According to our farrier most of the equine he has had to trim have been in the sticky muck. As he then said, "Hey, I chose this job."
Before he arrived we got each of the donkeys and gave their feet a bath and then put them in the round pen picking them out so our farrier wouldn't have to.
After Dewey finished, we talked about Siera and her frog issues on her one foot. We decided to see how trimming and regular 'in hand' exercise would work before we decided to go with special shoes.
I love Siera and she is a great ride. Everyday I get her out, clean her up and either hand walk her up the gravel road or lunge her a bit in the round pen. She enjoys the attention and the work so much that she trots to the gate every time I am in the yard.
Lil' Richard had his second training session. In the first one, he was full of nonsense. I put a rope halter on him for this session and we lunged on a line.
Between the last session and this session, he must have decided that he was going to be a smart pony and work very intelligently.
His Whoa became instant. He learned to walk to me with finger pressure on the rope. He learned to back up with finger pressure on the rope. In all of his years with us, he has just been led around, trimmed, and basically had no formal training.
He took to this like candy. He even took on the ever fearful blanket. Lil' Richard gave it the stink eye, then walked over it after only a few minutes.
I put it on him and he smelled it and stared at it and then promptly ignored it.
He is a very quick study.
At the end of his session, I spent a bit of time with grooming. He still has burrs in his forelock and in his tail from his late summer grazing. He stands like a statue when I work on these.
Of course I've done this for years with him, so I didn't expect anything else.
He may make a great little mount after all. He won't be for anyone who weighs over approximately 115 lbs, but that is fine because he'll work for me to get little short rides in.
My feet will only be about 3 inches off the ground. My inseam is 3 inches less than his height.
I'm looking at an older donkey to start under saddle and with this mild winter I may have time to do that also.
So I guess El Nino may have some good things after all.
I look across the pastures and see Pedro, one of my favorite not trained mules. I'd started him quite a while ago but had that ended when I had to have multiple shoulder and elbow surgeries years ago.
Hmmmm.
El Nino is being kind to us here and I selfishly hope it continues. I know it is causing trouble elsewhere, but since I can't do anything about it, i am going to enjoy what we have.
ReplyDeleteIf you do have to put shoes on, check out the new easyshoe NG's made by Easycare, Inc. I've been meaning to write about them forever, but just haven't yet. They do great things for horses with frog issues. They've saved my friend's horse, we nearly put him down last year. This year, with those flexible shoes, he is a new man and is tearing up the trails.
That is the shoe my farrier was talking about. She seems to have no pain now and in a few weeks he'll check her out again. We'll go with the shoes if we have to. But I see a glimmer of hope in her hoof! I think we got lucky ... I hope!
ReplyDeleteHer feet were neglected by us during the months of cancer care treatments. My farrier would have come out and taken care of them without us being there but hey we didn't even get that far in thinking.
Most days it was ... make sure they had fresh water and the fences were up.