home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.claremont.edu!nntp-server.caltech.edu!nimoy.ipac.caltech.edu!deblev
- From: deblev@nimoy.ipac.caltech.edu (Debbie Levine)
- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Subject: What Santa brought!!!!!!!
- Date: 28 Dec 1992 20:13:20 GMT
- Organization: California Institute of Technology
- Lines: 75
- Message-ID: <1hnn50INNqpg@gap.caltech.edu>
- References: <1992Dec23.215629.7177@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: nimoy.ipac.caltech.edu
- Summary: be careful what you wish for
-
- Santa left horses in my stocking! I am now foster mother to
- two!
-
- The owner is paying board and shoeing for both, and I am responsible
- for routine vet care, exercise and supplemental feed (the board
- includes alfalfa hay). Both horses are in outdoor pipe corral
- type in & outs. We're negotiating what to do in terms of major
- vetrinary expense, and I hope to get a written agreement, but
- am willing to take the risk of a purely verbal one. I'm not
- entirely sure if this amounts to a very inexpensive lease on my
- part or a very inexpensive training contract on hers... I know
- what lease agreements look like: does anyone have a copy of
- a "full-training" agreement? Morris is, in fact, something of
- a reschooling project. Split is semi-retired.
-
- I'm picking up where the former trainer and then former barn
- manager of our barn left off. We now have a trainer coming in
- to give lessons twice a week, and our barn is down to a rag-tag
- accumulation of boarders! The weathier of the rag-tag group
- are hiring the "other" trainer at the barn to do turnouts,
- blanketing and noon-time feed. She has agreed to do a barter
- with me for the times when I am out of town or ill. She
- will then do turnouts and I will work off the difference as
- a working student. "My" two will get their "lunch" feed
- unfortunately at random times. I realize this is not ideal,
- but both are living primarily off the alfalfa which is
- delivered regularly. The "lunch" consists of a pound of
- bran plus vitamins, baking soda, brewers yeast and corn oil.
- This is what they have sucessfully lived on for the last
- year, so I see no real point in changing it. I'll probably
- add some grain to Morris' diet if I wind up
- being able to event him, but for now I think the alfalfa
- has MORE than enough protein and I can up the hay ration
- and oil to add more weight if necessary. Split is getting
- a bit thin.
-
- Morris I have posted about before. He's about 8, 16.2, chestnut
- TB with a very furry winter coat at the moment (he eats blankets
- and so does his neighbor). He's very tense, but mellowing slowly.
- Incidentally, the haunches-throwing turns out to be a side effect
- of a more generic one-sidedness. Particularly when he is tense,
- he tends to drop the right side of his body and throw me to the
- right. If I make sure he is carrying his weight evenly and
- keep checking my weight distribution, we can do some nice
- canter departs and canter work on a 20m circle now, as long as
- the departure comes from a calm and balanced walk on a very long
- rein. I knew SOMETHING was going asymmetric, but it took a
- lesson with our trainer to figure out that the horse was
- throwing me crooked! Now, if I make sure my left seatbone
- is weighted and push him 'back underneath me' with my left
- leg, I can usually correct the crookedness for a little
- while.
-
- Split is 21, about 15.2, also a chesnut TB. She's sometimes been
- a school horse, and is a decent mover and jumper. She prefers
- (strongly) not to jump anything a mm above 3' though. She
- desperately wants a little girl all her own to fuss with her
- and not make too many demands on her! She's a little too
- opinionated to be good for a rank beginner, though. The
- other trainer may use her occasionally for lessons, but feels
- she is too much horse for all but the most advanced of her students.
- (She has primarily a school-horse lesson business, does some
- Hunter/Jumper shows and goes to one Event a year). I'm hoping
- to find some one to get her out a couple days of week in
- return for turning out and feeding Morris one day a week fro
- me. I'd like to ride her when I have time, but I won't have
- time every day, and Morris NEEDS regular work, so he will get
- priority. At worst, she will get turnout while I ride Mo.
-
- Now, how am I going to find time to my thesis????????? :-)
-
- Debbie
- deblev@ipac.caltech.edu
-
- ...and Morris, and Split!
-