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Be the Savvy ShowMom
In This Issue:
- Featured Article: Setting Goals
- News - New website for riders
- Show Tip of the Month
- Ask a Question - www.showmom.com
Setting Goals One of my favorite teachable moments for parenting and horse showing is helping kids learn to set goals. Horse showing provides a great opportunity for young children to watch you set and achieve goals, for older children to participate with you in goal setting, and for teens to set their own goals in conjunction with you.
Much of horse showing is all about setting and achieving a goal. The goal can be one that you set for the season, like riding well enough to move up a class or jump height, qualifying for end-of-year finals, or braving the chaos in the schooling ring. Or, it can be as simple as setting a goal for the day , like to ride your best, improve on your hands or shoulders for an EQ class or improve your attitude with your horse or trainer.
With young children, horse showing is a great opportunity to role model goal setting. You may discuss a goal with them or share a goal that has been discussed by the trainer. As a parent, you can share what it will take to achieve the goal and what the costs of hard work and time it might take. You can help set milestones along the way and show how to amend or change the goal if it becomes unrealistic.
With an adolescent child, it is the perfect time to work together. The best approach is to have a prior conversation with a trainer and set some parameters or expectations. As a next step, set up a three-way meeting with your child and the trainer to establish some goals for training and showing. Again, share some milestones and try to be clear about what it will take to achieve the goal.
With an older teen, your role may change to the active listener, with the teen and the trainer setting the goals and then involving you in the discussion. It is important to help teens fully understand the link between a goal, hard work, determination and follow-through as well as failure, disappointment and barriers that may crop up.
Winter Circuit is a great time to work on goals. Many families go somewhere out of town, usually for a two- or three-week time frame. Even though you may only go for a long weekend, time seems to flow much more slowly at these shows. Winter Circuit shows are less intense for many trainers, which provides an opportunity to have some longer conversations with trainers and children.
I've discovered that there is often more bonding time at Winter Circuit shows. For example, those long times of waiting for the next class can be a great time to pick up the conversation on an important topic. And, trainers seem more relaxed at Winter Circuit shows because horses are usually purchased, the trainer is in a nice warm place, and no one is earnestly chasing points or qualifying for medals.
What are your show goals for the year? What can you role model for your children and what can you use as a teachable moment? How can you help them learn how to set a goal, manage both the achievement and the disappointment, and then learn an important life lesson as preparation for adulthood?
Don't miss this teachable moment! Be the Savvy ShowMom.
News Here's a new site for horse riders -- it's the Facebook of riding YourBarn.com. Riders age 13 and above can create their own site with pictures, profiles and other riding information. Its purpose is to keep riders in touch with each other. Check out www.yourbarn.com. If you have young teens, monitor their web site use.
One way to do this is to keep computers for children under the age of 14 in a family space so that you are aware of where they are going online. For older teens, ask to take a tour of their web pages every so often so you are aware of the sites they visit online.
Ask a Question: www.showmom.com Got a question or have some advice to share? Please contact us through the website. Want to blog? Join the Showmom Blog at www.showmom/blog.
Horse Show Tips - Riding Boots I am just back from a Winter Circuit Show in Tucson AZ. I had a great time sitting and observing so many different kinds of horse show moms and dads. Parents and grandparents seemed to be everywhere on the show grounds.
Some tips I observed: New boots are always a problem for gripping the side of the horse. I watched one mom take a cloth, rub it in the sand and then rub the boots on the inside leg. It was painful to think about those new boots being rubbed with sand, but the daughter thought it was great! Never polish the inside of a boot (the side against the horse). It will make the boot too slippery and can cause great alarm among riders. If you have to polish a boot, then only do the outside that shows when riding. Your daughter will love you for making her ride easier!
Dye those boots. You can take a worn pair of boots that are still usable to a shoe repair store and get them dyed and resoled. One trainer told me Nordstroms was the best for dying and polishing boots for a professional job. (I'm not sure I can see going to Nordstroms with field boots, but why not -- I have done many other crazy things for this sport!) Boot Polish.
There are some new products on the market in this category. Avoid the grocery store brands -- get a good boot polish from the tack store instead. One polish that provides great shine without as much buffing is URAD- made in Italy. The tack shop at the show heartily recommended it to me this past weekend.
Custom boots. Sometimes they are the only option to get a good fit for wide feet and narrow calves. Check out the companies with your favorite tack store, as some of the companies at the horse shows are not the best. We ordered a pair in January 2006 and are still trying to get them made according to the measurements.
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