I did make him work, though, and it was my first ride in over a week (yay, midterms!). I expected a bit of energy, but he surprised me and was very loose and seeking the bit. At one point, I rode past Lynn and Max and exclaimed "It's like driving a Cadillac!". He did have some attitude, and kept trying to drag me towards the barn and the gate, but he would listen if I remembered to actually push him away with my leg, instead of trying to pull him around. Once Max and Lynn left the ring to go do trot sets on the track, Gali got stronger and started giving me a hard time. We worked through it by riding some square corners, and finished up on some good stretchy trot and two nice walk-to-canter transitions.
On Saturday, plans to ride got interrupted by the lousy weather, and Lynn invited me to explore Ikea in Philadelphia with her. We had a good time, visited a friend that we don't see nearly enough, and got some fantastic barbeque. As we split ways, we agreed to meet up at the farm on Sunday.
I woke up early and went to a different farm to ride a lovely little mare (more on that in a few days), and by the time I got out to see Gali, I was exhausted. He wasn't exactly thrilled to see me, either, and I decided to just hop on bareback and stand in the middle of the ring, relaxing. After some rest, I got my lunge line and made him work a little, just to let him stretch out and sharpen his verbal cues. I'm pleased to say that "Ho." gets him from a canter to a halt almost immediately again - something we lose when we don't work on the line for a long time. Afterwards, we grazed and shedded out our ponies - some quality time to end a pleasant weekend.
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| "Who you calling a ho?" |


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