Sunday, July 7, 2013

Gold Country 2013

This was almost a post full of inappropriate, barely veiled wiener jokes, but fortunately after giving everyone a good show of it Friday afternoon, Scrappy kept it in his pants the rest of the weekend. And therefor this will be a totally serious, no nonsense write up with just the facts--and the facts are, the ride vet actually opened his part of the Friday night meeting with a wiener joke! True story.

Anyway, the long and short of it--HAH--is that I have myself a seriously wonderful new horse. Rushcreek Tracer, "Scrappy," is smart, sweet, quiet, engaged, cute, forward, smooth, and loves to eat and drink. He also apparently finds buckskin Mustangs rather inspiring, and as such went for our short ride Friday afternoon with his flag flying High! Keep in mind I'd had him for a week and have never taken an essentially unknown horse to a ride right off the bat like that. I didn't know if he was going to mount something or WHAT was going to happen, but I did know that the scandalized ladies walking by whispering, "OMG, that horse had an erection!!!" had me almost as entertained as I was concerned. Despite the grand display Scrappy never escalated from there, he gave some throaty little stallion  nickers but would then see a horse or something else and wander off to eat. We rode the LD Saturday with N and Willow with no parts dangling in the breeze, so go figure. We'll see if this is behavior only reserved for (very flirty) mares, but it was definitely ride camp entertainment of a different sort!

To backtrack, we left Friday morning, but barely. Thursday night my husband and I went out to feed together and found my 2 yr old, Sheza, dead lame with a super swollen left hind leg and mildly swollen right hind leg. We immediately set her up in a stall with fans (this was the end of a week straight of 105+ degrees), and hosed and iced her leg that night and the next morning. Sheza was cheery and eating but VERY lame, though this was also a dramatic 2 yr old's first ever lameness so it may have looked worse than it was. She took to the hosing and ice boots impressively well, thank goodness, as neither of us had the emotional or physical energy left to be battling her to help her in the nasty heat. The swelling decreased slightly after hosings Thursday night and the lameness improved by Friday morning. I was a hot mess trying to decide if I should go the ride on my virtually unknown horse and potentially die or stay home and stare at my lame filly tragically. My husband reminded me my vet was gone til Monday anyway and told me to take a deep breath and go to my ride already, promising to keep on icing and hosing Sheza's hind legs. Thank goodness I listened to him, grabbed Scrappy from the field, and went for it.

Hey guys, I just got here, am I leaving already?

 It was an uneventful 2 hr drive out to Georgetown and the shady Dru Barner ride camp, where we found J and Sedona already arrived and saving us a spot in the sturdy permanent camp corrals.
 Scrappy backed out of the straight load beautifully (his 2nd time in a straight) and went right to work on whatever food I would put in front of him. Here's Scrappy settling in and Sedona the sexy Mustang lurking at the fence, saying "come here little boy, I'll give you some candy!"
 Another local riding buddy, C, camped next to J and eventually N found us and moved her rig over next to us, too. We were all set up for another fun ride weekend!

 Scrappy had never worn boots until I tried them on him the weekend I bought him, so this ride made it his 2nd and 3rd time ever going in boots. I stuck with front Renegades only because I've heard so many stories of people trying out hind boots at rides with varying degrees of failure, and didn't need to add yet another New Unknown to the equation. He had gone great in the Rennys through muck and water and speed and hills on our trial ride, so I felt good about his front boots.
 This was about the time in the tale that Scrappy started flying his flag, and as you know we tacked up and went for a ride in full glory, as it were. Again, barely knowing Scrappy, I just didn't know what I was in for even riding at camp, let alone the whole surprise wang-dangler thing. Scrappy was just as happy to be out and moving as it appeared he was, and walked out nicely, did all I asked,  and was happy to get back to camp and settle down to eat some more. And eat he did, chowing a half bale of hay, a bag of carrots, and about 6 mashes in the 2 days we were there.

We vetted in with a pulse of 42 and all As but a B for impulsion. Turns out Scrappy is very unimpressed by trotting out for vets, something I clearly need to practice. He unenthusiastically jogged after me for Melissa Ribley who promptly said on our return, "You know, I thought he was lame but he just moves funny!" Be still my heart, I think I lost another year off my life when I heard the word "lame" come out of her mouth, after my week of toting Desire to Loomis and back for lameness only to discover that her filly was dead lame right before leaving for the ride. Scrappy was not in fact lame, he just doesn't lift his feet very high and sort of paddles, so it does look a little funny, but is incredibly smooth to ride. Anyway we got our number chalked on up high above his big Rushcreek number and I started to breathe again.

