So there I stand. It is hot, about 90 degrees. It is extremely humid that morning. My anxiety is pumping because I have no idea where my horse has run off to, and I set out on foot hoping to find her with the assumption that she will "most likely" run for home. No biggy right? 2 1/2 miles, easy hike right? Ummmm....wear is my water bottle? It is on the horse where most of us keep our water holder. So I start hiking those big hills towards home, I'm soaked in sweat, my heart is hammering like a caged bird in my chest, suddenly I get goose pimples all up and down my arms....goose pimples? Next thing I'm dizzy and my mouth feels like cotton. I'm have a heat related emergency and I'm still a mile and a half from home. That fast, that quickly I'm in serious trouble. It wasn't a fitness problem, it was a heat problem. Had I been wearing one of these
But I was not okay. By the time I reached our back field and found my horse I was vomiting. I'm not sure how I got on the horse I was so sick. So sick that when I finally got home my saddle was left laying in the yard where I dropped it. Veins were standing up as big as my index finger on my face, I was beet red, and sicker than I've ever been. I got lucky. Lucky? Yes lucky. If I'd have not found the horse when I did, I don't believe I'd have made it home. My body would have gone into full blown heat stroke and I'd have probably died right there within visual distance of my home. My legs could not coordinate to carry me not ONE. MORE. STEP. I could have avoided that by having water on me, instead of my horse. I could have called for help, but guess what? Phone was in that saddle pack too. Use those saddle packs for things pertaining to your horse. For your personal essentials (water, phone, electrolyte packet, breakfast bar), keep them on your person in a fanny pack of some sort. It takes a little getting used to, but it is worth it. Just think about what could happen, out in the woods, five miles, ten miles, fifteen miles from anything or anybody? In most instances you are riding with a buddy and somebody has a water bottle, but some of us (me) ride out there alone. Be safe by being prepared. ~ E.G.
P.S. Wouldn't hurt to have an energy gel/ electrolyte in that pack.
P.S.S.
We tend to ride with a fanny pack when bare-back, and tend to hang a first aid kit from the horse's neck (hmmmm?). Just didn't give it that much thought, probably because every time I've been dumped, I've opened my eyes to find my horse staring down at me, trying to figure out why I was there! Good thoughts.
ReplyDeleteBionic Cowgirl
My old arabian mare was eyesight impaired and she'd spin back now and then and dump me in the process. She was one of those that would stop and stare down at me like "how'd you get down there?" At least she didn't run off like her offspring...
ReplyDelete