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Posted on 02/24/2006 9:12:25 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
Oh, I wanted to ask you...did you find out anymore about the lost horse? Was the guys story true? The one we have around here is hanging on but I don't know if he is going to make it. He's putting on weight but he's down a lot. I wet him down today and put granulex on him. Others are too. In some ways he's better but he's starting to breakdown and he's got an area on his hip filled with fluid. Probably about a quart. Maybe, just pooling from laying on it.
I think a ball being thrown would get the attention of any horse that was awake. It would certainly spook all of mine. It's certainly not something I would worry about having happen on trail unless your rides frequently go through sports stadiums. ;~)
The key to staying safe around that kind of thing is not desensitizing the horse to everything they ever spook at, but being alert to possible outcomes, like the ball bouncing toward you, or a dog, before they happen and keeping a safe distance.
I think I figured out why she was bumping that leg when I was leading her. No eye rolling, ok, but I believe it was because I was in her space. Today, I stayed to the outside, instead of stepping over it with her. She was perfect. Now I just need to figure what I'm doing wrong in the saddle. Maybe, I'm not giving her, enough slack. She can do it so it may be justing a cueing thing.
Thanks also for the well wishes - Bob has to go into the hospital Wednesday for a catheter Ablation, basically as I understand it, to try and destroy some of the cells in the short circuit that is causing the rapid heart beat and flutter. The doctor tells us there is a 95% success rate :)
Thank you for the prayers - first thing the doctor said this morning was "I can fix this" :). He goes in Wednesday for the procedure.
That's good news:')
I'm glad you watched over the lady and her dog - sounds like the kind of poeple you ran into might have gotten her hurt.
OK - just keep in mind that there are normal horse behaviors and instincts that you can fight against, or you can understand and manage those instincts. I wouldn't make it about pushing everything that scares her one her, it's about making her trust you by protecting and guiding her past those things when they happen.
I understand that kids play, but kids need to NOT play with footballs where people are working horses. It's just not compatible. I'd correct them, not the horse.
Well good, I'll keep him in my thoughts Wed:)
Becky
I've seen pushy people lots of places, I don't blame the sport :~D
Good luck and all our prayers for Bob. We hope he gets well soon.
I can't get them to load tonight but my server connected really slow when I logged on. I bookmarked the homepage though, so I can try again tomorrow.
I didn't think to tell you but if they were endurance riders, all the horses would have had numbers on their rump rather than numbers on the rider. No numbers on the rump, not endurance.
Yes, Cyn is a gem, if you ever get tired of her, she has a home here. :)
Where I am at there are lots of potential boogies. I understand the initial fright instinct but she isn't going to afterwards decide she doesn't like something and throw a fit and refuse to go past it. I would never get anywhere that way.
I'm butting in here - horses have died on these CTR rides? Why on earth? I think a couple of horses have been injured on endurance rides that we have been to, but from falls. The vets pull any horse that's iffy, and the riders pull if the horse even looks off.
LOL
Yes, I have been at several rides where horses died. One I'm not sure what happened, the horse got sick thru the night, was taken to the vet and died there. I really never heard anything else.
The other horse I did hear a few details, the mare was pregnant, not in shape and taken to a competition at Ark. The hardest ride in the region IMO. She also was taken to a vet during the night and died there.
Becky
Thanks. I'm really anxious to hear about the new horse. Sex, color, age, etc. etc. :) Well, I'm guessing a gelding since he's a he and he's in the pasture with other horses. Oh, and pictures.
Do you ever hear of horses colicing, or tieing up after the ride is over. That has happened at a lot of the rides I've been too. Horses going down a few hours after the ride is completed, sometimes even after the first day.
Becky
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