Friday night J cooked us dinner--woohoo!--we went to the ride meeting at 8, and then it was bedtime. Well for us, not for all the camp, as there was some hootin' and hollerin' of both the horse and human kind for quite a while. I was pretty nervous that night, having no idea what I was in for at ride start in the morning, let alone throughout the 30 miles. He has a nice little record and is clearly a good, kind horse but I've been through and seen and heard enough drama in the last few years that I swear I was as nervous as if it were my first ride ever. At that point I was still wondering if he was going to go 30 miles with his junk out!!

 As usual I slept like total shit, but I could hear a fleece blanketed Scrappy steadily chewing away most of the night and that was reassuring. The 50 started at 6 am, while the 30 mile LD started at 8 am and at least one of the Ride N Ties started in between, maybe both, not sure. Camp on ride morning was the usual mix of pockets of frantic activity and moments of peace around the rigs where horses had already left. Sedona wasn't happy to be taken away from Scrappy for tacking up but she settled in, and fortunately Scrappy was great. I tacked him at the trailer and he called and looked around if I walked away but if I was with him he was totally quiet and sweet and engaged with me. Really just a phenomenal heart and brain on this guy!
 After chatting with N about what sort of ride we both wanted, we agreed to ride together again and after letting the majority of riders head away out of sight, we hit the trail for our first AERC ride together!

Scrappy is quiet but he LOVES to go, just ask his perky ears :)
 I swear this photo could be Desire, especially since he's wearing her gear
 They had switched the order of the loops this year but the trail was the same, so much of it was familiar to N and I, as we rode it together last year on Willow and Blaze. A lot of shady forested dirt road, some great single track, minimal technical footing, but a fair amount of grades. Not to say it was a steep or hilly ride necessarily, just that you were going up or down perhaps more often than you realized, with a few very short, steep sections thrown in as well.
 Trail marking was phenomenal, very clear with ribbons, plates, signs, and chalk on the ground. Water was plentiful with troughs and natural streams available and there were even a few standing puddles out on the trail between water troughs in the first half of the ride.
 We had a hard time finding a spot to ourselves for a while as we caught a few people but mostly people were catching and lingering ahead of us. Scrappy was happy to trot along or do his incredibly smooth, powerful little canter. He really is a powerful little engine and uses his hind end so naturally and well. We les, went beside, or tucked in behind Willow and at one point were literally cantering in a pack of horses and he seemed fine with it all. He only pulled at the bit a little when he wasn't allowed to escalate to race mode but I think I only gave him one firm "Knock that shit off!" about anything, all day.
 The LD had one 30 minute vet check at 16 miles, out of camp, tack off optional, criteria 60 bpm. We trotted to the 1/4 mile to Vet sign then I hand walked him in and he pulsed at 48 immediately. The hold had loads of hay and horse mash and human food, and volunteers to stand with your horse if you needed to go pee in the bushes like I did! Melissa vetted us again with As and a 40/42 CRI, and then we failed miserably at the trot out. That is, Scrappy was in snooze and eat mode and was completely not buying this let's trot for no reason thing. I drug him down and back at a walk, embarrassed, and then trotted him out and back again with the help of a guy waving a big cowboy hat around. The vet seemed sort of amused by him, since she could see by his look and other criteria he wasn't sick or exhausted, he was just well, lazy I guess. I promised I would practice trotting out religiously at home and slunk back to our grub spot. I *will* practice trotting him out every time I pull him from the field, but I also have suspicions he'll always be laid back about the trot out. It's fine with me since he obviously knows to power down and go into conservation mode at checks and camp, but we certainly need to at least do a presentable mellow jog if nothing else, haha.

When we headed out from the hold Scrappy took about a mile to be excited about going again.



Soon enough he was all business again as we headed steadily back to camp, and supposedly past it for a "trot-by" check, though when we went by there was no vet present, then out past camp on the last little 6 mile loop. Scrappy was not amused about being back at camp but not being allowed to go sleep and eat, and with the gravelly footing at the start of the loop we slowed down to a steady meander for a while. I will definitely be booting him in the hind in the future, as he took the occasional ouchy step on the worst of the gravel, but the front boots worked flawlessly once again.

The last loop was beautiful and green and forested, but you wouldn't have guessed it from this unpleasant toasty moment out on gravel just before it got pretty:
 See, it's already way prettier!

 Even had a nice view point at a break in the trees
 N and I were sweaty and filthy and happy to be almost done as we both hand walked our horses up  the last hill and out around camp to the Finish. Scrappy's pulse was 42 at the Finish and he walked quiet as a lamb back to his food pile.
Predictably he barely trotted out for the final check, this time not for Melissa, so I mentioned the crappy impulsion grades even at check in and the vet agreed that he could see Scrappy was a quiet horse who was a little tired rather than a completely exhausted horse who could barely trot. Scrappy did have 2 little ouchy spots under the saddle which I'll address by rechecking fit but also experimenting with a crupper and remembering to ride with a tighter girth. I had some issues with my saddle sliding around on his short round body and a crupper might be a very good thing, though I've honestly never trained a horse to one before. I don't doubt Scrappy would humor the human and wear a fluffy strap under his tail if he was asked, that's the sort he is!

