Showing posts with label equestrian backpack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label equestrian backpack. Show all posts

June 5, 2013

Product Reviews: Vetrolin Shine Spray, Gearmax Equestrian Backpack, Romfh Coolmax Stock Tie

How about some long-delayed product reviews, brought to you by an epically slow week at work?

Vetrolin Shine Spray
Why I have it: I won this in Karley's contest in celebration of her blog hitting 100 followers.  Congratulations, Karley!  Also, Austen broke my Showsheen bottle last winter and it doesn't exactly travel well anymore...

What I like: It left Connor super shiny, and seemed lighter than ShowSheen.  It did not leave him feeling slippery the way ShowSheen does.  I even sprayed it on the saddle area to test it out - living on the edge!

What I found weird: It smells like Vetrolin, but isn't Vetrolin.  Does that make me a poser?

What I didn't realize until I sat down to write this review: It contains sunscreen, which many SmartPak reviewers report keeps their horses from fading.  Though Connor's orange late-summer color doesn't bother me, I'm definitely going to do some experimenting and report back.

Gearmax Equestrian Backpack
What I liked when I went XC schooling with it: It cut my tacking up time in half because I was able to hang this bag on the side of the trailer next to Connor while everyone else was jockeying for position in the trailer tack room.  When we were done, his wet boots went into the vented outer pocket.

What I liked at Greater Dayton: It hung outside Connor's stall, where everything from my brushes to my competitor packet to my tall boots was visible and within easy reach. The only things not in the backpack were his grain, my pads, and my wash bucket/sponge, which went into a small Sterilite container, and my saddles.  I was asked several times where I got it by my teammates over the weekend, and not having to search for my stuff definitely reduced my show stress levels and nerves.  I never misplaced a single thing all weekend.

What you should not think of it as: A backpack.  Instead, think of it as a soft-sided vertical tack trunk that you can put on your back if necessary in order to carry two things at once.


Equestrian Gearmax Backpack

What my husband calls it: The World War II Radio Man Backpack.  He's always asking me how the fighting in the Pacific Theater is going this week when he sees me wearing it.  Apparently my Dressage whip in the side pocket looks like an antenna...

Romfh Coolmax Pre-Tied Stock Tie
What I like: It's lightweight, adjustable, and stayed put when I didn't have a stock tie pin.  (Er, oops.)  I can see the technical fabric being cooler than a tradition stock tie in the summer.

This is not me, you can tell because she remembered her stock tie pin.

What to consider if you're thinking about buying it:  It's cheaper from Amazon than Dover or Smartpak, and shipped free with Amazon Prime.

May 13, 2013

Show Nerves


One thing I took out of the Hoosier Horse Fair experience is that I need to get serious about my show nerves.  It’s hard to call it nerves, I don’t get stage fright and have always loved performing in front of hundreds of people, but with horses I focus so hard on doing well at shows that I stop breathing and get all tingly and weak.  When I stop breathing, I get tense and I lose the ability to feel and my ride suffers for it. It's totally unfair to Connor to ride one way at home and feel another at shows, where he's tense to begin with.

To work on that, I bought a highly-recommended equine sport psychology book called 
Inside Your Ride: Mental Skills for Being Happy and Successful with Your Horse.  Have any of you read it?  I’m only partway through, but I love it so far.  One thing that has really resonated with me is that with equestrian sports, there are so many variables you have no control over compared to other sports, since you are partnered with another living being with its own agenda.  The weather, your horse’s mood, the condition of the XC course, whether or not your horse thinks there’s a lion crouching in the judge’s box – all completely out of your control.  What you need to focus on, then, is being as in-control as possible over the things that are in your control: memorizing your test, preparing your horse, being well-turned out, knowing the schedule, being on-time, and, my favorite, being organized.

Gearmax Equestrian backpack
At the HHF, I also learned that I’m not very good at organizing the amount of stuff required to keep a horse in a show environment, and that lack of organization left me feeling very stressed.  My corner of the tack stall looked like a bomb went off in a tack shop, and I was constantly searching for things that weren’t where they should have been.  With that in mind, I’ve purchased a saddle rack, a bridle/random stuff rack, and the Gearmax Equestrian backpack, which is so excessively large but seems like it will be very helpful for my "six people eventing out of one trailer's dressing room" experience this weekend.  Now that's a recipe for not being able to find anything.

Most of you are more experienced at showing than I am, how do you manage nerves and stay organized at horse shows?