Unfortunately there has been precious little riding since my lesson thanks to the holiday weekend, busy schedules and an extremely dusty arena. It is now very obvious that the flooding that I have had over this past winter has washed away most of my arena treatment as I tried to ride on Monday and it was simply too dusty to anything more than walk. How frustrating! My tentative plan is to throw down some more treatment on Saturday and see how it does.
I have delayed posting about this but I figure I need to share that Daisy is now living with alpacas and is not our babysitter. She has become increasingly noisy in her protest that she is turned out separately from the boys in the morning. Since the hay I secured for the boys last year is mostly alfalfa, she can't have it so she has to have breakfast separately and wait for the boys to finish eating. Around lunch I go outside and let her in with the boys. The issue is her braying at least every hour because she is separated and then when I turn her out with the boys, she immediately goes over and eats as much of the alfalfa chafing as she can. She has become lame a couple of times, has been ouchy on her feet and the farrier agreed it is likely her alfalfa chafing consumption. On top of this, she decided that she didn't want to be caught at night unless boys had already left. She could be standing at the gate, when I walk to the gate to get everyone she would turn, walk away and refuse to come up to me if I called. Half of the time if I then walked over to her she would walk away. BUT as soon as I took the boys out of the pasture, even if they were just on the other side of the gate, she come right up to the gate waiting for me to bring her out and I would then have no problems catching her. I tried round penning her (which she did really well at but didn't fix the issue outside of the round pen), treats, ear scratches and chasing when she walked away and she kept up her behavior for 3 weeks.
Eventually I posted on a forum asking for ideas and someone that is about 45 mins away said they were looking for a friendly guard donkey for their alpacas. They had just started an alpaca farm and this was their first birthing season, they wanted something to guard the babies. I met them and really liked the couple, they met Daisy and fell in LOVE. I brought her down to their farm and Daisy hopped off of the trailer and walked through the yard like she owned the place. She didn't spook at anything and was very interested in everything. When she was put in with the alpacas, she immediately walked over to them and chased them off of a flake of hay on the ground. I have kept in touch with the people and Daisy is doing great. The alpacas decided she wasn't evil after 2 days and Daisy has stopped braying every day. They even have pics of their young grandson sitting on Daisy. She seems very happy. Chippy wasn't happy though, he stared at the trailer when we brought it home and looked for Daisy for a full 2 days before settling down. Thankfully he got over his heartbreak and he is now fine with having the TWH to buddy with.
Last weekend the vet was out for spring shots, he drew blood on the App for his yearly CBC and said his levels are the same where the were last year, yay! He has some kidney disease so I am glad it isn't getting worse. He did say, however, that he is glad I retired the App from jumping last year. Apparently when in bright sunlight, and his pupil is small, the App about 75% blind. *sniff* That makes me really sad, I guess I can't just pull the App out of retirement if the TWH can't do eventing : ( I guess he is going to have to be happy as a lesson horse and slowly adjust to life with limited-to-no visibility.
Since I haven't been able to ride, and I am trying to get back into a shape that isn't round, I have started walking. Taking a tip from the NuzzMuzz book I took the boys on a walk. I don't have any awesome trails to walk on but I did walk almost 1.5 miles last night on our quiet little road and it went really well! I expected the App to jig and rush like he can under saddle but he was an angel, they both were. They stopped when I did, backed up when I did and I held both of them on a very loose lead line. Walking win!
Yay for walking and a good home for Daisy. Sometimes just because we love an animal doesn't mean we are the best home for them.
ReplyDeleteAww so sad you had to rehome Daisy, but I totally understand... I wish I could find such a fantastic home for Faran. Also sad about Chips's eyesight, but awesome about his blood work. :D I think all the good outweighs the bad. That's always good.
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