Joel, age 69, grew up in Brooklyn during
World War II, when grocery stores were using horses to pull their
delivery wagons. He remembers it was love at first sight when
he looked into the big brown eyes of one little palomino wagon
horse.
The
first time I ever rode a horse was right here at this stable
in Brooklyn; it was called Kennedy’s Riding Academy then.
But I ride more now than I ever did as a kid: riding wasn’t
very encouraged for a lower-middle-class Jewish kid growing
up in Brooklyn. I started riding more in my late twenties. I
spent a lot of time going to dude ranches, when they were non-family
oriented, in the Swinging Sixties, when everybody was getting
a little wacked and then riding a horse … don’t
ask!
I had a natural ability to ride pretty well, and back in ‘94
I began to volunteer here at the stable every weekend; it became
a religion. And I teach beginning horsemanship now. But after
all of these years— close to 60 years of riding—I’m
taking lessons from Jesse, who’s 20 years old and I’ve
known since she was a five- or six-year old kid. You can be
involved in something all your life, and then discover, “Yeah,
there’s dimensions I don’t know properly.”
I have a couple of horses that I adore, but Rocky is the one
that’s most needy, since he’s blind. He gradually
was less and less confident out there, and someone could see
it was a vision situation. Ultimately, they were afraid to use
him anymore for trail rides because of his increasing loss of
sight. So he was on what they call “stall rest”,
which means he ain’t working, for two years and change.
And I said, “Jesus, this guy, he’s such a good horse
and it’s breaking his heart that all the other horses
are going out to work.” So the owner of the barn said,
“Joel, I think he’s still ride-able, and why don’t
you give it a go?” Of course, he was scared, as horses
are born cowards, and panic-aholics, and claustrophobics, and
“yippee-there’s-a-dinosaur-behind-every-tree”,
but he responded to my legs and to my voice. Subsequently, this
bond developed and this mutual trust which is almost unexplainable.
It’s such a beautiful thing to know the horse is relying
on you. And by nature they’re herd animals, so when you
ride, you become a herd of two.
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