We stayed for a delicious ride dinner and I wasn't feeling my usual impulse to pack like the wind and get home, so I stayed the night again. Most of camp left Saturday night, including J and Sedona, but Scrappy once again impressed me by sending Sedona off with a few whinnies before turning back to his mash and quietly eating and sleeping alone for the rest of the night.

I couldn't be happier with this little grey horse! He is out in the field right now, still eating like a champ. I just knew we were going to have some funny ride moments together and sure enough there were some serious laughs on our very first outing. I am so looking forward to what's ahead for us!

LOOK, Wieners!
** In other news, Desire is looking good moving around in her paddock, I am to start riding her and see how she feels in about about week. Sheza's swelling and lameness have both decreased markedly today, though both hinds are still visibly swollen. Calling my vet at least for a chat in the morning..

Monday, July 1, 2013

"Is it that Grey?" Untold Bits from Wild West & MUCH More

I'm generally pretty inclusive on all details of my horsey life on this blog, but now it's time for a little confession. There was a fairly significant, kind of amusing part of the Wild West  story from a few weekends ago that I left out, and is best explained by the title:

"Is it that Grey?"

The night before I left for Wild West a sale listing for an 8 yr old 14.2 hand grey Rushcreek gelding came up on my local Craigslist. With Desire's trail future uncertain, Blaze content cruising LDs, and Sheza a few years out from saddle work, I've always got my eye out for that just right 6-10 yr old partner to do 50s and multi-days with as my teenagers age and my filly grows up. Joey was a cool horse and great learning experience and I am happy that I set him on a path to his new home where he is well suited and enjoyed daily, just as I am grateful and happy to now welcome Rushcreek Tracer, or "Scrappy," who I think is the perfect steady partner for me.

Back to the story, I exchanged a quick flurry of emails with the folks selling him and they assured me they would in fact be heading to Wild West themselves and would bring the gelding along for folks to look at. What good fortune! I've driven hours and hundreds of miles to look at horses, and here was a great prospect of the right age, size, and experience, being brought to the very spot we were headed! Too good to be true, I wondered? I knew Rushcreek's had a great reputation for sound bodies and minds, and this guy Scrappy, AERC# H48905,  had a pretty darn solid record with no pulls after 2 LDs, 2 50s, and a successful go at the Virginia City 100 miler last year!

So basically, when I wasn't riding 2 LDs or joshing around camp I was making endless circles around the Wild West camp with J or N going, "is that the grey?" "wait, is THAT the grey?" There were actually a few Rushcreek greys there that weren't him, and then there was this cute, stout little guy with a smushy smeared illegible maybe-brand? standing next to a clearly branded Rushcreek. N and I thought we had found Scrappy on Friday night, but we were never sure until Sunday when I saw the young couple walking by with a Rushcreek grey and piped up. Turns out that little stout grey from Friday night WAS Scrappy, and yes his Rushcreek clover is terribly smudged. Just gives him character, right! :)

After liking the look and air of him at Wild West, we made plans and met at Spenceville last Saturday and rode 6 or 7 miles with a few nice hills in 100+ heat. Scrappy had never worn boots and gently, non-dramatically tried to lay down when I put a boot on his front hoof. We said NO and he stood right back up politely. After a firm word the Renegades went right on nicely and he stepped out in them with no issue.

Scrappy decked out in a hodge podge of gear, but it worked! 
We went through a few streams and some majorly sucking mud and trotted and cantered hills without a single boot issue. Got to love Renegades! Scrappy was a steady, mostly confident, but non aggressive ride. He has a very kind eye and Blaze's zen-like air to him, but is a business-like mover and really steps out at the walk and gets er done at the trot. He liked to cut off the other horse in close quarters but wasn't mean about it, and he jog-trotted away from them happily on a loose rein. His movement is efficient, non flashy, not a lot of knee action. Comfortable to ride and feels like he'll go forever. He has a short neck and is very good with his feet, so I seriously need to learn to sit back and relax instead of being up in his face steering like I do on my other horses. He uses his hind end as a surprisingly powerful and steady motor of his own volition and is a pleasure to ride. I finished the ride in a halter with no bit. He looks at things and will smoothly slide away if he thinks the footing isn't great, but there was not a single spook to be had, hallelujah. He ate everything he could and drank at the stream crossings, and was thisclose to drinking out of my water bottle back at the trailers. He likes to sniff everything and likes goodies, for sure!

After the ride we cooled the horses in the creeks and I gave them a deposit. :)
 
 My appointment this morning with Desire was at the new Loomis Equine Vet Facility in Penryn which was in fact a few streets over from where Scrappy lived. The plan was to spend a few hours at the vet, load Scrappy in with Desire, and head home. It was hot, like 105+ hot.

