Farm

Update February 29th

I’ve taken full advantage of the nice weather and the dry field.   On Monday I drove Huey for the first time in quite a while and he did great.  So great that I actually hooked him to the singletree and practiced with that.   I followed up on Tuesday (yesterday) and actually hitched him to the drag.  He did fine, however there was some issue with the drag as it pulled to Huey’s off side.  The drag is chain link and I’m guessing the shape of the links causes that.  Played with it for quite a while, moving the connector I use to attach the drag to the singletree to the right and left until it seemed to be pulling evenly.

Huey pulling the drag

Huey pulling the drag

I’m looking forward to being able to drag the “track” – to keep the grass low, and to hopefully smooth it out some over time.  Also will drag the area in front where the horses eat, and hopefully get Huey to the point where he can pull some of the smaller dead trees down to the burn pile.

I rode Zola on Monday.  Our longest ride to date.  Walked almost all the way around the track a couple times – cut one end short .  Also trotted several times, which uncovered the fact that Zola is harder to steer to the right than the left.  Which is interesting, as on the lunge she prefers to go to the right.  It’s not that she really resists terribly going to the right, the problem is when  I pull harder she stops. Steering in general is not great – the usual green horse problem. One of the advantages to starting a horse in an arena is their natural tendency to follow the fence line – and develop the habit of going straight and making “turns”.  Out in the wide open, straight lines require a good deal of steering on a green horse.

In order to hopefully improve steering to the right I used the LG Bridle instead of the jumping hackamore yesterday, in the hope that the “wheels” on the sides will make turning signals clearer. I considered using the Meroth bit, but didn’t want to jump straight to something in her mouth.  The LG Bridle has a curb strap and puts some pressure on the nose and the chin – wanted to see how she handled that first.   And there was some improvement.

Yesterday’s ride was even longer than Monday’s and went well.   We worked a lot on steering at the walk, using the mounting block and other objects to make the idea more clear.  Zola also offered a few trots. Most times I kept her at a walk when she did, as I don’t want her to think she can just do whatever she wants, but a couple times I did let her go.  Since she volunteered to trot there was no “face”, which was nice.  She wasn’t too happy at first with the chin pressure of the LG Bridle, but got used to it.  I also figured out what caused her to move into a trot and used that to get several more trots – when I chose.

It’s interesting how sensitive horses are to what we do and how responsive they are before we would call them trained.  What made Zola trot?  Sitting straight, being confident, and following her movement with some energy.  Boom – trot.  Every time – and without the disgruntled face making.  When I am less confident she walks.  When I lose focus, or stop following, she stops.  I will have to experiment with my position, energy, and focus regarding steering.

Rode Chance yesterday as well.   Was nice to be able to gallop.  Was also nice not to hear squish, squish, squish!

Lena was not left out.  I walked right up to her carrying the halter and lead rope.  She greeted me, and didn’t bat an eye when I haltered her.  Led her several steps, stopped.  Repeated.  She was completely relaxed.  Took the halter off, gave her a bit of grain.  Stroked her neck, scratched her withers.  Took the halter and lead rope together and laid them across her withers.  All good.

A gorgeous and productive day!

Update December 20th

The last few days have been busy.  The weather has been great and I had one fencing project to complete.  I finally just bit the bullet and got it done.  There is a meadow at the top of the hill behind the house – about 2 acres, flat, nice green grass, and dry.  I got the fencing finished late Sunday afternoon, and led Huey up to the newly opened area.  Bettina followed right on his tail, but the others were just watching – should they bother to expend the effort?  However, being a herd, they had to follow once we were more than 200 feet away.  So they came thundering up behind us.

At the top as they passed through the newly opened section of fence into the meadow and I could almost hear them shouting Woo hoo!  They galloped into the meadow, danced around for a few seconds, and then picked out there individual grazing spots. I lay in the grass for a while just watching them, then left them to enjoy their evening.

