Calimba and her mom
In Germany Calimba had a very successful young horse career. She was ridden for much of her early career by the girlfriend of the German Junior Team coach, so she was in excellent hands from the start. During her seven year old year she had made her way to some one star Grand Prix classes. She was a winner at every level during her young horse career.
Calimba clearing this jump with her mom with plenty of room to spare
Calimba's mom has ridden her entire life. She grew up riding in Pony Club, attending local shows, and competing in endurance and eventing. By the time she was in college she had settled into the hunter/jumper world. She ended up taking a 10 year break from riding for medical school and then residency, but came back to riding as soon as she could. She bought a very young and green thoroughbred for her first jumper, and as her career progressed she was able to sell that horse that she had made into a nice jumper and upgrade to a more talented model. The year before she met Calimba she had bought a really nice young jumper, and she decided it was finally the right time to have a
second horse.
Calimba
Calimba's mom was working with a German trainer at the time, so she found herself in Germany looking at horses. Since her budget was limited she was looking at young horses, mostly five year olds. The trainer asked Calimba's mom to ride the 7 year old Calimba, who was priced well out of her budget, so he could evaluate Calimba as a potential Grand Prix horse for another buyer. From the moment she sat on Calimba her mom was in love and she was determined to have her.
Calimba and Norman
Calimba grooming with MyLight
Calimba had been previously purchased by an American investor in a package deal with 6 other horses. After the initial deposit was paid, the German family began building a new indoor riding arena. However the remainder of the payments were never made, and they had an unfinished indoor arena with no funds to complete construction. Calimba's mom and her trainer made an offer to the German family. It was well below Calimba's asking price, but the family would have immediate cash to use towards the completion of their indoor. They told the family it was a one time offer, and they could take it or leave it. They took it.
Calimba (2nd from right) on the move with MyLight, Cinnamon, Dolly and Maisie
Calimba (center) with Dolly and MyLight
MyLight and Calimba
MyLight and Calimba
When Calimba arrived in the United States her mom arranged for her to do her mare quarantine in Lexington, Kentucky. Her plan was to pick Calimba up while she was in Lexington for a horse show. When she visited Calimba at the quarantine facility early in the horse show week she was surprised to see a farm full of Llamas and peacocks, however Calimba didn't seem to mind.
Calimba (front) and MyLight
Calimba (rear) hanging out with MyLight and Cinnamon
Calimba (far right) with Maisie and MyLight on a foggy morning
Dolly, Calimba and Cinnamon
Calimba waiting for breakfast under a pretty morning sky
Traveller and Calimba
Calimba's mom said that Calimba was always a fighter for you at a show. She understood the game and new she needed to jump high and clean, and to go fast in the jump-offs. Her trainer always said that if he was at the in-gate waiting to jump a tough course, Calimba was the horse he would want to be riding. One time her mom was riding Calimba in a clinic, and the clinician set a tough double combination of two liverpools. While the other horses were spooking and acting silly about it, Calimba jumped it the first time and acted like it was nothing but plain rails.
MyLight and Calimba
Calimba and Dolly
Calimba napping with Norman, MyLight and Dolly
Dolly, Calimba and MyLight
After Calimba and her mom had a fabulous year and a half of showing, Calimba was inexplicably lame upon arrival at a horse show. She had foundered in one front hoof. Calimba's farrier worked tirelessly for her to have a full recovery. Once she was able to have some turnout, Calimba jumped out of the paddock on her first day out. She was ready to do things again! After a year of rest and recovery Calimba returned to showing in the high A/O jumpers, and she and her mom had another wonderful two years at that level.
Calimba enjoying a nap
Calimba and MyLight grooming, Cinnamon grazing
One day when Calimba was 13 years old, her mom was riding her in a lesson at home when Calimba uncharacteristically refused a jump. The distance had gotten a bit long and the refusal could have easily been dismissed. But Calimba had never refused a jump the entire time her mom had owned her, so she knew something was wrong. X-rays revealed some arthritic changes in ankles.
Cinnamon and Calimba (with Norman and Cuffie in the background)
Calimba and Maisie
Calimba's mom immediately changed her job description. She went from showing 4'6" jumps in the jumper ring to jumping 3'6" jumps in the Amateur Owner hunters. Calimba made the transition from the jumper ring to the hunter ring almost seamlessly. They even showed in an International Hunter Derby and her mom really got to show off with Calimba and take all of the high options as Calimba could do them so easily. They continued to have fun showing in the A/O hunters for a year, until eventually Calimba's mom knew it was time to retire her horse that had always given her so much.
Calimba and Dolly
Norman, Calimba and Cuffie
That day came a little over four years ago when we met Calimba. I remember the first time we turned Calimba out in a paddock by herself she kept getting more and more worked up as she saw all of the other horses outside with friends. Just as she had jumped out of her paddock after her rehab with her mom, Jason and I were pretty convinced she was going to jump out of her paddock in search of friends. We abandoned our plans to give Calimba a slow transition to our farm, and instead let her join her future friends in the pasture right away.
Calimba (center) grazing with Maisie and Cuffie under a beautiful sunrise
Calimba and Norman grazing under a pretty morning sky
For a day and a half she acted very shy and always stayed well away from the other horses. Sometime during her second day she fell in love with Norman the pony. Apparently Norman facilitated Calimba's transition into her group at that point, because from that day forward Calimba has been heavily bonded with her group. Like most of the mares, separation is not something that Calimba considers a reasonable option, and she is convinced death might follow if she has to be away from her group more than 5 or 10 minutes. This is a huge improvement over the 3 seconds of separation that she would initially tolerate.
Calimba and Norman
Calimba and Norman the pony have continued to have an on again, off again relationship. If it were up to Calimba it would be 100% on. However in true pony style Norman likes to play the field. He loves Calimba as long as they are in the fun dating phase. When she wants to get engaged or move in together, Norman suggests it is time for them to start seeing other people. Why Calimba has put up with this for four years, I will never understand. In her defense, she is not the only mare that puts up with Norman's antics. Almost all of them would happily be in love with him 100% of the time if Norman would go along with it. When not in a relationship with Norman, Calimba spends her days with her girlfriends grazing, grooming, playing and having a grand time. As she did when she was ridden, Calimba puts 100% of herself into enjoying her retirement.
Calimba and Norman
We hope you have enjoyed meeting this special mare as much as we have!
5 comments:
I feel like I know her! Great writing for such a great mare.
Even before you said it, I was thinking that perhaps Calimba and Norman were an "item!"
Seems she's pretty good friends with My Light and Dolly, as well. Neat mare!
Solingen is the town adjacent to ours. Almost all my knives are from there, and the city has these enormous scissors as art all over town. When visitors come, we always go to Solingen for its castle. Cool that you have a horse from there!
Thanks for the bio. I love your stories, and meeting your boarders, one by one.
This was great! Loved learning more about the beautiful Calimba, her past life and her life with you. She and Norman are such a sweet duo.
The photograph taken at sunset is stunning!!!!1
Post a Comment