Something Unexpected

Today’s post marks the 250th post here at the House on a Hill. So far we’ve discussed everything from happy weddings to helpful tips, and of course houses and horses. Since I started documenting Foster’s journey, he’s gone from Beginner Novice hopeful to making his first attempt at Training, and from an inconsistent connection to schooling second level dressage. This blog has been such a fun exercise for me, and I hope you all enjoy following along on the ridiculousness that is life here at the House on a Hill. To commemorate the occasion- surprise! A slightly new look for the blog. I hope you guys like it 🙂

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On a different note, North Carolinians everywhere woke up to see the fluffy white stuff coming down from the sky in torrents. Considering the supposed chance of precipitation for today was 0%, this was a surprise indeed. Since I hadn’t planned on working from home I attempted to drive in, and now speak to you in front of my fireplace, having given up on driving in. The salt trucks here were also caught off guard, and so snow and ice is packing quickly in the rush hour traffic. Even 4 wheel drive couldn’t get me down the hill without a little trouble, and things are currently getting worse.

I only skidded off the driveway a little...

I only skidded off the driveway a little…

So, at least I got to get out to the barn last night, because it’s definitely not going to happen tonight. Or even tomorrow. I hope everyone is staying safe and keeping warm! Thanks for reading!

Let’s Discuss: Cloning

News broke recently that the famous Irish stallion, Cruising, has not one, but two clones on the ground. If you are not familiar with Cruising, you probably know his prodigy- Mr. Medicott, or Flexible, for instance, to name a couple. The clone 2 1/2 year old stallions (nicknamed Rooster and Booster), are to be made available at stud to select mares this year. Personally, I was shocked to hear this news.

The late Cruising meets his two clones

The late Cruising meets his two clones / PC: Horse and Hound

When we sold our farm, it was purchased by a man with a vision to breed Irish horses (after going through breed books with my parents over the kitchen table, no less). He went to Ireland, purchased himself one grade-A stallion and 10 purebred mares, and imported them to the States. He then bought 40 Belgian draft mares (some halter broke, some not), and started an embryo transfer practice using the draft horses as the recipient mares. For some time we continued to live in the house while he took over the farm, and a little piece of my heart broke seeing half the barn turned into a laboratory. The Irish Draught registry must have felt similarly, and had an absolute shit-fit. They determined that only one foal by a mare/stallion combination could be registered per year. So, if one Irish mare donates 3 embryos that year that become live foals- which one gets registered?

Crusing

Crusing

I’m sure this rule was at one point overturned (this having happened in the late 90s), but the Irish Draught Society still ruled with an iron fist over their registry books. Getting an Irish horse registered is no joke, including hours of preparation, grooming, and training in hand before going to the inspection in your region. And even then you are not guaranteed approval- we were told to represent one full Irish mare the next year because she wasn’t fully matured in her back end. The approval of Ivan as a registered stallion, an even more rigorous test, then was a huge relief.

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Ivan at his stallion inspection

 

So, knowing as I do that the Irish Draught Society errs on the conservative side, how did such a prestigious stallion come to be cloned, and the news stay secret for so long? Is it right of them to allow cloned horses into the registry books? What about the multiple clones, such as in Cruising’s case? Personally I’m not fully decided. But I do think if there’s to be a clone for breeding purposes, maybe it should just be one horse and not two, so as to keep the integrity of the breed by not ‘polluting it’ with one genetic line by having it available for the space of three stallions’ lifetimes.

Read the Horse & Hound’s article on the clones here.

Weigh in! What do you think of introducing cloned horses to the genetic pool, and how do you think this will set an example for future generations?

Time off

Last night we got hit with a bit more snow, but even so, my office was actually open at normal business hours, so with that in mind and feeling a bit stir crazy at the thought of another day in the house, I decided to drive in.

This post is evidence that I did indeed arrive in one piece, however, after a few moments of precarious fish tailing on some black ice, I think perhaps I should have stayed home. Maybe even more importantly, I don’t think it will be safe to chance driving the 30 minutes back from the barn in the dark tonight. Foster will have to just go on without me.

I feel completely guilty about the situation, especially knowing that going long periods with no exercise is the last thing he needs. But if I can’t get back in one piece I won’t be good to either one of us. Essentially, this week is a wash.

winter weather

At least the weekend is looking promising, so I’ll just have to hope that I get out to the barn Saturday and get some quality time with Foster. In the meantime, I am extra grateful to the barn staff who are handwalking the horses in the covered, since all the paddocks are sheets of pure ice.

