Painted Horse
Posted : 11/27/2010 12:45:49 AM
In general I don't ride in the dark. Mainly because I enjoy seeing the country I'm riding thru.
But as I think about your stories, I'm reminded of all the miles I ride in the dark during hunting season. Bue to the nature of big hunting. We are always trying to be at a location to hunt at sunrise and sunset. Which means we get up early and ride up the trail in the dark and we hunt until dark and ride back to camp in the dark. Also we often have to work and leave to go hunting after work, drive several hours and then have to ride in 6-7 miles to where we camp. With the shorterdays of fall, This often means riding in the dark.
Since the state dictates the hunting dates, I have no choice about full moon or no moon, rain or snow. So I have ridden up some pretty black canyons with heavy cloud blocking out any stars or moons. I usually wear a LED headlamp. If I turn it on, I use the red light setting so that I don't upset my horses night vision. I usually can't see much with the LED lights, But I can see a branch just before it swats me in the face. One night after work I was trying to get up to camp. My friends had gone out the day before, So I was by myself, riding one horse and leading a pack horse with my gear. I had gotten away late and not gotten to the trail head until almost 9:00pm so by time I headed up the trail. It was real black. I had a 7 mile ride that takes me about 90 minutes to do. It's up a very narrow canyon. Part way up the canyon the horses stopped. I couldn't see what they were looking at, but they just wouldn not movve forward. I turned on my flashlight and saw a black blob in the middle of the trail. The LEDs don't throw enough light very far ahead to really tell what I was seeing. But it was big, dark and moving. I dug out a real flashlight and turned it on and saw a couple of Black Angus cows. The weather was pushing them out of the high country and they were migrating down hill from the high country. Trail was too narrow to pass and they were too spooky of me and the horses. They soon turned around and went crashing back up the trail ahead of us. After a while they found a place to get off the trail and we passed by.
Another ride was during Moose hunting. A friend's son had shot a moose and hiked back to camp and asked us to bring the horses and come haul his moose off the mountain. We left the truck/trailer about 1/2 hour before dark and ride the 5 miles up and found the moose. We had to butcher it and load it into the panniers. My friend and his son rode horses up, bet we loaded those two horses with meat and they had to hike out while I rode and led the other two horses. It was a very dark night, No stars or moon. I was in pine forest, so the trees blocked out ambiant light and just seemed to suck up any light the LED put out. The horses had never been here other than the ride in a couple of hours earlier. So I turned the light off to perserve the horses night vision and just hung on to my reins in one hand and the lead rope with the other. I was wearing a large brimed cowboy hat and when ever I felt a twig or branch touch the brim I closed my eyes and turned away. I could not see anything. As we proceeded down the trail, I would hear the horses hoofs clicking over rocks and occassionally crossing the small bridges the forest service had built over boggy areas. The sound of hooves on the bridges was the only way I knew the horses were still on the trail. I spent the entire 90 minute ride just hoping my horses could see and would follow the trail off the mountain.
So Yes, I do know that my horses can see very well in the dark.