Archive for the ‘Veteran’s Program: Adaptive Horsemanship’ Category

You’ve Got the Love

As hard as it is for us to acccept, next week will be the final lesson of our first Heroes and Horsemanship Program. Having started in January, riders in this program spent the past seven weeks learning horsemanship at our Woodside facility.  We speak for all involved in saying we never realized just how quickly we’d all form new bonds.  From the men and women who quickly came to love their horses, to the sidewalkers and leaders who became invested in their veteran’s progress, we grew more attached to the weekly lessons than any of us could have imagined.

Though next week will be bittersweet, we can spend this week just soaking up the good.  The plum trees are blooming, the horses’ sleek summer coats are coming in, and life’s never looked so good from the back of a horse.

Video- Heroes and Horsemanship: Week 7 

Heroes and Horsemanship: Day 5

The much anticipated video is here!  Considering taking a look at the video of Day 1 for comparison.  Can you believe how far these riders have come over the past couple of weeks?

VIDEO- Heroes and Horsemanship: Day 5

The Gift of Opportunity

It seems like every week we’ve added another veteran to our morning lesson.  In fact, we’ve been so busy that our videographer has been recruited to help handle the ever-growing group (meaning no video the past two weeks).  So, what have our veterans been up to lately?

At the beginning of the program each rider worked with a horse handler and two sidewalkers, a team designated to keep everyone safe around and on the horses.  Over the past 4 weeks the riders have progressed to the point where they’re now spending part of the lesson completely independent, no leader, no sidewalkers.  Initially riding alone only at the walk, last week’s lesson introduced everyone to the challenging (and thrilling!) experience of trotting without help.  Our adaptive riding instructor, Corie, had the servicemen and women whooping it up through a barrel racing pattern.

Watching the riders maneuver through the course was a lesson in humility.  One of the most challenging life lessons is learning to let those you care about take chances.  It’s tempting to lend a helping hand, to be the little voice on a shoulder offering assistance.  As a horse handler, the moment when you unclip your leadrope and turn to the rider saying, “You have your horse,” is difficult.  It’s offering ownership of the situation to a student who is less experienced than yourself.  Part of you wants to stay clipped on forever, ensuring that your lessons are nearly risk-free.  However, the act of taking chances is the only process by which we grow.  We teach everyone who leads our therapy horses to allow each student the opportunity to succeed, which conversely means offering them the chance to fail.  If a student forgets to ask their horse to turn, their leader will slowly let the horse bump into the rail.  “What happened?” Corie will exclaim, “Did you forget to tell Valentine to go left?”  It’s this process that teaches both patients and students that their actions have consequences.  If we’re always catching someone before they begin to fall, they never learn to tread carefully.

In many ways, letting kids begin to lose their balance is a vital aspect of hippotherapy.  Thankfully, we have the ability to do this while keeping our patients safe, with sidewalkers maintaining light contact but resisting the urge to help out too much.  For those with neuromuscular or sensory disorders, it can be difficult to feel asymmetries or imbalances.  Instead of helping a child each time they begin to drift off midline, perhaps leaning to the right, the therapist may ask for a small left circle from the horse.  The centrifugal force of the schooling figure encourages the rider to fall even more to the right, or outside of the circle.  It takes this greater sensation of imbalance to teach them to find midline, helping the rider learn where the center is and how to stay there.  Taking away support is often the only way to encourage someone to support themselves.

Many wonderful people have summed up the above in less than a sentence.  From Kenneth Boulding who said “nothing fails like success because we don’t learn from it.  We learn only from failure,” to Robert Allen, “There is no failure.  Only feedback.”  A great many men and women have expounded the virtues of missteps, errors, and flops.  However, Henry Ford may have said it best, “Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”  Each moment of our lives is an opportunity, whether for success or otherwise, it is an instant in which anything is attainable.

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Heroes and Horsemanship: Day Three

Whether it’s carriage driving, competitive riding, or just a hobby, a life with horses is a social one.  Though it’s not clear if horseback riding attracts talkative people or instead creates them, the result is the same, a group of people intent on carrying on a conversation until days pass and seasons change.  Like twins separated at birth, we manage to find each other at crowded parties and expansive companies, and upon finding each other refuse to let go, madly quizzing each other on the price of hay, or the best winter blanket.  Ever noticed how our Horse Handlers say each equine’s name before issuing instructions (“Sebastian, walk on”)?  It’s to let the horse know the conversation is no longer aimed at the sidewalker, therapist, or patient, but at them.

For veterans returning from war, depression and anxiety can leave servicemen and women feeling isolated, starting a terrible cycle of social withdrawal.  We often talk about the physical benefits of equine-facilitated therapy, and even the mental benefits, but the emotional ones are just as important.  Our adaptive horsemanship program not only joins together veterans as peers, but brings into the conversation their significant others, children, and friends.  It creates and nutures relationships that are essential to their recovery.  Our arena is such a wonderful place to be, and within its walls are a group of people intent on helping each other become the best possible version of themselves.  We hope you too can feel that sense of friendship as you watch this week’s video, and be sure to stick around until the very end for what must be one of the most inspiring shots of a young veteran and his growing family.

