I've wanted a horse since I was a little girl. After only a few months of horse shopping I found my cute mare Daenerys (Dani) in 2012. Then in 2015 we moved from CO to NC and bought horse property. We now have Chance a sweet Arabian gelding. Then in 2022 I bought a younger and gaited horse, Kentucky Mountain horse, named Seamus. This is the story of my continuing adventure in the world of horses in my backyard.
March 19, 2023
First Hoof Trim for Seamus at Geek Acres
March 16, 2023
Kentucky Horse Park
February 28, 2023
Seamus
February 20, 2023
Great Horse Shopping in Lexington, KY

Micromanaging Sellers- a personal rant
Part II Lexington Horse Shopping
I had to make this it's own post.... This may have been a personality thing or maybe some horse trainers out there feel like they need to be the ones to help someone connect with a horse....like people can't do it on their own.....sure I want to know a horses past and hear about their training but to feel like I'm under complete scrutiny is not a fun feeling. If you don't want to read a rant just move on to the fun post about my Lexington shopping experience here
I had an appointment in Lexington on Saturday with another breeder about an hour out from Lexington. I'd chatted on the phone with her before and had been stressing out about meeting her. The way she talked about her training process, and then the selling process where she was saying I would need to spend a full day or more looking at her horses (there is only the one for sale that I was interested in.....). Let's just put it plainly; I felt this was going to be a very particular and picky lady.
I felt like I was just holding a rope but I "led" him to the barn. I want to see the horse so I know where they are while leading if they are way behind me they could plow into me with no warning. I was starting to get on edge with this lady. We went to the barn and stood there talking while I held the gelding and pet him a bit. I don't even remember what she was saying at that point, I was already so nervous and shutting down. She lunged him and he was being a little silly and even plowed into her at one point like he wasn't seeing her. She then had me give it a try. We just had the long lead rope, no stick and string which I'm used to since you get a bit more distance between you and the horse....it's an extension of the arm. I slid my hand down the rope and up and did a point and cluck and got him moving but he was too close and I just had the rope to use to move him out of my space.
January 04, 2023
Bummed
December 26, 2022
Gaited Horse World
In any equine discipline there is bad riding that can often become the "norm". The bad riding can also be abusive.
Why do you need to use this overly restrictive posture to get a horse to collect? Answer: you don't!!!
Peanut rollers and unnatural gaits
Horses hoppling around in the arena....why is this attractive? It's not and it's definitely not pleasure.
Tenneesee Walker Pads/Soring and Chains
Pic from: https://good-horse.com/blog/end-big-lick/ |
Tenneesee Walking horses are a well known area. The stacked pads and high stepping that is gained unnaturally....why? Just why??
Gaited horses in General-harsh bits
Photo From: https://profchoice.com/i-7196459-wonder-bit-smooth-snaffle.html |
Equipment is often used as short cuts but just watching those high headed, and hollowed out gaiting horses makes me cringe. You don't have to use harsh bits. So many people ride in snaffles, bitless and heck, even in simple halters. Training takes time. A 30 day trainer brush up....you really think that will fully train a horse? Ugh.
All of this has come to the forefront as I've researched gaited horses, Rocky Mountains in particular. I've looked at two horses now and both were in a gag bit. I don't get it...if you want a soft horse you need a soft bit and you need to teach them to give to pressure not pull away from the pressure to avoid pain.
So far I'm hearing from some gaited horse people that "You can't ride that horse in a snaffle! You need this foot long shanked bit!" You can't gait without leaning way back or using this bit or having the horses head high up. Or apparently this so called "Wonder Bit" is the best bit for gaited horse, which is a leverage gag bit. Ugh. No thank you. I will put the work in with a good trainer to get the horse soft and subtle in a snaffle. I'm hoping I can find a Rocky that hasn't had such extreme short cuts used in it's training.
I've reached out to a local trainer that I really think may be a good fit when I find my next horse. She trains softness and has the same philosophy in training and riding as I've learned in recent years (the training that I had at Quintessential Arabians, great natural horsemanship) She also mentioned how she felt about harsh bits in the gaited world. As I've been doing research it's some of the same stuff I see in a lot of disciplines; there are few areas of the horse world untouched by short cuts to get the ribbon or the big bucks unfortunately.
You don't need harsh bits for most riding, a simple curb or a double jointed or even mullen mouth snaffle or heck even bridle less headstall can be used with success if you put the time in and stop taking short cuts. I've seen a lot of 2 year old Rocky Mountains or Tennessee walkers horses under saddle. Their horses don't grow much faster than the rest of the horses in the world.
I've ridden several horses for sale in the past couple months. I had some interesting experiences and have heard varied suggestions or ways to get the horse to gait. What it boils down to is training and any horse with the right temperament can be retrained. You don't a certain bit or a saddle to ride a gaited horse. You need a saddle that FITs properly and a bit (or no bit!) that the horse has been trained to understand and a horse that has been trained to carry their bodies in the best way to move properly.
