Calm, Forward, Straight

Calm, Forward, Straight

Monday, December 24, 2018

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Just another time when science is awesome!

This would come in so handy right about now. Article printed in full with credits.

Horses can use symbols to talk to us
By Virginia Morell


                                                                                                                                        Creative Commons  

There will never be a horse like Mr. Ed, the talking equine TV star. But scientists have discovered that the animals can learn to use another human tool for communicating: pointing to symbols. They join a short list of other species, including some primates, dolphins, and pigeons, with this talent. Scientists taught 23 riding horses of various breeds to look at a display board with three icons, representing wearing or not wearing a blanket. Horses could choose between a “no change” symbol or symbols for “blanket on” or “blanket off.” Previously, their owners made this decision for them. Horses are adept at learning and following signals people give them, and it took these equines an average of 10 days to learn to approach and touch the board and to understand the meaning of the symbols. All 23 horses learned the entire task within 14 days. They were then tested in various weather conditions to see whether they could use the board to tell their trainers about their blanket preferences. The scientists report online in Applied Animal Behaviour Science that the horses did not touch the symbols randomly, but made their choices based on the weather. If it was wet, cold, and windy, they touched the "blanket on" icon; horses that were already wearing a blanket nosed the “no change” image. But when the weather was sunny, the animals touched the "blanket off" symbol; those that weren’t blanketed pressed the “no change” icon. The study’s strong results show that the horses understood the consequences of their choices, say the scientists, who hope that other researchers will use their method to ask horses more questions.

doi:10.1126/science.aah7335

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Year in review - Part Two
All creatures great and small...


Val got his own post. Here's what the rest of the critters got up to in 2017...






These girls lay blue eggs...




Chickens love pumpkin!


One day's egg harvest this summer.






Lost this girl to one of my neighbor's starving and neglected hunting dogs. She was torn wide open...


I caught the offender skulking around the farmette again the next day.


Another chicken killer. I caught and relocated five coons this summer...


This doe and her twin fawns were fixtures on the farmette...




Deer like pumpkin as much as the hens do!


This tree frog was the size of my fingernail.


Hiding in the corn plant.


I saved a dozen anoles from Val's water trough this summer...


I rescued this one from the Shimmy Shack.


Another save from the trough...




This rat snake was about to shed - embiggen to see her milky eye...


Super healthy Hatteras King snake - she was relocated to my property...


I found this shed snake skin IN THE SHIMMY SHACK!!!


Planted plenty of fennel this year, which attracted these colorful caterpillars...


 

which led to lots of Black Swallowtail butterflies! I watched them pupate and hatch out.










A Gulf Fritillary, which feeds on wild passionflower vines, and isn't supposed to be this far north...




❤️❤️❤️ The indoor crowd ❤️❤️❤️






Monday, January 1, 2018

I hearby declare 2018 Year of the Unicorn!

No one is gladder than I am to see the back side of 2017.



Besides the myriad global crises - enough to sink anyone's ship of optimism - I've been navigating the world of mortgages, appraisals, stacks of (virtual) paperwork and endless hoops to be jumped through, since February. I am ecstatic to announce that on December 8th, I closed on my mortgage / construction loan. (there simply aren't enough exclamation points) Pilings should be going in this month, and theoretically (all fingers and toes crossed) I will have an actual house to live in by the end of the summer.

Before
During (yours truly operating the tree carrying tractor!)

After - clearing for house and new road in




While I am very fond of the Shimmy Shack - which made it possible to live on my land while preparing for the house building project - it is time for an upgrade. I'm ready to be doing something more than glorified camping. For example, as I write this - the thermostat (inside) has achieved a balmy 59 degrees. The refrigerator is on the porch. There are exactly seven minutes of hot water - only if I drain the tank, let it refill and hop in the shower immediately. 220 square feet. Not to mention hurricane season.

Shimmy Shack when she first moved in...

With this major life change comes a major blog change. I'm assuming that every spare minute of my life will be accounted for in the coming year making this new house happen, transitioning the family business, running the farmette, plus caring for my aging father. There is literally no time or money for extracurricular horse activities. So - for 2018, I'm changing the focus of the blog to chronicle the house building. With a little bit of luck, once things settle down - I can put more focus back into riding. Adulting is hard.

Big announcement made - now on to the Year in Review, which I'll break into a few posts as it's basically everything that happened that I didn't post all year long lol...

Val:

Val came through 2017 a little whiter, a little less fit, but still an adorable rascal.

Highlights (for him, not me) include the time he escaped and went on a wild runabout. Uncharacteristically, I did not freak out. I followed his tracks - which led over to visit his girlfriend Honey Bee's house next door first, and then off down the trail to the beach. By the time I grabbed his halter and made sure he hadn't headed out to the road, he came galloping back off the trail. I stood in the middle of the path and he skidded to a stop, put his head down to be haltered, and meekly followed me back to his paddock.

Unfortunately, Val absolutely tore his feet to shreds during his escapade. His soles separated, curled up and away from his walls, and the walls broke off well up his foot. It was a disaster, and took several months to correct. I learned quite a bit about trimming from the incident - mostly what not to do...

His girlfriend Honey Bee
Some of the damage from the runabout
 Looks nice, but I took way too much toe off...


Overtracking
A highlight for me was a blogger visit in May. Nicole (Wait for the Jump) and her delightful husband Carlos spent the weekend here on the island. We had a lovely time. Great meals, long beach walks, tons of horse talk, and best of all quality time with Val. I hopped on to warm him up, and then Nicole took him for a spin. He was a gentleman as usual.





A not great-at-all thing that happened in 2017, was the discovery of another good sized melanoma on Val's upper lip, close to where the bit rests. We've been experimenting with the bitless bridle. I can't figure why I hadn't noticed this before, which leads me to believe it may be fast growing. This is in addition to melanomas on his anus and the underside of his dock. After consultation with the vet, I'm going the watchful waiting route for now.

One thing that hasn't changed in the nine (!) years I've had Val, is his cleverness and sense of humor. Every afternoon I spread some scratch for the chickens. Val generally expects to receive a handful of sunflower seeds - a toll to pass through the gate if you will - which I withheld this particular day due to cheeky behavior on the way to the grazing pen. He shook his head impatiently, stretched his neck out over the gate with his best treat face, then offered multiple smooches. When that didn't work he went through his entire trick repertoire one after the other in rapid fashion. I was rolling... I love that horse. ❤️❤️❤️


My favorite view

Christmas card outtake
Doing what he does best (besides eat)
Year of the Unicorn!!
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...