Showing posts with label Blacky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blacky. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Training Horses... Classify it anyway you want


Today we took three of the horses to the chiropractor. Santana, Strudder, and Blacky. We were gunna take them to the chiropractor yesterday, but we got on the highway and barley a mile out the back left tire on the trailer lost some of its rubber. So, we limped back home, dropped the horses off and went to an auto repair shop. Terry bought four new tires for the trailer and rescheduled the appointment with the chiropractor. Santana and Strudder both had ulcers and out of place ribs. Did you know ulcers are caused by stress. A lot of the times it comes from the pecking order of horses. The Dr. said that when there is more than two horses in a heard there starts to be some competition for leader or being the lowest. Both can cause stress. Santana's neck was out of place. The Dr. also poked their hind feet with a needle. I don't remember what that was for except for a release of pain. He also told us to spend 30 seconds backing them up at the beginning of each ride. The reason for this was to strengthen their hindquarters and they will learn that they have a back end and start using it. When they use their front end it will eventually cause pain. The Dr. explained it like their front legs were like the suspensions on car wheels. They are connected to the rest of the skeleton by muscle and they are supposed to go up and down but when they use their front legs to go forward it causes their front legs to go horizontally witch in turn causes some of their ribs to  shift down and pushes on the nerves and causes pain. They also tend to cheat with their back feet by almost dragging them along. This causes their muscle by the socket to shift over which also causes them pain. He told us also that we will not be able to get them to back up for 30 seconds right away, and that we need to make sure it's thirty seconds, so we have to watch the clock because they will be fighting us the whole while. So, this is the medical reason to teach your horse collection.



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Another thing the Dr. talked about was cushing's disease. I don't really know what it is, but you can tell if your horse has it by a bump on the crest of your horse's neck that looks like the mane is pulling it over. He said Santana might have it. He said to watch for a drastic increase in weight. I'll try to remember to get a picture of the bump.



We also took the fillies over to Terry's brother's place. Which we call the Rosen Farm. We took them over there because Coffie had figured out that she can get under the fence, and keeping them in the back pen and barn wasn't very good because they had a limited space to move about in, and without any grazing to fill them up they were eating a bale and a half a day. This works much better. They have more room to run and they can graze all day and night without us worrying that they will escape. It's only a mile from Terry's as the crow flies and a little over a mile from my place. Also, Flicka is at the Rosen Farm too. I'll explain who she is later. Sadly I forgot to take pictures of her.




feeding time!

do you have more grain?

look at this adorable kitten


desensitizing the horses to the kitten

it was very entertaining 



ain't it adorable!

The fillies will be at the Rosen Farm until winter hits which is about two months from now. When that happens we will take them back to Terry's because they can't graze anyway. And it will be more convenient for Aleythia and me because then we'd have to walk a mile to the Rosen Farm to work with the fillies and then another mile to Terry's to work with the other horses. All this in temperatures in the 10 degree range. How fun! (insert sarcasm)

Monday, July 23, 2012

Look Who Escaped

I rode my bike up the driveway and saw Terry. He was getting ready to go to the vet. I asked if I could come and he said I could, so I went down to the barn to put my bike by the barn. When I got around the bend in the driveway and the pine trees weren't in my way I saw Blacky calmly eating grass on my side of the fence. So, I yelled up the drive, "Terry, is there a reason Blacky's out?" Carter was there too, and he yelled back, "Out, what do you mean 'out?" So he came down the drive and walked up to her took her head in his hands and led her to the gate. We shooed the horses away, and opened the gate and Blacky ran through. They then explained to me that Blacky had been with the fillies. Since there isn't an actually fence, just a long strip of plastic, that didn't have an electrical current running through it because it was turned off. They told me that she was probably able to get under the fence because she's so small. All she has to do is drop her head, and the plastic goes right over her head, up her neck, and across her back, and she's free!

After we got Blacky into the paddock, we herded the fillies into the barn because we didn't want them to escape when we weren't there. I went to close the gate behind them, and Terry was walking into the barn, and he asks me, "Are those big horses in there?" Sure enough all of our other horses had gotten in with the fillies in the barn. Terry and I were like that is not good. We were both thinking that there would soon come an explosion of flying hooves and teeth... Nothing... They all stood in the barn and then calmly walked into the back pen. So then came the task of separating them. We found the little red gate that leads from the paddock into that pen open. We summarized that when it was latched it must not have been in tight enough, so the horses just pushed on it a little and it opened. So, we were able to chase Misstack, Ana, Strudder, and Blacky out, but Coffie had gotten past too. Well, we left her and tried to get Santana separated from the fillies. Well we got him a little bit separate, and we shooed him out the gate, and he charged out. Carter went out to try and catch Coffie, but she escaped into the pasture with Blacky. Then all the other horses charged out of the paddock, and were galloping around the pasture with Coffie. The other three fillies called to Coffie, and all the horses ran to the large gate connecting the pasture and the back pen. Well, all the other horses ran off again except Strudder with Coffie. We were able to get strudder away and Coffie was thinking about going after him, but decided to stay with her buddies. So, I was trying to get the gate open, but I couldn't untie the twine string, so I just took my pocket knife out and cut it. We herded Coffie in and all the horses were were they were supposed to be, and we got in Terry's truck to go to the vet. Then I asked Terry if Stretch was supposed to be in the barn, so we had to go back and let Stretch out. Terry had just fed him. Now we were truly on our way to the vet.

And just so you know, none of the horses needed medical attention. Terry just wanted to get some vaccination stuff from the vet.