I was really thankful to get that project finished – and it’s my final fencing project until spring!  Not that I don’t have a list of other things to get done, including clearing debris from the field.  Fallen tree branches and other natural detritus.  Have I mentioned I’m obsessive?  Today I will start building a new burn pile – the first one has been burned already.  Along with operation cleanup is the War of the Roses.  Wild roses abound.  Not a problem unless you want to fix fence! I have been stabbed, clawed, grasped, poked, tangled, and tripped.  My hat has been destroyed, my pants torn, and my almost-new rubber boots punctured.  First items into the burn pile will be the big rose bush in the front part of the enclosure.  And then it’s on!

I have not ridden Chance the past 2 days -  in order to get the fence done in the meadow.  Training should resume today – athough it’s clouding up, so we’ll see.  Now that my horse trailer is safely out of the field, I will put up the little “arena” for training Zola. Trying to pick the driest and flattest spot.

Now that all the big projects are done the focus will really be on the horses.

Life on the farm

I am finally into a routine.  Mornings are spent on the computer and indoor chores (not many, as I live in a travel trailer) and the afternoons are spent outdoors working and with the horses.  The horses are loving the attention and the farm is starting to look like a farm.

Below are some photos. In order: Chance and Bettina grazing loose in the big field, with Beauty on halter and lead, but I’ve let go of the rope and am taking pictures. (This photo was taken yesterday – and look how green the grass is.) The farm the first time I saw it. (As you can see, there is no evidence at all of the driveway, which is between the house and the pine trees.) Huey, Tina, Lucy, and Shadow napping. Zola was down too, as was Maura, but they were behind some bushes. The farm as it looked the other day.

Slideshow:
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Thanksgiving

This year Thanksgiving was truly a day of thanks.

Every year I am thankful to have a place to live -  and basic comforts.  I am grateful for my horses and for my dog Cynthiana, and my cat Sissy.  I am grateful my sons are healthy and doing well, and that they care about their mother.  I take none of it for granted.  However this year has been a difficult one for me, and just when it became very hard to bear, a miracle occurred.  I have posted that I bought a farm, but I did not post how that came to happen.  Here is the story:

I was on my couch reading a book by Deepak Chopra.  In the middle of reading a page, what I call my ‘little voice’ prompted me to put an ad on craigslist looking for a new place to rent.  I scoffed at first – I had already done that 2 or 3 times and had no response whatsoever.  However, having learned very painfully to trust these promptings, I put the book aside, went to the computer, and placed an ad.  Basically I said I was a mature woman looking for a place to retire with her horses, and said if anyone had a farm to rent, or space on their farm, please contact me.  Imagine my surprise when I got several responses.  Timing is everything.  But the best surprise was that one response was from a man who said he had 75 acres that he would sell me for $175,000, with owner financing.  How tempting!  But I emailed him back and told him I had no cash to put down.  He said that was not a problem – $2,000 would be needed but that was all. At that point I became hopeful, but I had not seen the property yet.  I knew from my travels that some property is literally just the side of a hill.  Or it could have been completely wooded. Or completely wrong in any number of ways.  I got directions and drove down to look.  As you approach, the road goes around a turn and looks down on the farm.  Right at that point I knew it was right.  I had been told it was on a dead end – with only one property beyond it.  And so it was.  It sits in what is virtually a private valley, and extends uphill to the north and west.  And there, in front of me, was the perfect field for galloping!

In any event, my son lent me the money and here I am.  If that is not a miracle I don’t know what is.

And if that was not enough, less than 2 weeks after moving to the farm I was offered the two mares, Tiz Life and More Oysters, for what I call my Mare Rejuvenation Project.  (See www.horsesabetterway.com for details.)

An added bonus – there was a man renting a trailer down at the end of the property who owns a tractor and is willing to work and help out.

How quickly things can change.

 

View of farm on north side of the road 10-26-11

View of farm on north side of the road 10-26-11

View of farm on south side of the road 10-26-11

View of farm on south side of the road 10-26-11

 

Moving the horses was . . . revealing

I think of my horses – any horse really – as a unique individual with a fully formed personality, wants, needs, and desires of his or her own, and as sentient creatures.  I do tell my horses what to do, but I like to think I do it in a way that is as respectful as possible.  I am sure in the past I have not been as sensitive as I could have been.  Just from lack of perception and maturity on my part.