Here’s hoping all of you are staying warm and safe, be careful out there!

Happy Birthday Drake!

It’s hard to believe that my floppy puppy turns 5 today! Ever the veritable goofball, I’ve been so glad to have this little mama’s boy by my side to guard the castle the house on the hill.

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Those ears though!

 

Drake comes home

Drake and his first duck

Drake's first photo shoot

Drake’s first photo shoot

Drake's first barn visit

Drake’s first barn visit

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9 mo. old 2010

 

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2011 First Portrait Lens model

 

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2011

Family Portrait

Family Portrait

Instagram #elliotanddrake for more of this <3 (2012)

Instagram #elliotanddrake for more of this

 

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2013

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2014

2014

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So now Drake has lots of space to run around!

Fall 2014

 

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Looking back at these photos, it’s amazing how much he has grown up. Happy birthday to my favorite model canine!

From the [Horse] Husband’s Mouth

My oh-so-wonderful husband has agreed to experiment with a possible monthly blog post for House on a Hill! To get the series started here are 10 questions answered from a horse-husband’s point of view!

What was your first experience with horses?
I was on a trip in Costa Rica when I was 14, and we decided to do some trail riding one day.  I had never been on a horse, but I expected them to be quite big.  These Costa Rican horses seemed tiny compared to what I had imagined: shorter, thinner, and not very energetic.  Afterward, I mostly just felt bad for the horses.

Do you have any interest in riding horses yourself? Why or why not?
I do not.  I think that having one member of our marriage with a very expensive hobby is enough, but I will always be supportive of her at shows and while filming lessons.  I have learned enough about horses up to this point to be of help whenever Britt has to travel for competitions so I guess I can vicariously take part in her riding.  However, one rider in this family will do. 

The early days- dressage shows with Ivan

The early days- dressage shows with Ivan

Let’s pretend like you ride competitively on your own horse. What would his/her show name be?
I have racked my brain trying to come up with something either witty and funny or  obscure and legally related (Britt: Tyler’s a lawyer by trade!), but I have reached the point of over-thinking the question.  Therefore, I must resort to my ‘go-to’ name that I know I will eventually assign to something: Bob.

It should be noted that Jackson almost became a Bob, too.

It should be noted that Jackson almost became a Bob, too.

If you could change one thing about Foster, what would it be?
If there was a way to eliminate his occasional need to avoid capture in the pasture, that would definitely be one thing I would change.  Not that I have ever personally had to chase him, but I can tell how frustrating it is whenever Britt tells the story later in the evening.

In the House on the Hill you deal with horses, dogs, and cats. What do you relate to best?
The cats – I am one of the few guys that is a cat person.  They’re chill, like to lounge, and you do not want to get on their bad side.  It is also funny when the two cats “fight” – they’re declawed so they mostly just smack each other on the head and yell at each other which is always entertaining. 

Family Christmas Photo

Family Christmas Photo

In 3 words, how would you describe horse people?
Competitive, Focused, Crazy – horses are tall and I do not like heights so y’all are crazy to get up there.

Husband and the dog

Husband and the dog

Are there any benefits of being married to a horsewoman? Cons?
Benefits: makes for very interesting conversations with friends and co-workers who have no interaction with horses; it is therapeutic for her, and I like to see how much satisfaction she gets out of riding; all the ribbons she wins helps out at Christmas time when we are severely lacking ornaments for the tree; her green jumping vest makes her look like a ninja turtle – one of my favorites growing up; go-pro videos are cool to watch when she gets home.

Cons: some days we do not see each other as much as we would like – long practices in the evenings or overnight weekend shows/events; horse smell (although I have really gotten used to it so not really a con any more); cross country always makes me nervous.

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PC: Robyn Van Dyke Photography

Describe your role at a typical horse show/event.
I wear several hats at a typical horse event: help load the horse on the trailer with a treat in hand as encouragement whenever he is being difficult to load; shoveling horse crap after arriving; holding him whenever Britt is unloading all her gear; filming when possible and trying to zoom in and out correctly – harder than it sounds; trying to provide verbal encouragement to Britt before each phase of the event

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Riding in competition often requires outfits that are, let’s say, a little outside common fashion trends. What piece of equipment (horse or human) caught you most off guard?
Human: the pants.  I had no idea you needed a special type of pants to ride.
Horse: the weird ear covering hat – there is no way the horse likes that thing.

