"I Would Have Thought They Would Have Been Lined Up!"
Posted by Labels: Rainbow Mountains, trail riding, Tweedsmuir Park, Wildwood Legacy Lace, Wildwood Mistral, Wildwood Reining Horses
I first started planning a trail
ride in the
After our conversation I brought up
all the information I had on my computer – notes, maps, photos – and started
making plans for a ride in August. Some time in the winter a second person
approached me about riding with me. I thought I had a plan B but she soon
decided it would be too much for her.
As the months passed and still no
one confirmed that he/she wanted to ride with me, I branched out. I asked two
or three friends but due to commitments, costs or lack of interest, no one took
me up on the offer. A Facebook post hinting at a once-in-a-lifetime trail ride
adventure yielded a couple of "I would love to go with you's" that
fizzled out. If I was going to see the Rainbows on horseback, I would be riding
alone. Determined, I proceeded with my plans. I studied maps carefully and
decided on a route but since I had not ridden these trails, I could not be sure
my timeline would be accurate. I had originally planned a four day ride when I
thought there would be two or three of us but I decided three days would be
enough by myself. For safety reasons, I bought a DeLorme InReach so I could
stay in touch with family and friends. I watched the weather forecast for the
best possible three or four consecutive days and finally settled on August
19-21. I would be riding Mistral, a 6 year old mare who had been on only one
trail ride (Where she was lost in the wilderness for five days. See Lost in the Potatoes) and Legacy
would be the pack horse.
I drove to the trailhead on the
afternoon of the 18th, settled Mistral and Legacy for the night with
hay bags and myself in the camper of my horse trailer. The next morning, I
saddled and packed up (sounds fast but in fact took me quite a while by myself),
slung a back pack on me with emergency items (in case I got separated from the
horses) and my camera and headed into "unknown-to-me" territory.
A sign at the trailhead warned of bears – no kidding! I had belled Mistral hoping the steady clanging would ward them off and, for the first time in my life, I had bear spray but I knew it would be a wreck if we came across a grizzly. Mistral, especially, was on looking for something to happen. I will never know what she saw on her five days lost in the wilderness last year but it's safe to say she saw grizzly. The experience changed her. I knew she was having déjà vous moments.
I followed a rocky trail along what might be East Branch Creek with no difficulty though light forest sprinkled with fireweed with very little change in elevation. Mistral was fresh but the day was warm and sunny and I was relaxed and eager with anticipation. I woke from my reverie with a jolt when Mistral leaped into the air. (This was the first of a few times on the ride that a lifetime of riding saved a serious wreck – I stayed in the middle of the horse!) At first I thought Legacy's lead rope had slipped under Mistral's tail but that was not the problem. A stumpy tree had scratched her belly and apparently she thought something had bit her! I might thank her for the wake up call though because I discovered my oilskin coat, tied behind the saddle, had fallen off. I had to back track and pick it up (almost back at the trailhead).
A sign (almost missed it because it was laying flat on the ground) indicated the junction of Octopus and
The weather was perfect – sunny but not too hot – and, since I had skipped breakfast, I wolfed down a sandwich and coffee from the thermos. It was here, for the first time of several that I wished I could share this moment with someone. Instead, I sent a message on InReach that I was okay.
Lunch break |
I knew I should reach Lester's camp before long and had no problem recognizing it when we did. It would have been a great place to camp had the timing been right as it is sheltered and boasts a bear locker and a toilet (open air kind), water and grass near for horses. I tied Mistral and Legacy, finished my coffee, checked the InReach and took a few photos.
I stopped for the night at a little lake that had grazing for the mares. I would have liked to ride farther but according to information I could glean from internet sources there would not be a place to camp for several kilometers. I saw that horses had been tied at a small clump of trees so I tied Mistral and Legacy and put my little tent up. Although I have in the past hobbled my horses to self graze, in light of the problem last year and the fact that I was alone, I did not. Thank goodness the flies were not too bad at the edge of that lake where the grass was! I gave them a half hour, ate, and took them back for more before tying them up for the night. Both were belled to scare away bears. This is when the trouble began – the mares would not settle down!
I woke to a cloudy sky, quiet horses in their hobbles and ice on the water in the basin. I needed coffee! I downed a couple of cups, then grazed Mistral and Legacy. Then came the arduous job of breaking camp and packing up – by myself. My aching shoulder didn't help – lifting the boxes on Legacy especially – but I got it done.
Not before I had seen
It was cold and windy. Whereas the first day I rode in a tank top, this day I rode in underwear and my oilskin. As we climbed to the barren highlands, the wind blew harder. The sky was threatening rain but thank goodness we did not get wet! Of course the cold wind jazzed up the mares and they wanted to keep moving. I didn't want to get off because I didn't want to have to mount multiple times with backpack, camera and my damaged shoulder. Once my cap blew off, necessitating a dismount I had not planned. I jammed it in my pocket and went bare headed so I wouldn't have to get it again.
The scenery was incredible but all photos I took from Mistral's back. What I would give for a photo of the mares and I with this beautiful back drop, impossible of course by myself. There was not a tree to tie to so I could handle the camera without the horses. I regret that I could not take advantage of such wonderful photo opportunity but thankful for those I did get. Another time? Maybe.
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Crystal Lake |
2 comments:
Good read but was wondering if the sore shoulder was an old war wound or something you did on the trip?
It's an old injury or should I say chronic wear and tear. I had surgery on the other shoulder and this one is trying to do the same thing. Leading the pack horse really exacerbated it.
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