I always laugh when Parelli goes into his routine that he (and his students) ask the horse what to do and have a “partnership” and “play” together.  I am 60 and have been around horses since I was 15.  What Parelli and most people do with horses is not play.  I have had two horses, both TB stallions who did play with me.  The first one taught me the game he liked to play, and which I enjoyed wholeheartedly, and the second, years later, enjoyed playing the exact same game the exact same way.  It had nothing to do with “work” or with obeying my “requests”.  It was pure play for fun.  Most people would probably warn against it, but that is because so few people really give credit to the horse for being extremely intelligent and kind.  It appears, since I’ve tried to start the game with other sexes, to be at least a stallion only game, and perhaps a TB stallion only game.

Anyway, I do not try to pretend that when I tell (and yes it’s an order) my horses to do something that I am asking them.  To ask implies that the askee has a choice.  If there’s not a choice it’s not a request.  There are times when I do ask my horses to do things and they do have the choice of refusing. But that is more along the lines of true play.

As I become older, and hopefully wiser, I pay more and more attention to how I tell my horses to do things, as well as to how they respond.  I know that they are always ahead of me.  As with the move.  I’m pretty sure they knew we were moving before I did. As for the actual getting in the trailer and riding to the new place, I was somewhat concerned, as the last time most of them were in the trailer it was for a 3 day trip!  I foresaw some potential issues.

To give credit to the horses, I feel they were happy to leave.  There was a lot of killing at the place where we’d been living.  Chickens, ducks, rabbits, racoons, etc.  I know it disturbed me and them both.  In fact, Huey was so unhappy that he, Bettina, and Lucy basically formed their own herd within the herd and would often keep to themselves.   Huey was the first horse I loaded, and he normally puts up a couple minutes of minor fuss, then goes on.  He never hesitated for even the slightest second, just walked to the trailer and in.  Confirming my feeling that he was glad to leave.

Next came Bettina.  For convenience (mine) I had left her in the round pen so I wouldn’t have to walk all over to get her.  She couldn’t see the trailer from there as there is a hill, and the trailer was on the shoulder of the road, at the bottom of that hill.  As I lead her, with just a nylon halter and a lead rope clipped to it, toward the gate to the pasture, she walked quietly half way.  Then her head went down between her stiffened front legs and she crow hopped like a bronc.  But, she never pulled the rope out of my hands – and she could have, easily.  It was clear to me that she was just expressing her feelings.  First, she wasn’t sure where Huey was, but second, she had friends among the horses we were leaving behind.   She wasn’t saying she didn’t want to go, or wouldn’t go, just that she was upset by the whole thing.  After expressing herself, she walked nicely to the trailer and loaded.   I tried to load Lucy, but she is just too big (read wide) for the end spot of my 3-horse slant.  So she was left behind.

I returned a few days later to get Chance and Lucy.  Chance loaded like Huey had.  When I went to get Lucy, I expected a tantrum, which I had gotten the other day, but, surprisingly, she walked very nicely down to the gate and to the trailer.  But she wouldn’t get  more than halfway in.  Lucy is a very social horse, and I wasn’t surprised she didn’t want to leave.  She is a dominant horse and used to getting her way, and also is a busy body, wanting to be in on everything.  Leaving the herd would be hard for her.  My friend Marilyn had come to help me that day, so I asked her to just go behind Lucy and cluck and ask her to go in.  Lucy backed up from the trailer immediately.  Clearly that wouldn’t work.  I went back to waiting for her to get in, but I could see that would have been an extremely long wait.

Lucy knows that the whip means go.  She is not afraid of it, but understands it as a command, not a request.  I had Marilyn stand about 15 feet behind Lucy and hold the whip.  Then I just had her move it.  Not toward Lucy or in a threatening way, just move it.  Because it was so subtle, Lucy went in.  If it had been any stronger she would have refused.  She had made her statement, and so had I.  Each in our own way.

