Sebastopol Wranglers

We’re on a mission here. As members of the Redwood Empire Trail Riders horse club, we’re out to help promote other horse clubs in our area.

Today we offer the link to the Sebastopol Wranglers, also here in Northern California. Like the Redwood Riders, that I featured yesterday, The SEBASTOPOL WRANGLERS have been around a long time. Yes, I rode at their arena too when I was a kid. Here’s the link to their website: http://www.sebastopolwranglers.com/Wranglers/home.html  And here is their link on FaceBook: http://www.facebook.com/SebWrang

Speaking of “kids,” I may take Gracie to the Sebastopol Wranglers schooling show on June 2nd. No, we’re not entering any classes–we just plan to hang out for the day with them. I think it’ll be a good experience for her, as a three-year-old, to just absorb the day’s energy and cheer the others on.

Posted in bareback riding, horse crazy, Horses, riding, Sonoma County | 2 Comments

Redwood Riders

Howdy Y’all,

Just found this website for Redwood Riders horse club in Mendocino County. I know this club has been around for a looooong time, since I went to some of their events and trail rides when I was a kid. (Everyone knows I’m old as dirt! Ha!) So check them out on the web. They have some gymkhanas and horse shows coming up for spring/summer 2012. http://redwoodriders.webs.com/

I recall going on at least two trail rides with the REDWOOD RIDERS when I was a kid living in Mendocino County. My sisters and I also rode in some of their gymkhanas, although the games were never much of our thing. It was still fun though.

Speaking of gymkhana fun, the REDWOOD RIDERS do have a gymkhana scheduled for June 2nd at their arena in Redwood Valley. I hope some of our Redwood Empire Trail Riders will be able to attend and enjoy the day’s fun.  Here’s their FaceBook  link: http://www.facebook.com/groups/383840284977850/#!/redwoodridershorse

 

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Horseback on Mother’s Day

Happy Mother’s Day! We spent time enjoying a couple hours  trailriding in preparation for our June ride at the McCutchan Ranch.

Left to Right: Patty on Rusty (Foxtrotter), Phil on Vinny (Thoroughbred), Barb on Zuni (Mustang) and Melissa on Joe (American Paint Horse).  Gracie’s ear’s are in the photo too, so here is a picture of me on Gracie (Quarter Horse.)

Here’s another photo of Barb on Zuni.

Posted in Horses, Kids' stories, pony, Writers | 6 Comments

Life With Horses

Gracie chases motorcycles. Yes, you read that right, she chases motorcycles and four-wheelers. Which leads to another interesting aspect of life with horses. I knew about the four-wheeler gig. Kevin and I would go over onto the neighbor’s 200+ acres to check on the horses in the wintertime. They learned to come running when they saw us. You know, the old carrots in the bucket trick. For fun, Gracie would run along after the four-wheeler just like she was running with another horse. Willa would join the run. We’d all stop at the flat spot not too far up the hill.

Loren came home from classes today on his Buell 750. Gracie picked up the pursuit and ran up the driveway until he parked the bike in the garage. Next time he goes out I’ll have to be ready with the camera or video to catch her in action. It is my guess that being young, energetic and of cutting horse bloodlines, she thinks “Oh boy, let’s chase the cow.” (Her cohort in crime, Willa, also taught her to herd wild turkeys.)

"Not MY hoofprints in the pumpkins!"

“Who, me? I didn’t step in the pumpkins!” Gracie’s look of innocence.

So, come noontime today I go out to hand water the tomato plants and the pumpkin starts. What do I find? Two hoof prints in the started pumpkins tray! Here they are:

The evidence is probably stuck in the front shoes of one of the horses. I wonder which one carries the remains of squished pumpkin starts. This also reminds me that after trail riding season (summer) maybe Gracie and I will be pursuing cow-horse training. Or possibly we’ll take up motorcycle racing–after all quarter horses are known for their sprinter’s speed. Although pumpkin rolling might be interesting.

Posted in authors, California Writers Club, farming, horse crazy, Horse racing, Horses, Kids' stories, Ponies, riding, trail riding, Writers | 9 Comments

Bees for Earth Day

A few of our wild beesIn honor of Earth Day, here are some of the wild bees on our ranch.

