Tuesday, June 25, 2013

apparently, it's summertime

I have been working my heinie off at both my regular job and then a bunch of small side jobs. After starting work at 6am on Friday I went straight to Dover to work at their annual tent sale. I was there until 8:30, so that was a long day. I worked another ten hours at Dover on Saturday. It was very hot out in that tent in all its sweaty sauna glory, but I enjoyed helping customers. I always like shopping vicariously through people!

With my earnings from working the tent sale, I bought something I've been pining for for a long time: a Rambo Micklem Competition bridle. It is sooo pretty. Now, I worked at the Dover store when it first opened, and I was part of the crew that put the store together initially. I spent about a week putting bridles together, so I know how all the pieces fit! But a Micklem is a bit...erm...different, and I swear I felt like I had never put a bridle together when I first saw all the pieces of this thing. Luckily, Maddy helped me, and we got it assembled. I put it on Lucy to see how it fits her (it fits perfectly) and she was so confused. I didn't put a saddle on her, of course, and she hasn't been tacked up in a very long time, so she was like, "What the devil is going on here? I thought I was retired!" Since she's been hurt, I haven't bought anything fun, only grain and hay! It has sucked! Boy did I miss shopping for beautiful tack, although I am much less broke than I've been for a long time!




On Sunday, I helped my hay farmer bale three fields of hay. Maddy was there too, and she told me I'd appreciate the cost of hay a lot more after that. Um, YEAH....that was a lot of work!! $7 a bale doesn't sound so bad now! My responsibilities on Sunday were to throw the hay that had just come in from the field onto the hay elevator so that it could be stacked in the farmer's hay barn. Then I went out and picked weeds out from the next field that we were going to bale. There were three of us picking out weeds and we got a lot of them! Evidently, the weeds, which have a very thick stalk, do not dry out as quickly as the grass does, so one weed can cause a whole bale to go bad.

Then we went back out with the baling machine and as the machine sucked up the hay, made it into a bale, tied the twine, and spit it out the back, I stood on a trailer that was being towed by the baling machine and hooked the bale of hay to bring it onto the trailer to be stacked.





I tried to keep up with drinking enough water but I started to feel very sick after about 4 hours of working out in the sun. I have such a low tolerance for heat and sun, it's ridiculous! I had fun, though, and learned a lot. In exchange for helping out, I got a very good deal on some hay that we pulled fresh out of the fields and brought to the barn. Lucy has been pretty wasteful with her hay in her stall lately but she is cleaning up every spare morsel of this stuff. It has made our hay barn smell amazing. If I were a horse, I'd eat it all, too!

Lauren is away this week and Maddy and I are taking care of Charlie for her. She also said we could ride if we wanted to, so yesterday I rode after work. He is very different to ride compared to Lucy. He is so long and lanky, but he was a very good boy. He had one little spook and it was basically, "oo that's scary! very scary! oo I will just do a little shuffle and then stop! ok, I'm over it!" and that was it. He has had a rearing issue in the past so I was paying attention to his front end most of all, and making sure he was going forward. At one point he started flipping his head and got a little light in the front end, but his front feet never left the ground, I just turned his head toward the inside of the ring and booted him forward. He snapped right out of it, thank goodness! After that, each time he got a little sluggish and started acting distracted, I made sure to urge him forward right away.

Charlie

The other thing I worked on was asking him to stand by the mounting block. Lauren had told me he likes to wander off when you're halfway on, and he tried that on me the first time I went to get on him. He found his rear end parked right back by the mounting block and we tried again. This time he just took one step sideways, so again I got off and moved him back over. The third time he was almost perfect. My mission for this week is to work on that so maybe Lauren can come home to a horse that will stand all day by the mounting block!

Lucy has been doing well. I did a horrible chop-shop job cutting her mane, and I finally mowed down the mohawk bridle path she had going on, so she looks halfway civilized. Her front feet are falling apart, probably from stomping at flies, so I will need to have her feet done already, only 4 weeks into the cycle. It's only going to get worse, too; those huge "B52" flies are starting to come out and those things are awful. They actually take chunks out of the horses. Poor things :(

Here's a photo of Lucy being super sweet with one of the neighbour's children:


Last but not least, I will leave you with a kickass video that's been circulating around over the past few days. If this isn't heart, I don't know what is:

19 comments:

  1. Wow, that video is amazing - 20 lengths behind the pack to win it, and at 10 years old?!

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  2. Working in the hay field and at Dover both sound like really fun jobs! I'm with you on the heat though. Especially here on the east coast where it's super humid... Very pretty Micklem!

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  3. The Micklem looks lovely on Lucy, I just love mine. I am so excited to do hay this year...another year of food for the ponies!

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  4. I love that video, that boy has some heart. Doing that much work with hay in your humidity is impressive, how awesome you got a good deal on some fresh hay.

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  5. Wow! What an awesome video. There was a horse in the early 60's who always ran that way -- came from way behind to win it. His name was Carry Back, and he was bred and trained by my Reverend's uncle. He won the Derby & Preakness in 1961. I have all of his old scrapbooks with his papers and newspaper clippings. Pretty cool stuff!

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  6. I love the new bridle! It will be interesting to hear how Lucy goes in it.

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  7. wow wow wow, I hadn't seen that video! My heart was breaking for him (I always feel for the underdog) and got goosebumps to see his finish! Overall, a great post! Congrats on all your side jobs, they may be tiring, but they seem interesting (and a little extra cash never hurts). The hay job looks like it could make your back sore, but what an experience to see how exactly your hay gets to you!

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  8. Hope you get to use that new bridle on Lucy soon!

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  9. I almost cried watching the video. Sappy much? How cool for the old dude.

    Love the Micklem!

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  10. I love that video! And yay for a new bridle.

    As for Lucy's feet... You are not alone. Houston's feet are in terrible condition. He is a stomping machine because of the bugs. Have you thought about using something like keratex maybe?

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  11. The bridle looks beautiful on Lucy! Also, glad Charlie was so good for you. The trick, like you said, is to keep him going forward. It took me awhile to figure that out because with Lucy it's completely opposite but once you do he's a very good boy (and his "spooks" are nothing like hers! haha). Thanks for practicing with the mounting block too :)

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  12. That is such a great video, and haying is a lot of work! It's great that you got a discount on some hay though

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  13. Hi! Just saw your comment over on my blog! I would love to barter! Ps. I've been going to the barn at 5am to escape the heat!

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  14. Hi! Just saw your comment over on my blog! I would love to barter! Ps. I've been going to the barn at 5am to escape the heat!

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  15. P.S. I (sort of) nominated you for the Liebster Award, or at least I did if you would have qualified. I love reading this blog :)

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  16. Oh my goodness, that video is great! My retired jockey neighbor is out of town, but when he gets home I'll show him this - he'll love it!
    I can't believe you get great hay for $7 a bale. We pay $14.95, and some of it is crap. Grrr.
    Lucy looks lovely, as always.

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  17. Oh that video brought smiles and chills! What an amazing run!

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  18. dang sweet deal on the hay! How fun that you got to ride Charlie :)

    Oh and I love the video!!!

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  19. Reading about your haying experience brought back so many fond memories for me. You described it so clearly, very cool, and I really do remember that fresh hay smell in the barn, nothin' like it. Of course we always did it when it was scorching hot out too (nature of the beast I guess), lotta work, but at the end of the day, it was a lot of fun!. Well done!
    Thank you for sharing that video, it was fun to watch and very inspiring.

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