PC: Robyn Van Dyke Photography

PC: Robyn Van Dyke Photography

If you were to describe eventing to a non-horseperson, like a co-worker, how would you describe it?
I explain it to my co-workers all the time as a triathlon on a horse: dressage (choreographed riding like you see in the Olympics), show-jumping over poles mostly, and cross-country jumping (multiple mile course with jumps over trees and other immovable barriers throughout)

 

I hope you guys enjoyed hearing from the husband’s point of view! Look out for another post next month!

In a Life without Horses

As I contemplate the crisp and windy weather, and the joys of staying inside (which I’m not), I start thinking about the projects I’d like to undertake were I to avoid the winter like any normal human being. Of course what I should (and might) do is paint the damn hallway, but what I would love to do is get back to one (almost) non-horsey passion- art.

I was the quintessential artsy kid growing up, trading animal-shaped erasers for drawings in kindergarten, then becoming the sketchbook toting nerd in high school. Of course, horses made up the majority of my doodles.

Pen and Ink Drawing from High School

Pen and Ink Drawing from High School

Then in college, after making the switch from Animal Science to Art & Design, I took a mandatory Painting studio as part of my degree, and found that I really loved the process. I could get completely in the zone for hours, and it was so peaceful and satisfying.

Part of a triptych

Part of a triptych

Mixed Media Painting

Mixed Media Painting

But sadly, the only thing I’ve painted since school is this rooster painting, which was meant to hang in my kitchen but now resides in one of the piles of artwork that dons every closet. Or to rephrase, the only things I’ve painted since school are one rooster painting and a shit ton of walls.

Rooster painting that I would love to truly finish one day!

Rooster painting that I would love to truly finish one day!

That is not to say that I don’t satisfy the creative calling in other ways- photography is certainly an outlet for that (see Britt Gillis Design tab), as well as the occasional t-shirt design (or logo contest 😉 ) that comes around. But there is something about a fresh canvas, or a blank sheet of paper, that tangibly physical evidence of the artist’s hand, that those outlets simply lack.

Alice in Wonderland t-shirt design

Alice in Wonderland t-shirt design

My best friend N knows how much I miss doodling/painting/being an artiste, and got me this wonderful Disney book full of original animation sketches. I love to look through it, and have been wanting to try Disneyfying Foster for a long time. But other than this random proposed project, the tools that dominate my schedule remain my saddle and reins, and not my paint brush. Maybe when I’ve had so many falls that I’m too broken to ride, I’ll pick up my palette and give it a go again.

Things to Celebrate

A few things to celebrate this week! The first is Foster’s new bonnet he’ll be getting thanks to Amanda from the $900 Facebook Pony, who chose our logo as a runner up in her logo contest!

Runner up logo design

Runner up logo design

Secondly, the USEF reversed the helmet cam ban! Although event organizers can still prohibit the cameras, I’m hopeful that the majority will allow us to record our rides for learning and sharing with others.

And lastly.. Jurassic Park IV. It comes out on. my. birthday. I got velociraptor induced hysterics when I saw the trailer. So scared, and SO excited.

Also on the good news front, Foster was a stellar boy last night. I finally set up some canter poles in an attempt to get us started with cavaletti, and he was golden through them, even though they were a bit further apart than the 9′ I meant to make them, and he had to reach a bit in the canter. Continuing work on the walk-canter transitions as well, which we’re getting about 50% of the time. After watching back the videos (thanks Ali) I need to keep working on my elbows- it’s definitely the thing that goes to hell in a handbasket whenever things get hard. It’s always something though!

blurry, but the canter is definitely improving!

blurry, but the canter is definitely improving!

It’s about to get frigid cold here tomorrow, so I am desperately hoping to get a mini jump school in tonight before everything freezes over. We shall see!

Secret Santa Gift!

I’m a little behind thanks to a handy internet outage at my house.. thanks neighbor for digging where you shouldn’t.

But I digress…

I arrived home after Christmas to find my Secret Santa gift had arrived! Thank you to EquiNovice for the lovely gift, oh how did you know!?

Scarily amazing secret Santa gift!

Scarily amazing secret Santa gift!

