread a single pile of manure the entire weekend. How can the grass possibly recover when it’s coated with a 2 inch thick flattened blanket of manure!?! Also I wonder if the horse were to colic, how the rider would respond to the veterinarian who asks, “Did your horse poop his normal amount last night?” A very good reason to clean up twice a day!

I think all of the attendees of the River Run (RR) agreed the trails were fabulous and we heard from lots of folks hoping to come back again. I love the Land Heritage Institute (LHI) and ride there often as it’s only 30 minutes from my house. I want another endurance ride there myself which was why I was so concerned that the land stewards be happy with how we left everything. In order to make them happy the camping area, most of which is not normally used for horse camping, needed to be spotless. Unfortunately several of us had to spend the entire day on Sunday cleaning up. Even though manure/hay disposal stations with wheelbarrows were located all over camp, many riders still drove away leaving their camp sites a mess. In many cases we had to literally scrape the manure off of the ground. Just because you can’t see individual road apples

doesn’t mean the manure still isn’t there!!

So the real purpose of this article is to answer the question, “What do we do about riders who are totally oblivious or who choose to ignore the rules and refuse to be considerate of Ride Management and future users of the property, whether it be private or public?

I’ve ridden on some public lands where manure had to be bagged (management disposed of the bags). At another site we had to leave a large deposit in the form of a separate check. If our camp site wasn’t clean, the RM had the funds to pay some helpers. I’m sure a lot of you have had similar experiences, so asking riders to clean up is not peculiar to Texas.

Now I do agree there are some things RMs could do to help with this problem. Such as prominent instructions in the ride flyer, signs at the check-in, and reminders at all the meetings. Maybe one of the best things is making sure the ride site is clean when the riders arrive. I call this latter the “Disney World effect”. Most big time theme parks are so spotless that no one would dare not to dispose of trash properly. I think the same applies to our riders. If a parking spot is clean, riders will more likely leave it that way. The opposite is also true. I had a RR rider point out to me that there was a pile of “old” manure by his parking spot. I didn’t say what I was thinking but whatever happened with trying to leave your area a little better than you found it? Doing a little extra—a lesson my Dad taught me as a child.

But I digress—RM does need to ensure the camping area is clean upon arrival along with highly visible instructions for how manure should be handled. Okay now what? Now what does management do about riders who still won’t abide by the instructions?

I’ve had many suggestions —

1) upping the entry fees so the RM can afford to hire cleaners. Doesn’t seem fair for the rule followers

2) collecting a cleaning deposit and then inspecting ride sites—more work for the RM, but better than management doing the heavy lifting

3) hiring an individual/group who will contract individually with riders who can’t (physical limitations) or don’t want to clean up their site themselves

4) riders reminding their next door camping neighbors about the manure rules—starting an in camp discussion

5) the RM taking notes on where individuals are parked and publicly shaming the slobs on social media (this really was a suggestion I received).

The next TERA sponsored ride is the Heart of the Hills at the Hill Country State Natural Area in early March. Being that this is a state park, riders will need to put their manure in a designated area. When we show up at the park we are a very visible group. I want the trail riders who use the park the following weekend to say “Wow, those Endurance Riders were here last weekend and this place is spotless. What a great group!!”

Let’s start a dialogue on how we can all solve this problem. Not sure how or where this discussion should take place. Some of us choose not to be on Facebook so perhaps the various Yahoo sites?

Paulette Brehob, AERC #6313, TERA #123, Ride

Manager Dry Creek Cattle Call 1992-93 1995-2000,

TERA President 1997-2000, TERA Hall of Fame

2002

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Continued on page 98

Welcoming & Mentoring New

RidersBy Selena Copeland

With the help of our new rider clinics, introduction rides and the simple awareness of the need to recruit, we now have several new riders at our rides. It is up to them to decide if they like the sport, the people in it, their horse is suited for it and to continue to come to rides. Saying hi to new riders, asking them if they had a good ride, and complementing them on their horse are all good ways to leave a good impression of “the people in the sport”. Asking them about their ride, how they got started in it and telling them stories of one of your first rides are great ways to make a new friend. But, you also might consider being a “mentor on the spot”. Most people think of mentoring as “babysitting a new rider”, letting them follow you, having to go their speed and helping them out while you sacrifice a higher placing in the competition. But, it doesn’t have to be that involved. Giving simple advice at a particular moment is sometimes all it takes to help someone finish that might not have made it. At the Armadillo, Valerie Bixler and I talked an intro rider into going back out on her 2nd loop, just by suggesting she rest for a little bit, eat some fruit and maybe drink a protein shake. We were just vetting and scribing and saw her only for a few minutes, but we helped her complete and I am sure she will remember the advice.

We have sold people an easy boot and put it on for them so they could finish a ride. We have also helped people get their horse across a creek or held their horse for them while they got back on. It is also not unusual for us to come upon people towards the end of a ride that look completely whipped and talk them into riding with us. Just having company sometimes can get someone through their last loop. While riding with them, we usually

ask them what they did to condition to get ready for the ride and make suggestions if we think it might help and if they are interested in learning. I have also heard that “the new people are rude”. Which can be translated to – they have not learned our unwritten etiquette for being grateful for vets & volunteers, along with politely passing, being passed, water trough courtesy, and gate courtesy. So teach them, instead of branding them as rude and someone you instantly don’t like. For example, if someone gallops past you without a word, and other new people just saw that person get ahead of them in a rude manner, you might say “she was rude, experienced riders always ask you if it is OK to pass”. When you are new, the last thing you want is to “look new”. If you see her later, you might say (when other people are not around), “I’m not upset with you, but I can tell you are new and I just wanted you to know that in our sport, one of the unwritten rules of sportsmanship is ……., because it is extremely important to think safety first….. etc.” If the person is still rude (and most people will not be), at least you will have tried.