The next two horses to go were Zola and Shadow.  Zola loaded right up as had Huey and Chance.  Shadow is a huge girl and I expected she would take a while to go in.  I tie back the divider between the second and third horse in the trailer and let her have the whole area for herself, and still she is too big to really be comfortable.  She did walk very quietly to the gate and to the trailer, so I knew she was ready to go. However, when the remaining 6 horses came galloping over and screaming for her, she did balk.  But she didn’t become uncontrollable (which I feared).  When they left she could relax a little, and went on.

The last horse to go was Roxanna.  Roxie is a horse that I used to have a difficult time catching, though for the past several months she has not tried to avoid the halter, even for worming.  Still, I knew she could be obstinate if she wanted to be.  Our relationship is unlike any I’ve had with another horse.  And because I have no agenda for Roxanna, I am allowing it to unfold truly naturally.  I allow – for the most part – Roxanna to control it.  She is a unique horse, maybe because she is a mustang – I don’t know – but I have never had or worked with a horse who is so attentive to me and is so expressive in indicating she wants a relationship.  Yet who has not trusted me 100%, or even 90%.

As I went to get her to load her up, I knew this would be interesting.  She saw me coming, obviously, from a long way.  Clearly I had a halter and lead rope (I never try to hide my intentions).  Clearly I was coming for her.  She watched me.  I watched her.  What would she do?  It is not unlike her to let me get right up to the point of putting my arm over her neck and then leave.  In all honesty, I expected her to  move off before I got there, and then we would play our old game of I will follow you until you give in (about 5 minutes).  What a surprise when she turned her body to face me dead on, then took a step in my direction!  A first!

There was no doubt in my mind that she knew I was coming to get her to load her in the trailer and take her away.  She is a very, very, smart horse.  For her to take that step said to me that she was ready to go.  I was even more amazed when she took several more steps toward me – in essence ‘meeting me halfway’. When I went to put the rope over her neck, I wondered if she’d move away.  But no, she stood right there and allowed me to put the halter on.

To me that will remain a very special moment for a long time to come.  Even as I write this it fills my heart with emotion and brings tears to my eyes.  It not only marks a new level in our relationship, but any time a horse truly chooses to do what you want of their own free will it is an amazing feeling.

When she loaded onto the trailer – and it took her a few minutes to get ready – it was with calmness and purpose.

And so the last horse was on her way to Wild Dreams Farm.

Roxanna at Wild Dreams Farm

Roxanna at Wild Dreams Farm

 

What a difference a few days make

Below is a photo of the first area I enclosed.  This is where Huey and Bettina spent their first night.

My first enclosure

My first enclosure

The photo below shows the horses’ area only 7 days later.  They’ve gone from an area 150′ x 150′ to several acres.  Everything visible in the photo is accessible to them, plus a lot more.

Enclosure as of October 25, 2011

Enclosure as of October 25, 2011

 

Drama on the farm

It’s been a while since I’ve posted and it’s been a busy time.

First I hauled my travel trailer to the farm – I will be living in it until the house is renovated. Once I was in place I started working on fencing. I had purchased a weed eater, however, it was not up to the task of tackling weeds that were over my head. I resorted to hedge clippers to hack out a fence line for my first enclosure. Not pretty, but it was effective.

Once that area was finished, I hauled in my two oldest and most stable horses, Huey and Bettina. The ones I felt would be least upset by being alone in a strange place. All was good. The second day the horses were there I decided to enlarge their area to include a 2-stall section of the barn. It took longer than I thought (more hedge clipper work) but I finished just as it was nearing dark. As I was moving the portable fence posts and the electric tape, I created a 20 foot gap. And what did the horses do, but go out it! I wasn’t too concerned and honestly thought, if anything, they would head for the 2 horses at the end of the property, owned by a previous tenant. Wrong!!! I closed the gap, turned around and they were gone. There was absolutely no sign of them. No sound. Nothing. I walked to the meadow at the top of the hill – where I felt they would have gone but they weren’t there. Now it was fully dark.

