|
| |
::TRAVEL NEWS::
LE Newsletter - March 11, 2010
|
| |
Horsing Around In The Bahamas
Source:
www.thestar.com - Carol Perehudoff
(February 20, 2010)
Grand Bahama–Am
I on
The
Bachelorette or is this a bad case of TV deja vu?

The pale aqua ocean, deserted beach and sleek black horse all
look strangely familiar. My lithe female guide, Leo, the owner
of Trikk Pony, confirms it.
Secluded Barbary Beach on Grand Bahama, the fourth-largest
island in the Bahamian archipelago, is where Bachelorette DeAnna
rode horses with Jesse on
The
Bachelorette Season 4, and I'm about to re-create
the ride.
The only thing is, I'm not sure I want to. When I'd originally
signed up I'd misunderstood the program and thought I'd be
swimming with seahorses.
When I found out it was swimming
in
the sea with horses, I almost cancelled, then
reconsidered – surely I'm over my fear of horses by now.
My issues with riding began when a horse in Cappadocia, Turkey,
tried to maim me.
An imperious mare who'd hated me on sight, she'd head into stiff
dead trees in the hopes of poking out one of my eyes. It was so
bad, I ended up switching horses with another trail rider, and
the minute I got on that horse it ran into someone's garden.
Who wouldn't be emotionally scarred?
In a weird
Bachelorette coincidence, only one other person is
riding, a Bahamian man named Andre.
He's on Nifty, Jesse's ex-mount, a small, brown gelding with
gentle eyes. My horse – or should I say, DeAnna's – is taller
and shuffles on dainty feet as I approach.
"This is BB, short for Black Beauty." Leo pats her neck. "She's
been a real princess ever since the
Bachelorette."
I have a sudden flashback. "Wait, didn't she take off with
DeAnna?"
Leo hoists me up. "She was just upset because her routine was
disrupted because of all the retakes."
I promise BB I won't saddle her with retakes if she doesn't
bolt. I've worked hard to overcome my fear and don't need any
setbacks.
First came a trip through the Australian Outback on a cow horse
named Jughead, who loved me but never listened to a word I said.
Then came equine therapy at Ste. Anne's Spa near Grafton, Ont. (www.steannes.com),
where I'd spent three intensive days in a battle of wills with a
horse named Boomer.
The program teaches you about yourself and your interactions
with others, and what I learned is that my leadership skills are
deeply buried.
It took two long days before Boomer walked where I wanted him to
go and I considered it a triumph – now I'm over my fear of male
horses.
So, how am I going to coax a princess into the sea? Keeping in
mind what I'd learned in equine therapy – that neither demanding
nor begging gets results – I try to exude a calm confidence as
we set off down the flour-pale beach.
Barbary Beach is gorgeous, all right. Tendrils of railroad vines
crawl along the sand and a warm wind ruffles casuarina trees and
silver-toned, sea lavender bushes.
I relax enough to ply Leo for
Bachelorette gossip.
"It was supposed to be a romantic scene with DeAnna and Jesse
leaning in for a kiss," she says. "Only Nifty didn't want to be
beside BB because he's in love with Heidi."
I look at little Nifty with renewed admiration. DeAnna and Jesse
didn't work out but Nifty's love for Heidi has stayed strong,
especially touching considering she's 27 and he's 12. Evidently,
cougar love doesn't only exist in the cat world.
As we near a rocky promontory, Leo slows her horse.
"Okay, we're going in."
I look out at the windswept Atlantic. "Like straight in?"
"Right." She and her horse push forward. Tensely, I nudge BB's
sides. She hesitates. The familiar fear rises up in me, the
gearing up for a battle of wills, but an interesting thing
happens. I see my fear, but it's a hollow husk of emotion. What
I'm really feeling is ... excitement.
I nudge BB again and she plunges ahead. Green water swallows us
up. First my feet disappear, then my legs until I'm waist deep
and we're moving in a methodical rhythm against the warm waves.
Behind me, Andre has a huge grin on his face and I give him a
thumbs up. This might not be a TV romance, but it's surreal
crazy fun. I'm floating through the ocean and it does sort of
feel as if I'm riding a seahorse. Not only have I overcome my
fear, I've learned something else – reality beats reality TV.
Read Carol Perehudoff's blog at
www.wanderingcarol.com
Carol Perehudoff is a Toronto-based freelancer. Her trip was
subsidized by the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism. |
|
| |
|