It was a surprising gift. About two and a half months ago my
wife gave me a horse riding experience as a Nowrouz gift. Nowrouz is an ancient
Persian ceremony to celebrate the New Year. Persian New Year coincides with the
first day of spring in late March.
All I needed to do was setting an appointment and then redeem my
coupon. I had booked the first appointment for two weeks ago, but the accident
happened and I had pain in my leg, so I postponed it until yesterday.
The session was supposed to take three hours. The location was
somewhere in the suburb, North London. I reached there on time. It was a vast
green field and you could smell the stables from outside. At the front of the
field, there was a small cottage and, beside it, a fenced garden. The cottage
was used as the office. In the garden there were a few children, probably 4-5
years old, with their teachers. They were some playing and some sitting on the
benches, apparently waiting for the school bus to come and pick them up.
I entered the office and introduced myself. They asked
me to fill a registration form, enquiring basic information about my health,
connections and also my previous experiences of horse riding, if I had any.
Actually I had a few, but they went back to many years ago, perhaps 10-15 years
ago, and I hardly remembered any instructions! Therefore I preferred to
introduce myself as a basic beginner.
When I was done, a young and short lady came and introduced
herself as my instructor. Subsequently we went for picking a riding helmet and
boots. It was there that I realised we were a group of three. Two young ladies,
probably in their twenties,
joined the session.
First, the instructor started our tour with showing the stables.
They were maintaining 160 horses and ponies in a number of various breeds and
ages there. She showed us most of them and explained shortly about different types
of every breed. One thing which was surprising for me was that most horses
change their colours by the time they get older, from a darker to brighter
colour. I had no idea about it. She also explained about their food, their
health, their hygiene, their values, their passports, their ownership, the differences
among breeds, their speed and power, their retirement, their holidays, etc.
Then we went to the storage rooms, where they kept horses' belongings like
saddles and reins. All of them were kept under the name of every individual
horse. The whole information was quite interesting.
During our visit we met many people, adults and children, who were
leading a horse. Some of them seemed professional and many looked like they had
attended just for fun.
Then we went to one of the indoor schools for riding. The
instructor allocated the horses to us in terms of our height and weight. My
horse's name was Fewie. He was black, tall, extremely beautiful and quite
intelligent. We got on the horses. Each horse was held and controlled by an
individual expert. The instructor started to teach us how well we should sit,
hold the reins and keep our feet. Then we started to walk gradually and she taught
us how to keep our back, breathe easily, be as relaxed as possible and go up
and down with the horses' movement simultaneously.
It was entirely safe. However when my horse ran, I felt a bit
unstable. All in all, it was a very exciting experience. I learnt a lot, but
unfortunately the instructor had a strong accent and it was quite difficult for
me to understand all her words. I loved the experience and now I am thinking of
attending again more regularly.
So glad you liked it! Nice picture by the way.
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Deleteone of the best. Thank you again.
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