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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Eric Church, a Pony Club Reunion, and War Horse

Busy weekend!  A few weeks ago I had bought tickets to see Eric Church in concert for Nathan's birthday.  He was coming to town, and Nathan kept talking about how he wanted to get tickets, but he shouldn't, but he wanted to, but he couldn't.  So, I did it for him.  We had the BEST time, and I would absolutely recommend a concert of his to friends!!  Justin Moore and Kip Moore opened for him, and then we danced along to "Creepin'," "Springsteen," and all the other CLASSICS.  Nathan ran in to some guys from the Old Guard, and I saw a girl I went to high school with.  It was a great time!

Kip Moore
Justin Moore

Eric Church


Saturday, I made my way out to Chinatown to meet up with some girls I rode with in the Difficult Run Pony Club.  We had a little reunion at Clyde's and wandered over to watch the Washington International Horse Show.  It was so great to see them again and all of us were just like the old days, like we had never separated!  The WIHS was a great venue for us horsey people, too :)

DRPC Reunion!

Sunday my parents had tickets for them, my brother and his girlfriend, and Nathan and I, to see "War Horse" at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.  I had seen the movie, but Nathan hadn't, so I knew he would like it.  We had dinner at the Center Rooftop restaurant, which was AMAZING.  Nathan learned to ask for black napkins instead of white, and I learned not to eat so much food before a play!  The actors were terrific, and they make the horses move so realistically.  I didn't know there would be loud gunshots and explosions during the play, but after the first couple I was less surprised for it!

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Date Night Wednesday - Tandoori Nights

Nathan and I have been trying to keep up with a date night once a week, to avoid us getting too busy for each other and to explore the numerous restaurants around Arlington without spending a million dollars by eating out every night.

This week we used a Groupon for Tandoori Nights, which is a delicious Indian-inspired restaurant in the Market Commons Clarendon.  The Groupon was $20 for $40 worth of food and drink, which was the perfect amount for us.  Nathan got the chicken curry and I got some vegetable cheese curry, and we both really liked them.  Our total at the end of the night was $1.00!! I gave the guy a $10 tip.

The Cons:
- It's expensive.  Both of us eating an entree and one of us having a drink totaled $41.00.

- It's loud.  The restaurant itself is pretty loud and we were seated at a long table across from each other and in the middle of other couples, and we could not hear each other at all.

- Seating isn't level.  I was sitting in a booth and he was in a chair, and the booth was so low I had to practically sit on my own feet to see over the table.

The Pros:
 - It's delicious. My cheese/potato curry was good and Nathan's chicken curry was good (though he said it tasted a little bland)

 - Service is pretty good.  The guy kept asking us what we wanted, and we were so slow to decide he had to come back a few times!

 - It's convenient.  There's a parking garage right behind it and the Clarendon metro is three blocks away.

Overall, I would go back, but we like the Dehli Club down the street way better :)



Saturday, October 6, 2012

Goodbye Elliott

It breaks my heart to let everyone know that Elliott (his show name was "Happenstance") passed away late last night at my family's farm in Boyce, Virginia.

Elliott was an absolute fighter until the very end, and I had to make the call to avoid future pain for him.

When we bought Elliott, I was in high school and recovering from trying to event Dublin, who would get me eliminated pretty much every event.  Elliott was being sold by T. Mansmann as an experienced eventer at a reduced price, because his x-rays showed some arthritis and fused hocks, which never caused a problem.  I absolutely fell in love with him.  During our first three events, the technical delegate approached me about "speed control," which I took seriously but it also felt a little funny to hear it after I had been riding Dublin!

We quickly moved from Novice to Training, at which point we qualified for the USPC National Championships and won the CDCTA Horse Trials with a 24%!  Elliott's dressage wasn't awesome, but he tried hard.  I could always see his eyes wandering during the test if there was a running cross country course behind the arena!

Once we had hit it big at training level, we moved up to Preliminary where we had a few "blips" (aka RIDER ERRORS) but did fairly well considering I was an amateur.  Unfortunately Elliott's feet were very difficult, and I was having a hard time keeping him sound for the move-up to Intermediate.  We decided he had earned somewhat of a retirement after he got me through my Pony Club "B" rating, and we began leasing him to other Pony Clubbers to get their ratings and some experience.

After a short while of lower-level competitions, Elliott began losing weight to the point of looking unhealthy.  We called the vet, who told us his kidneys were beginning to fail, and he most-likely only had a few months to a year left.  Immediately, we brought him home, put him on a low protein diet, and retired him for life.  Our hopes were to keep him happy and comfortable for as long as we could.

The vet came back for routine blood work, and after a while Elliott's levels evened out.  His kidneys had kicked back in and he was doing great!  We sent him to Millwood to enjoy his retirement, where he was taken care of daily by a woman named Lauren, who was also my very first riding instructor.  She loved him as much if not more than the rest of us, and his feed, treats, and turnout were catered specifically to what he liked :)  After a while, he started gaining weight back and looked like a real horse again!  The vet had to come out a few times for his random mishaps, but overall he was doing really well.

Elliott made it seven years from his initial diagnosis, which is almost unheard of with kidney failure.  On Thursday night, Lauren noticed he had an edema on his chest that was not getting better with time.  The vet came out once more, and gave us the option to take him to the vet hospital for the weekend to flush him with fluids to see if his kidneys would come back, but we knew it would stress him out being away from home and it was very expensive for a 21-year-old horse.  Lauren offered to stay with him, and we started him on fluids at home for 24 hours.

Friday afternoon mom had a meeting out there, so she was able to see him and check on him.  I grabbed Nathan and we trekked out during rush hour traffic to see him.  When I got there Elliott looked unexpectedly good for what his body was going through.  He was eating grass, acting like a horse, and had his ears up like everything was fine.  But when we hooked him back up to the IV, his body showed us he was not going to make it through this time.  I had to make the heartbreaking call, and we took out his IV and turned him out in the field to enjoy the rest of the night with his pasture-mate.  We were all devastated, but it was clear he was ready to go.

The vet was scheduled to come out in the morning, but when I woke this morning there was a text letting me know they had to call the vet to come out last night.  Apparently they had gone out to check on him and he had started to colic, so they did what was best.  Our vet said he went very peacefully, and then everyone saw a shooting star, which was so like him.  He always had to make a scene :)

Elliott will be missed dearly, as he was the one horse I ever felt truly confident on.  He carried me so many times when I made the wrong decision, and he never humbled me when I felt too proud.  In a lot of ways he was my best friend for a while, and my competition partner.  There will never be another horse like him, and I respect that.

Lots of love for you, Elliott.
1991-2012