I'll go into some details of the rides I've had but today I'm finishing up this post I started before Thanksgiving and am finally posting now. I had a ride on a horse today that I think may be the gaited horse I bring home. I have that gut feeling and that's a good thing to have!
November 13, 2022
Sundowner Trailer
I had sadly sold my old trailer last year, it was just rusting in place, large and needed more work again and I was just not up for another project that was going to take me away from my horses. Dani is not a loader and with her tender feet I think she may be more of a home body. I'll see what I can do about teaching her to load but I'm not going to hold my breath. Chance for sure is a home body since he is not rideable. So my two older ponies can live the great life at home and I can ride Dani around here.
My future plan is to begin looking for a younger trail horse that can trailer and is calm on trails. If I can get Dani to come along great I can may bring Steve too! But I do need a horse to stay with Chance and I doubt I'm going to expand from my two horses all the way to four at the moment. So for now the plan is a trail horse for myself that I can take all over.
I casually was looking at trailers online and was interested in a couple but never really pursued any. Then I saw an ad in the local agriculture paper for a 2004 Sundowner in Bahama, my very tiny town in NC. I called the seller up and then went over and checked out a very well kept two horse trailer with a walk in tack room. I was beyond happy with the trailer. So we bought it on the spot and brought it home...now for a name....Sunny is too obvious....
Only time will tell so I am keeping a close eye on her health. If we can get the track system to have less grass grow in it that would be fantastic. I definitely saw that she moved a lot more on it which is great! She and Chance are our forever horses so they stay here until their last days. The next horse I bring home will be the same, so I need to find the right riding partner. That's the long hard part for sure. Trailer was easy!
November 11, 2022
Chance's Crazy Month
While Steve and I were away in Iceland Chance had a run in with that spring gate I'd talked about in the previous post. I have no idea exactly what happened but the spring gate got caught on his tail, he probably ran around like crazy and Dani was probably chasing him. Then by the water trough he barreled through the top rail either kicked it or hit it when he tried to jump it....this is my feeble 24 almost 25 year old horse with all the health issues. He normally just plods around the paddock and pastures like the effort is enormous. Anyhow, he got out of the paddock and then ended up down the street where my neighbor later found him. All four legs had big scrapes on them and he was bleeding some. He was in pain.
My pet sitter was alerted while our friends who had been helping care for our dog and indoor critters got home from work and tried to patch up the fencing. My pet sitter called me and was really concerned about how Chance was moving, he wasn't putting weight on some of his legs. I told her to get the emergency vet out. We were afraid we'd be making a decision from Iceland that we didn't want to make. Luckily the vet treated his wounds, they weren't as bad as my pet sitter suspected and the pain meds helped him too. She kept him separate from Dani for the rest of the week. Poor guy and my poor pet sitter, she is in the process of cutting back to give herself more time for travel so I'm sure this was the final straw! Just kidding, she's still gonna help out but I found another farm sitter group for our travels so I won't have to worry about critter care.
So Chance recovered from that and then a few weeks later I had the vet out again on a Sunday because he was acting off. I suspected colic or impaction with his behavior and lack of eating or pooping. The vet came out and they said his gut sounds were good. We didn't know what to do and I wasn't going to make a call at that time. We decided pain meds to get him over what ever issue was going on and stayed on the course of wait and see. Moist food was provided. The next morning no better really and he seemed to be more agitated and not laying down for long at all when he did. This time they gave him more pain meds and electrolytes. I'd even called his former owner since she had not seen him in a while and I really wasn't sure what way we were going.
We did get one bowel movement and the gut sounds were still good. We became more aggressive with electrolytes and damp food. I got some alfalfa cubes that I soaked, some mash and electrolytes. Chance pulled through and began eating more. I kept him separate from Dani and soaked his food really well and continued with the pain meds for a day as well as continuing to finish with the alfalfa. He's been loosing weight so we've had him on more grain lately but not so recent as to cause this. I think we just need to really soak it for feeding him at this point since 1) he's getting more than just the 1lb a day and 2) he's older and his teeth are probably not as good.
A tooth floating is on the books for both horses, fall always seems to be that time of year. I'm very happy that he seems to be doing much better and is eating well again. He's got a lot of health issues with Cushings, Heaves, suspensory ligament degradation (DSL) and the vet questioned maybe sidewinders....still have to read about that. He holds his body off when he's in pain so that may just be a coincidence since I don't see it now that he is well. We are just trying to keep him happy and comfortable for as long as he desires. We'll know when he's done. I didn't think he was this time around and I'm glad we held on with pain meds and let him work through this minor issue. With the good gut sounds we still don't know if he was slightly impacted or colic or what. I wish horses could talk; happy to have my bay Arabian pony still here though! :-)