I’m in mid FL. There are places that do it within a reasonable distance .I have a few friends doing it. It’s just a matter of a) finding the time, and b) not being injured , which I have made a habit of the last few years ugh.
Right now I’m recovering from a broken back
I am not a spice-flavor fan, so the stash is safe from me.
Now, OTOH, if the horses liked Oreos…
Thanks for the update.
I was wondering if you forgot to take artificial legs or arms or one of both!
It really fitted in with not being able to buy and sitting in a hotel without them.
Florida has some excellent shooters and coaches for standing archery. If you are mobile, there are a lot of folks who do seated archery.
Understand about the injury process. This was the first winter in 4 years where I was not recovering from an injury or procedure. None of them involved a sport injury
Right? This blows. But I’m grateful
I usually hurt myself in the summer when it’s too hot to ride anyway lol.
Thank you for the info. As soon as I attain some level of riding fitness again and don’t hurt myself o plan to investigate it further
I just keep an entire set of pretty much everything in my trailer, so if I go anywhere I just have to bring feed, and saddle and bridle if I’m not using my trail saddle that I keep in the trailer. Hoarders unite.
Same here, although over the years I’ve managed to scale down a LOT of what I used to think was absopositively critical for a horse show, road trip or other off there farm excursion.
Now we are at the stage where every year after the season I remove stuff that wasn’t as useful as I thought it might be, however I replace it with something that might be more useful. That’s mostly on the semi-but not really too - primitive camping stuff, I’ve mostly got the horse side figured out.
But!!! fun new find! Chicks kept advertising these $10 stall bags on FB so I finally have up and ordered one for me and my gator. Definitely useful at shows for keeping blankets and Ziploc bags of food tucked away, but nothing mind blowing… Until I figured out they were the perfect size to store cob size dressage pads, so now the show pads have a nice clean out of the way place (hangs on the stud gate), and when driving season start up I can just put the sheets/blanket n there, and I’m sure there will need something else looking for a home come “packed to the gills” season!