One of the riders at our clinic asked how she could find someone to ride with at the rides. I told her to watch the riders go out and wait until a group of riders left at the same speed she wanted to go, then to follow them. A few miles down the trail the riders will start to spread out and she can ask ”do you mind if I ride with you”. I told her that if the answer is no, usually the person will say it as “my horse really does a lot better alone” or “this is a really green horse, so I want him to ride only with really experienced horses”. I also told her not to take it personally, the other person really was thinking of their horse or their own safety. Most people are happy to have the company, especially on a 50.

I probably have a tendency to give more advice than most people want, because I like to teach and share information. I have learned all kinds

of things from people that I would never have thought to ask for advice. One of the things about giving unsolicited advice, is that it should never sound like an order or be given in a voice of superiority. Most endurance riders are independent people who like to learn, but don’t want to be told what to do. If the person chooses not to follow your advice, that is not your fault and it should not stop you from helping the next person.

One ride that I will never forget, I was midway through the last loop in 5th or 6th place in a 50 at the Armadillo. I was about 20 minutes behind the first 4 horses, with 1 horse right behind me and the others 20 to 30 minutes behind us. The young woman behind me caught up with me about midway and we met her crew at a road crossing. I took one look at her horse’s expression on his face and knew he was exhausted. They offered him water, oats and a wet mash. He had no interest in any of it. They then offered it to my horse, who slurped up the mash, but her horse still showed no interest. I kept waiting for the crew to say something to her about her horse, but no one did. So, as soon as we went back on trail, I told her that her horse looked really tired and it was not a good sign that he was no longer interested in eating or drinking. She said, “oh he’s not tired, he’s just not hungry”. Then, I said we were so far ahead of the people behind us we should just walk the rest of the way and it shouldn’t affect our placing. She said “no we can still trot”. I was really concerned about the horse and could see the way his hind legs were wobbling at the trot. I had dropped behind her thinking she could set the speed that way and I wouldn’t pass, so that her horse could go slower. She kept trotting faster, so finally I said my legs are cramping so I’m going to lead my horse (they weren’t). So, I dismounted and she immediately picked up a big trot to camp. So, I remounted and came in at a slow trot so that she wouldn’t see me and push her horse any harder. By that time we only had

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2 or 3 miles to go. When I arrived, her horse had pulsed in, trotted out (and so received a completion) and was flat out on his side beside the trot out area, with his legs sticking straight out and his eyes rolled back in his head. The vet already had an IV started. The rider was sitting with the horse and sobbing uncontrollably. I knew then that she did care about him, she just really hadn’t understood that her horse was really in trouble, so I hugged her. The horse lived and to her credit I never saw another horse she rode need treatment. If I had not tried to say something to her, I would have felt just as guilty as his rider. But, the horse (who was owned by someone else), died a couple of years later while receiving treatment at a 100-mile ride. A few months after that, Hank and I were at dinner with several breeders and show trainers on a Friday night at a horse

show in Oklahoma City. One of the breeders exclaimed that a horse that she bred and raised became an endurance horse and she was so happy that he was really being ridden and not just someone’s pet in their backyard. She said maybe you know him, his name is _______. I did not have the heart to tell her that the foal she had raised had died doing his job. I also did not want everyone at the table to have that image in their heads of endurance and swear to never sell another horse to an endurance rider. I have occasionally wondered if that was the right thing to do, but it is too late to change it now. So, we have an obligation to speak up for the horse and to protect our sport, through education and teaching whenever we can. Most of us are not vets and not experts, especially reading someone else’s horse, but it is still better to speak up or to err on the side of

being too conservative.

In endurance, there are some people with amazing records that have completed 1000s of miles. You don’t have to be one of them to be knowledgeable and to be able to share that knowledge with someone else. You can always start your sentence with “you know I read an article in Endurance News, TERA, Equus, etc. and the author said …”. Or one of our speakers at convention said …. Or “you know one of the things I have tried that worked for me is….. Or your horse looks like he might be off”. There are ways to phrase things that share the knowledge and help other people and horses without sounding authoritative or condescending. So, let’s see if we can all help our new riders get off to a good start and on the right foot with their competitors, vets and volunteers.

Texas Endurance Riders Associat ion 2015

from your Board of Directors and fellow TERA members!

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Continued from page 8

2015 VOLUNTEERS

The Board of Directors and your fellow members want to acknowdelge you for the hours you invested

to make our TERA 2015 rides a great success.

THANK YOU!!!

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Winter 2016

Texas Endurance Riders Association

%Kerry Lowrey163 Fisher McConathy RdAnacoco, LA 71403

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Trot Out

Nappin on the job!Photo courtesy of: Jim Edmondson http://www.opticalharmonics.com