British chocolate has an exceptionally large place in my heart. Whenever family visits in or from England, they are sure to bring plenty of Cadbury’s goodies home with them- so a box filled with Dairy Milk is just the ticket to get this (semi) British Britt super excited!

And then, my newest horse show accessory- a foldable wine bottle! Complete with equestrian monogram so there’s no denying who it belongs to. This will definitely be making a debut this season for some post-cross country appreciation!

Because this is how we roll at horse shows (post-ride of course)

Because this is how we roll at horse shows (post-ride of course)

So thanks again, Equinovice, for the wonderful gifts!

Starting the year off right on another horsey note, we squeezed in a dressage lesson yesterday, complete with video! Lots of nuggets of wisdom (wisdom nuggets?) to type write down lest I forget! Post tomorrow 🙂

2015 Goals

It’s now January 2015, which means a theoretical new start, and new resolutions and goals to be made. Some of the below list should be completely do-able, others, a little more dreamy but possible if luck stays with us and we’re dedicated to the effort. Here’s our list of hopeful accomplishments for the year!

For the Horse:

  • Here’s the big one! Move up to Training!
    Aiming for a May unrecognized horse trials at CHP. By then I hope we can come to grips with jumping more consistently again (boo daylight savings time) and hopefully have some Training CT’s under our belt. Date may move because, well, horses.
  • Increase strength in haunches
    Cavaletti work here we come.
  • Walk-Canter-Walk transitions
    which hopefully leads to….
  • Lead changes?
    Maybe! But it also leads to…
  • Completing a Second Level dressage test with a score over 63%
    A lofty goal for sure, but might be possible by the end of the year, if our schedule works out.
  • Get a 7 on a lengthening
    Which is going to be hard for my pony.. but we’ll try!
Preparing for Training, I hope.

Preparing for Training, I hope.

For me:

  • Be a better competitor
    By this I mean, get to the damn warm up ring with plenty of time, get to the start box with at least 1 minute to spare, put together a first-aid kit just for shows
  • Stop over-thinking the distance
    I’m irritating the you-know-what out of myself for overanalyzing the spot- looking forward to hopefully not doing this so much in 2015
  • Stop overthinking people
    Let it go, let it go!
  • Insert annoying weight-loss resolution here!
    I’ve got a beach vacation in February (hopefully) and a sexy bridesmaid dress in April- motivation!

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For the House:

  • Granite countertops in the kitchen!!
    Please happen! Because I’m. So. Excited.
  • Aerate + seed front and back yard
    So we’re not the worst lawn in the neighborhood
  • Paint upstairs hallway
    Because red wine stains are not the color-du-jour
  • Paint the NC State Room
    Let’s face it, the Carolina room should never have gotten that much of a lead.
  • Be better about blogging about the house!
    Since 2 posts a year kind of makes the blog’s title a joke.
Better grass for Drake, please.

Better grass for Drake, please.

Happy 2015 to all, and may you accomplish all you set out to do this year!

Happy Holidays

When things get a bit boring around here, you can pretty much count on me to bring you yet another embarrassing story about something I’ve done. Since this particular thing already lives on the interwebs, I’ve decided there’s no reason a few more [mostly] horsey strangers shouldn’t see it too.

So, here’s a little secret. I, kind of, sing. I’ve always liked singing, and for a while I wanted to, and a few years ago did, take vocal lessons. I found my riding background to actually be extremely helpful in these lessons, as it requires small but precise control of the diaphragm and other muscles, as well as obviously exercising skills in rhythm, etc. I also used singing as a way to push myself out of my comfort zone, particularly when it came to public speaking (singing) and sang the National Anthem a couple times for the Carolina Mudcats.

Around the holidays one year, my coach suggested I try out for a small role- singing Christmas songs as people took their seats before a Christmas play. The problem was, I was sick, and couldn’t make the audition. So I went with plan B- record myself singing and send the person in charge a link. Let’s note- person. Not people. But unbeknownst to me, there are a lot of people interested in this particular song, and my video has over 20,000 views. People, my bed is unmade in the background, and I obviously didn’t care to even re-record the thing when Drake walks into the room! But there it is.

So from me to you, another embarrassing/vulnerable/laughable moment in the life of Britt. Happy holidays.

 

PS, how awkward is it when you don’t know whether to look into the camera or not? Ugh. And let’s not even talk about the video preview image. Please.