I called the Breckinridge County Sheriff’s office and reported them as missing, in case someone found them. The next morning I was up again searching. Since it was long grass there was not even a hoof print as evidence of where they’d gone. I called, in hopes that they’d at least whinny to me. Nothing. In town at Southern States (farm store) I let them know I’d lost the horses and left my name and number. The woman at the counter – brilliant – suggested I call the radio station. Her husband suggested I contact the vet, whose home backs up to that area. I took both suggestions. Back to more searching.

Thankfully, I was exhausted from more fence line clearing and all that searching and could sleep. But I was awake at first light every day. I had images of them being shot (there was hunting going on) and lying dead in the woods. I imagined all kinds of dire fates, from falling, to being caught in barbed wire. I pushed it all to the back of my mind, but really, I was sick with worry.

To make a long story short, Monday morning I got a call from the vet’s office. The horses had been spotted via the vet’s ‘trail cam’, which he uses to watch deer. What a relief. I had been afraid they had headed back to Paris! Dr. Burke gave me directions to his farm and I headed out with the horse trailer. I arrived, saw the hoof prints and the pile of manure where they had passed. I searched the area for a couple hours but gave up. Saw no more fresh sign and another pile of manure further up the road toward the main road, indicated they had gone that way. At the junction of the dirt road and the main road was a house. I knocked at the door and asked the woman who answered if she’d seen two horses. She said she had! As I was hoping it was not too long ago, she said her husband and a neighbor had gotten them corraled. She pointed and there they were!!! I was never so happy to see them. I thanked the woman profusely, and gave her a hug, then loaded them up in the trailer and hauled them home.

In all they were gone 5 days. Torture for me – vacation for them.

I will add however, that the next time I enlarged their area (it was secure) and I took down the unnecessary line of cross fence – leaving at least a 300 foot gap – Huey watched me closely, but never made the slightest move toward the open area. So maybe it wasn’t such a vacation after all. It was over an hour before any of the now 6 horses made a move to leave the area they’d been in, and then it was very tentative and they didn’t go far past where the cross fence had been.

As of Thursday, all 7 horses are now here at the farm. What a relief.

Update October 5th 2011

First, the horses.  Zola’s stitches came apart after a few days.  The vet had warned me that was possible due to the location and size of the wound.  Boy it looked horrible – just a big gaping hole!  I didn’t take photos because there are a few areas in which I am superstitious, and taking photos of things I hope to go well is something I avoid, to not jinx it.  (Yes, it’s silly.)  Anyway, between the drainage, the depth, the tail hairs getting in it (at first), it was scary.  I wrapped Zola’s tail in vetwrap – which she always managed to get 90% off – to keep the hair out of the wound.  And I sprayed it twice with Blue Kote.  It is almost completely healed and did not get infected or have problems.  I will confess that contrary to vet’s advice, I did not give her any antibiotics.  I didn’t give them to her when she cut her leg last year either.  She is young and healthy and clearly has a healthy immune system.  I do not believe in prophylactic antibiotics, I feel they should only be given when it becomes apparent they’re needed.  I believe a lot the issues we have now with resistant bacteria, etc. comes from massive overuse of antibiotics.  For both people and animals.

I also did not make any effort to keep the flies off the wound.  Yes, flies are creepy and disgusting to us, but are they bad?  I don’t think so.  Also, having now seen that very few flies were on the wound ( saw one), yet there were a LOT of flies on the horses, I think flies are an indicator of infection.  No flies, no tempting rotten smell of infection?  Maybe.  Also, the chemicals I would have used to keep flies away (SWAT was recommended) would clearly have made their way into the wound, which I consider a bigger risk than flies.  For all we know, flies could actually be good for wounds.

As for Chance.  Of course he is fine now – bucking and galloping and playing.

I have not ridden him as I have been too excited about other things.  Namely I have bought a farm!

Yes. My own farm.  76 beautiful acres.  Click here to see photos.

I’ve named it Wild Dreams Farm, for obvious reasons.

 

May 2012
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