At Loomis facility, it's very clean and nice! 
Yeah well, that's why there are plans A, B and C, right? Turns out they had me listed under the wrong doctor, so in fact the lameness specialist that I needed was busy until tomorrow and would most likely get the extent of the exam and work up done Wednesday morning. Board including feed and mashes was reasonable at $28 a night, we'd hauled this far, and considering the worsening heat of the afternoon I didn't mind her getting worked with earlier in the day instead.

Desire checking out the barn
 It was incredibly weird to leave her there but leave her we did, and they promised to call regularly with updates as the doctor got to her and the work up progressed. The vet we talked with did watch her walk and trot out and did a quick evaluation confirming a definite deterioration in her left flank and some short striding/lameness in that left hind. So, the wait continues!

Bye Desire, be good. She promptly took a huge pee and crap in her stall, btw, classic :)
 We picked up Scrappy pretty non eventfully. He had never been in a straight load and was certainly concerned about it, but totally willing to try when the gal asked him to go in. He stepped in, out, in, out, and with futher encouragement made it cautiously all the way in and started gobbling hay. All right, good boy!

On the way out we noticed we were leaking what looked like transmission fluid and we had a rather tense haul home, to say the least! The tranny is definitely leaking and the truck is going in first thing in the morning but THANKFULLY we made it home safely.

Here's Scrappy checking out his digs, currently in the big front field with the goats, and the Blaze/Sheza/ mini herd sharing a fenceline.

They were all enthusiastic to see him, then noticed maybe it wasn't Desire and paused a good while before continuing down to meet him.
 This is very flashy for him, I sent this to his previous owners and she said she had never seen him so animated. Go guy!
 Surprised and swerving away from the white lurking goat
 Sheza has decided it's time to go say HI
 They hung in the shade and then came charging back up the hill when they saw me in the pasture topping off the troughs. Pretty picture seeing he and the filly power trot up the hill. towards me!
 Enjoying the shade
 The dorks coming to say hi, but Sheza had to spook at the water trough on the way by, Haha
 Blazer looking good after his multi day experience
The horses are still striding around checking out who's who and I'll check on them again in a few at feeding time. Not sure I'll make Gold Country ride this weekend as planned, my priorities now are getting the truck fixed and getting Desire home hopefully Wednesday but maybe Thursday at this rate. We'll see!

Hey--Welcome home Scrappy!

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

*Gulp*

After 2 days of steady rain, everything has been washed clean and more importantly--rock hard summer hooves have all been miraculously softened for a day or two! I seized the opportunity to trim Desire's hooves this morning and Ah, yes, despite her maniacal mare machinations--think constant lean, twist, turn torque--it was *much*easier to whip through all four hooves. I was pretty pleased with my trim so of course forgot to take photos! D'oh. She did have some stinky thrushy areas in each foot which is par for the course for her. Even without the damp factor she is constantly shitting like a brontosaurus and standing in it. I clean her hangout areas and feet as often as possible but she really is a piglet. Anyway I sprayed good ole Vetericyn in there which so far has made a difference quickly on the thrush.

If I close my eyes, maybe she'll disappear 
 After major mare spa time I called Loomis Basin Equine Clinic and got us an appointment for next Monday at 11 am. I told them I thought I needed ultrasounds on her left hind leg with a brief overview of the situation. Because really, I'm not totally sure what I need. I've detected that she is intermittently lame/short striding on her left hind, and after flexion tests it was clear to my vet as well. She seemingly has muscle wasting in her left flank but was negative for EPM. Her hind legs creak and crack and she seems to have some difficulty holding herself up for trims, or at least will teeter on the toe of one hind hoof when I work on fronts, and sort of fall out from under herself even when the hoof is let down very slowly. I have used various joint supplements on her in the couple of years I've owned her and she is currently on Smartpak Smartflex III.

Ugh, boring, feed me or point me down a trail
 So that's the lay of the land. I've never hauled a horse in to a vet for anything before, honestly. I've always had vets that came out to the barn, and have been really lucky on injuries/drama (knocking on all available wood). Desire and Blaze are my first horses that I've had at the time of aging into their late teens, and I have no experience with hind end/leg issues like Desire's. So as much as I am terrified to find out from ultrasounds or xrays that there is all sorts of Wrong in there, I am also incredibly ready for answers. The forecast for Monday calls for 102 degrees, so I may be breaking out the electrolytes as if going on an endurance ride, with the stress and heat!


Gawd, she still isn't gone is she, I'll just rub my leg and squint real hard and maybe then POOF! she'll turn into a big bucket of mash
Quick note, Blaze is looking and feeling great and is back bossing his mini, filly, and 2 goats around like that 55 miles never even happened. :-)