QUICKSILVER

Manzanita Oct. 2002
The Manzanita Endurance ride held Oct. 5 in the PS region just
along
the border with Mexico is out in the middle of nowhere.
When you see
a road sign saying "next rest stop 60 miles" - you know that
you're
headed away from civilization. But that said - this ride put
on by many
time ride manager Terry Woolley Howe turns out to be a lot of
fun.
Terry's rides always have great amenities, facilities, and scenery.
The ride is located in the Manzanita Horse camp 65 miles east
of
San Diego on the Campo Indian Reservation with our basecamp at
4000
feet. It's high chaparral country with cool nights and
pleasant days
this time of the year. The camp is located in a small valley
with oak
trees surrounding it in the foothills of the Laguna Mountains.
The
setting is that of early "B" western movies and should look familiar.
Many movies of the 40's and 50's used the area for filming. There
are
towering stands of granite rocks, desert trails weaving through
chaparral, and a nighttime sky full of millions of stars.
The camp has facilities for RVs and about 90 pipe corrals for
our horses. Plus it has showers which seem to really enthuse
the women riders. The night is cold before the ride - in
the high
30s but warming up to a pleasant temperature during the day.
The moon is a small silver crescent shining over the camp before
we get up early to get our horses ready for the start.
There's about 80 starters in the 25 mile LD, 71 in the 50 mile
ride,
about 6 Ride and Tie teams, and a few 15 mile fun riders all
under
the veterinary supervision of AERC President Barney Fleming,
Hugh Hewett, and other vets. The ride is moderate with some hills,
sand, single track, dirt roads, and lots of these little tubular
cactus called Cholla. The start at 6:30 just after sunrise
is a nice
controlled start leading to the first vet check at a little over
14 miles.
It's well marked everywhere - cute signs on yellow that say things
like trail turn ahead, steep slope use low gear, watch for falling
rock next to a 10 ton rock balanced on top of another, and
big stump behind the next bush. There's a few difficult
places -
one with a permanent sign saying Crash Crevice - but your biggest
hazard is the spiky Cholla that can get you or your horse. One
finally
got me late in the day but apparently my horse was more agile
than I
was and avoided them all.
The most striking scenery is the huge rock formations. There
are
towering stands of rock with unusual balancing rocks on top of
each
other - many tons of rock that you wonder how this happened
and why it's still there. Glaciers perhaps ages ago but
now it's the
desert. Huge rocks cover the hillsides helter skelter as
if some
giant hand had just tossed them at random over the landscape.
The vet checks have fresh fruit, firm ice cold fruit popsicles,
and other treats handed out by the many volunteers. At
one place
on the road where there's nothing around but sagebrush - there's
a stand with a tent for shade set up just for handing out treats
to
the riders. Terry certainly takes good care of her riders
and
their horses.
Little eight year old Sarah from an earlier Terry WH ride is here
with her father to see and hold the horses again. She remembers
my
guy from the New Ride in June and leads him around the camp after
the
ride is over. She's learning to ride and will someday be
out there
on our rides just like many of those other little girls who grew
up
and are riding this trail today.
It's just a personal view but men seem to come into horses later
in
life than the women. Women have wanted horses all their
lives and
while they may have breaks for college or family usually return
to
horses. Guys get distracted early in life and miss out
on what can
happen between you and your horse. At this ride, I see
a number of
motocross guys in full safety gear. We are polite to each
other
but I think they are missing out on something important in life.
The stalls are a nice feature at a ride - you don't get the squeak
from a trailer tie or the banging of buckets on the side of the
trailer all night to keep you awake. But you don't hear
the nice quiet
sound of the horses munching on hay all night either. And
when the
water bucket is knocked over in the morning - you don't know
if he
drank it and tipped it over looking for more - or whether it
was tipped
over early and he never drank. But for showers -
there's no downside
at all - they are always great to have.
Terry has an excellent catered awards banquet as always.
Her awards
ceremonies are always funny with comments such aa "there are
4 Icelandics
in the ride now including John Parke and how they are going to
replace
our Arabs the horse of choice for endurance".
First in the 50 is Shelli Sexton followed by Suzy Kelley(BC on
La Petite
Dancer) with Ernie Lohman in third. Ernie is riding
so much and doing
so well that he is 1st and 2nd in the PS heavyweight standings
on two
different horses this year. This is Suzy's first BC under
Vet Barney
Fleming and Terry notes this in the awards. 70 of the 80 LD starters
complete and 61 of the 70 starters in the 50 mile ride finish.
Terry does an AERC BC for the LD ride and also has a broader
Best
LD Horse award.
Terry - another very nice ride even if it's way out in the middle
of "nowhere". Next up is the resort ride in January at
Warner Hot
Springs with Terry.
Mike