Posted in authors, California Writers Club, Dog Leader Mysteries, farming, ghosts, Kids' stories, Sonoma County, Writers, writing | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Born Horse Crazy

The following is a guest blog featuring an article by my writer friend, Deborah Taylor-French. Deborah writes a cute dog blog on Word Press called, Dog Leader Mysteries. Please visit her dog blog: http://dogleadermysteries.com/ .

Thank you, Deborah for sharing this article about the “horse crazy” bug. Looks like it bit twice in your family!Photo by Deborah Taylor-FrenchPhoto of Alex and “Missy Brown”, © Deborah Taylor-French

Born Horse Crazy

By Deborah Taylor-French

“Born This Way,” a song made popular by Lady Gaga spins on my teen’s iPod. Alex DJ’s as I drive home from high school. We sing along. Then, she chats about her dance and pottery classes.

Out of habit, I ask, “How is Ashley?”

My daughter snaps, “Mom.”

Oops—slipped up again, being a teens’ mom gets me in heaps of trouble.

I miss those years when my girl felt horse crazy. Afternoons I drove her to riding lessons then leaned on a fence watching her ride felt golden. Our mutual admiration and fascination with horses started young.

My earliest memories are still full of horses.

Born horse crazy says it all. No other explanation fits.

My mom said, “When you were three, your dad had to read you Cowboy Bill, over and over.” By the time I was five, mom took my sister and me to the library. I borrowed every book on horses, horse care and novels based on horses. I dearly loved Walter Farley’s The Black Stallion series. Reread every book over and over.

As a kid living in California’s central valley near Redding, my parents drove us past herds of horses. Surrounded by acres of ranches, large and small, there never was a day that I didn’t see horses grazing in pastures. Soon, I was calling out, “A bay, a chestnut, a palomino—look Mom a buckskin.”

My dream was to have my own horse.

I was not born to parents who owned horses. Mom and dad didn’t share my crazy but they did patiently listen to my obsessive passion for every kind of horse. My step grandfather had worked as a cowboy on cattle ranges in Montana. He told me stories of using his saddle as a pillow, of riding all day and herding cattle. My uncle Scott owned horses and never tried of my horse crazed patter. One day when I was twelve, my uncle drove up pulling a horse trailer with a little quarter horse mare. With his gift, he made my dream come true. But that’s another story.

Right now the only four-footed animal we care for is an adopted poodle mix. He happens to love horses too. You can read about Sid on my blog, Dog Leader Mysteries where he yelps and yips about how rescue dogs rock on Sydney’s Spot.

To this day my love of horses especially quarter horses, Morgan horses, mustangs and trail riding lives on in my daughter.

My daughter’s inborn love of horses surprised me. I hadn’t expected that. I have friends and family members who are terrified of horses. After all when a person stands near a horse for the first time the sheer size difference can be terrifying. Not everybody likes the idea of sitting on a horse’s back. I have heard plenty of horror stories of friends urged into trail rides on vacations.

And my daughter loved to read about horse care, horse breeds and horse ranches. Being mostly a nonreader, she really took to books offering horse and dog nonfiction.

By the time Alex turned seven I started hunting for a riding teacher. I thought finding a teacher of western pleasure riding in Sonoma County would have been easy. I ran into a few bad attitudes about western riding.

Finally, I discovered Christine Cole and her Full House Farm Harmony with Horses http://www.fullhousefarm.com/programs.htm  in Sebastopol. Her understanding and devotion to child centered learning and personal safety impressed me. I watched from a distance as my child learned how to communicate with Missy Brown, a fine-boned, calm Arabian. Child to horse love bloomed. My daughter built real relationships with horses of differing personalities, breeds and sizes on the farm.

Because I loved bareback trail riding as a girl, the day I watched my girl head into a strand of redwoods nearly brought tears.

What do I remember from that moment?

Inhaling a lung full of cool fresh air, my chest rose in wordless happiness.

A fullness of life among forested slopes etched in my memory of riding California’s coastal hillsides. Senses enlivened, I recall an unforgettable hush of trails deep in redwood duff, the sound of muffled hooves and my eager certainty that adventure awaited around every bend of trail.

For those of us born this way, just looking a horse makes us happy. For some of us, nothing rivals the sheer freedom of trail riding.