Video: Heroes and Horsemanship: Day Three

Heroes and Horsemanship: Day Two

At some point in their life every horseperson has come across a friend, acquaintance or family member who’s shocked to hear that after decades of riding you’re still taking lessons.  “You’ve had a horse for fifteen years and you still haven’t learned to ride it yet?” 

 Simply put, riding is hard.  Not only are we working to maintain our balance on a moving surface, but we’re attempting to synchronize multiple body systems: hands, legs, voice, seat.  Before you so much as mount a horse you’re challenged to remember a host of instructions.  Leading a horse to the mounting block sounds simple enough, but remember to look where you’re going, hold the leadrope below the snap with your right hand, keep the excess rope in your left hand, walk at the horse’s side between their head and shoulder, don’t get too close to their hooves, and keep your head up, shoulders back, chest open, well, you get the idea.

 As able-bodied individuals, we sometimes take for granted the ease with which we complete everyday physical and mental tasks.  As you follow the progress of our veteran’s program, put yourself in their shoes.  Think about how difficult it is to walk through deep sand at the beach, and imagine that’s how it feels for some of the men and women to walk in our arena.  Try to instantly memorize a new telephone number, do you have to repeat it to yourself many times before it sticks?  Now, imagine trying to memorize that number while talking with a friend.  That may be what it’s like for participants with PTSD or TBIs to try and remember the order of grooming tools or a riding pattern during lessons. 

 The programs offered at NCEFT are far from pony rides.  They’re hard work conveniently disguised by hooves and hair. 

Watch the video from Day Two, where our veterans mount up for their first ride.

Heroes and Horsemanship: Day One

On Wednesday morning at 9:30am, a group of veterans and their entourage, a mix of therapists, staff, and volunteers, assembled for the first session of NCEFT’s new adaptive horsemanship program.  Working to overcome the effects of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injuries, these veterans will spend the next 8-weeks learning the aspects of horse care and riding they’ll put to use at Lava Lakes Ranch in Sun Valley, Idaho.

 Day one of the program found them in the arena grooming their therapy horses.  The lesson included memory challenges like recalling the order of grooming tools, and some work on flexibility and range of motion by asking them to bend down and pick hooves or brush their horse’s belly.  Then it was on to a leading session, each veteran  gaining the confidence to leave their helper behind and lead their horse independently through a set of weave poles.

 Check out a video of the day’s session and tune in next week for the group’s first mounted lesson!

The Journey to Sun Valley

Early next Wednesday morning, NCEFT will play host to a group of veterans taking their first steps towards riding on the open range of Sun Valley, Idaho.  Recovering from trauma such as brain injuries or post-traumatic stress disorder, these veterans and their significant others will begin their journey at NCEFT, where they’ll spend 8 weeks learning the basics of horsemanship and riding.  From grooming and saddling to staying balanced and in control of their horses, participants will learn the skills they’ll need during their upcoming camping trip.

 This trip is the result of a collaboration between five non-profit organizations working to provide a once in a lifetime experience for injured veterans.    NCEFT, The Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Sagebrush Equine Training Center for the Handicapped, Sun Valley Adaptive Sports, and Lava Lakes Ranch, are all teaming up in the endeavor, each playing a vital role in what is an enormous process.  The goal of the program is twofold; provide veterans with an activity that creates self-confidence, fulfillment, and excitement, while simultaneously improving strength, range of motion, and flexibility.  The resulting combination is a person who’s both physically and emotionally stronger.

 After completing the eight-week program at NCEFT, the group will embark on a camping trip that begins and ends at Lava Lakes Ranch.  Located in Idaho, the ranch is home to a pair of sheep ranchers dedicated to responsible use of grazing land and conservation of the Pioneer Mountain area.  

 After spending some time at Lava Lakes Ranch, the group will head over to Sagebrush Equine Training Center for the Handicapped (SETCH).  With a mission similar to NCEFT, SETCH has worked since 1991 to provide equine-facilitated therapy for those in need.  In addition to programs such as Interactive Vaulting and Youth Horsemanship Courses, SETCH provides horseback riding for special interest groups like Sun Valley Adaptive Sports (SVAS).  SVAS offers a variety of programs aimed at providing recreational activities for people with disabilities.  One of their programs, Higher Ground, works to combine recreation and rehabilitation for veterans and their families.    The group will team with SETCH and SVAS, putting the horsemanship skills acquired at NCEFT to use, and mounting up for several days of riding and camping.

 The complete trip is offered at no cost to participants, with financial aid provided by generous donors. With up to 12 participants each week, the program will add up to nearly 200 hours of adaptive horsemanship over its 8-week span. Normally at a cost of $50 a lesson, the program requires roughly $10,000 in funding for each session.  It will take the combined efforts of our donors and some serious fundraising to continue to offer this adventure in the months and years to come. Check in next week and find out how participants managed on Day 1 of the program!