Nothing beats being horse crazy.

Deborah Taylor-French writes both fiction and nonfiction. Her goal is to save dogs’ lives and dog lovers’ sanity at www.dogleadermysteries.com. Animal welfare, current animal research, dog rescue and the humane treatment of wild and tame creatures remain a lifelong passion.  Deborah belongs to Redwood Writers, a branch of the California Writers Club. Deborah has completed her first novel for kids 8 to 12.

www.dogleadermysteries.com. Animal welfare, current animal research, dog rescue and the humane treatment of wild and tame creatures remain a lifelong passion.  Deborah belongs to Redwood Writers, a branch of the California Writers Club. Deborah has completed her first novel for kids 8 to 12.

Tags: horse crazy, Born This Way, Lady Gaga, bareback riding, trail riding, Full House Farm, Dog Leader Mysteries, Deborah Taylor-French, California Writers Club.

Posted in Dog Leader Mysteries, horse crazy, Writers | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Weekly Photo Challenge: Through

Did someone say “storytime?”

Posted in authors, California Writers Club, ghosts, great stories, Kids' stories, Writers, writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Read Your Writing Aloud

                      REDWOOD WRITERS SOCO COFFEE READINGS
Saturday, March 24th, 6-8 PM
Please join us and read some of your writing aloud, whether it be poetry, prose, or creative non-fiction. Don’t feel up to reading? Then just come enjoying listening to others.

Soco Coffee, 1015 4th Street (at Brookwood Dr.*), Santa Rosa

Arrive at 5:30 to sign up for Open Mic readings. 1st come, 1st served – Reading time approximately  5 min.

Featured Readers: New members of Redwood Writers—Poet John Miatech, and Conrad Bishop, (plus we’re still open for new members.)

Join us for camaraderie, coffee, & literary delights.

Each month features special featured readers, after which there will be intermission & open-mic. (Note: we will not have an Open Mic reading in April.)
Come & read your work to a supportive audience.

Enjoy Redwood Writers’ new sound system.
Please support the venue with the purchase of a beverage or snack.

Don’t miss this wonderful event!
For details visit our website: http://redwoodwriters.org/
FMI:
Robin Moore: editor@redwoodwriters.org

Abby Bogomolny: house@bbbooks.com

 

(*Easy driving directions from 101 freeway to SoCo Coffee: Take College Ave.,

going east. Go straight through intersection with Brookwood Dr. Go one (short) block and turn right on Chinn St. Go 2 blocks, SoCo will be on your right. Off street parking is available. There’s plenty of parking on Chinn St.)

Posted in authors, California Writers Club, great stories, Writers, writing | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Weekly Photo Challenge: Unusual

Posted in authors, California Writers Club, ghosts, Jack London, poets, Sonoma County, Writers, writing | Tagged | 7 Comments

Open Mic Readings, March 24th

                      REDWOOD WRITERS  Open Mic Readings at SOCO COFFEE Saturday, March 24th, 6-8 PM

Soco Coffee, 1015 4th Street (at Brookwood Dr.*), Santa Rosa

Arrive at 5:30 to sign up for Open Mic readings. 1st come, 1st served – Reading time approximately  5 min.

Featured Readers: New members of Redwood Writers—Poet John Miatech, and Conrad Bishop,  (plus we’re still open for new members.)

Join us for camaraderie, coffee, & literary delights. Each month features special featured readers, after which there will be intermission & open-mic.
Come & read your work to a supportive audience.

Enjoy Redwood Writers’ new sound system.
The first SOCO event drew over 50 people.
Please support the venue with the purchase of a beverage or snack.

Don’t miss this wonderful event!
For details visit our website: http://redwoodwriters.org/
FMI:
  Robin Moore: editor@redwoodwriters.org

 

(*Easy driving directions from 101 freeway to SoCo Coffee: Take College Ave.,

going east. Go straight through intersection with Brookwood Dr. Go one (short) block and turn right on Chinn St. Go 2 blocks, SoCo will be on your right. Off street parking is available. There’s plenty of parking on Chinn St.)

Posted in authors, California Writers Club, dining, great stories, Kids' stories, poets, Sonoma County, Writers, writing | Tagged | 4 Comments