I blame the boosters!

Our sports boosters held their big fundraiser dinner last weekend, so I volunteered to bake a couple of cakes for the dessert auction.  I haven’t baked for awhile (partly due to the whole lightning strike incident), but what the heck, right?  It’s for a good cause.

I must have offended the bad cooking fairy somewhere along the line, because she was definitely out to get me.  I couldn’t even find the recipes at first!  My favorite is Mary Ellen’s spice cake.  Whoever or whatever Mary Ellen is/was has been lost to the sands of time, but it is a great recipe and I couldn’t find it!  Finally had to take all of the cards out of the file and go through them one by one—it was hiding in the dinner section (placed there, no doubt, by the fairy in a fit of devilry late at night!).  I also have a killer carrot cake recipe that I never did locate, so I finally settled on plan B—the CIA cookbook.  For the uninitiated, it is not a cookbook for spies, or even a collection of recipes so secret you have to kill yourself after cooking them.  The CIA is the Culinary Institute of America and they have uber-amazing recipes plus how to cook everything known to man (see chapter 17—how to prepare the squirrel your son shot and killed with his slingshot so you are making him eat it!)  It also doubles as exercise equipment.  You could get in serious shape bench-pressing this thing—it weighs about 50 pounds.  It also contains the best trick I have ever learned when it comes to making cakes—add pastry cream to the frosting to give it texture and subtlety of flavor.  The only challenge with the CIA is that all recipes are restaurant quantity and measured in grams and drams and scruples and have to be scientifically re-engineered for normal portions.

So the plan was to cook the cakes Wednesday night, make the pastry cream Thursday night and frost them Friday night.  I got home from work Wednesday night and found that, somehow, every dish in the kitchen had managed to crawl out of its respective cupboard and get itself dirty!  I know I complain about cleaning, but I really do try to keep up with the kitchen cleaning and David is stellar at helping out with this—I suspect the bad cooking fairy had a fairy banquet while I was at work that day, but have no way of proving it.  Still, I’m pretty sure I heard her giggling in the background as I washed and dried them all.  Then it was on to the mise en place.  For those of you who don’t possess the CIA cookbook, this is where you drag out all of the dishes you just washed and prepare to get them dirty again!

After whipping up the Mary Ellen’s Spice Cake, I got to wash all of the dishes again, and then I was faced with a dilemma—I had used my only two round cake pans for the spice cake…  what to do with the carrot cake?   I decided to cook it Thursday night, so I could make it round.  As I waited for the first cake to cook, I thought perhaps I should at least peel and grate the carrots so I would have a head start on it.  The next thing you know, I had decided to bake the cake that night as soon as the spice cake was out of the pans.

Only the spice cake wouldn’t come out of the pans!   Absolutely not, NO thank you!  I didn’t know what to make of it.  I tried to be as gentle and as careful as possible, but it simply wouldn’t budge and, in the end, as careful as I was, I still made a mess of it.  I would have to bake another spice cake if I wanted something nice looking for the auction.

So now I had a carrot cake to bake, another spice cake to bake, one very mangled spice cake to deal with, and two VERY stuck on pans to wash.  I decided to make the carrot cake rectangular instead.   I got the carrot cake in the oven, washed all of the dishes again until I finally got to the two cake pans.  These two pans are non-stick and I had used Pam spray, but the exterior layer of the cake seemed to have permanently bonded itself to the interior of the pans anyway.  Obviously, the bad fairy had switched my Pam with a can of spray craft glue!  By the time I had the carrot cake out of the oven and cooling, I decided the spice cake was going to have to wait until Thursday night and I went to bed.

Did I mention it was windy?  David and I thought we were being so smart, building our house on a ridge to take advantage of the view.   And most of the time life is idyllic and we can sit and enjoy our lovely view with lovely pastoral music floating around in our heads.  But when the wind blows, our vents flap, the water heater exhaust whistles and the siding and other random unidentified objects bang and whump and rattle all night long!  Wednesday night, I got a grand total of two hours of sleep.  So Thursday night, I was too tired to do anything but fall into bed and sleep.

So the plan became:  bake cake and make pastry cream Friday night, frost Saturday morning.  The fund raiser was Saturday night.  This time, I lined the pan with parchment.  It stuck again wherever there was no parchment, but I was still able to remove the cakes intact this time.   All I had to do now was make the pastry cream and I could fall back into bed and try to make up one or two more hours of lost sleep.  Unfortunately, the bad kitchen fairy cursed my pastry cream making skills last year and she obviously hasn’t let up.  I have made it a lot of times over the years, but it wasn’t until I was making a trifle last year (using a non-CIA approved recipe) that I read the sentence “if the pastry cream is lumpy, run it through a fine sieve.”

I thought to myself, “Hmmm…  My pastry cream never comes out lumpy…”

We all know the end of that story.  I have a theory that when you bring it to a boil after adding the eggs, you should actually bring it to a boil more quickly than I have been.  I am planning to experiment with that soon because I plan to make a trifle out of the mangled remains of the first spice cake.  I have another theory that I used to cook it in an old pot that was, essentially, the final remains of my mother’s old pressure cooker.  The handle was broken and there was no lid or little pressure thingy, but it was heavy cast aluminum.  I doubt I still have it—I am using a new enamel clad cast iron dutch oven.  If the cooking process doesn’t solve the problem, I may blame the pot—after all, it always worked in my mother’s pot!  Although… it could just be that evil fairy again—I may be cursed to forever produce lumpy pastry cream.  I guess it’s better than being a frog!

The real problem with my pastry cream, however, revealed itself Saturday morning when I went to frost the cakes.  In trying to prevent it becoming lumpy, I, apparently, didn’t get it thick enough.  So I mixed up the first batch of frosting, whipped in some pastry cream, and produced a sort of heavy syrup—definitely not something I could frost a cake with!  So… second batch of frosting for the second spice cake later, I had one cake finished.  Then, apparently, the bad kitchen fairy cast a forgetfulness spell on me because I mixed some of the pastry cream into the frosting for the carrot cake, thinking I would use a smidge less this time, and wound up with cream cheese “syrup.”  AGAIN?  How did I manage THAT?  Half an hour later, I was completely out of powdered sugar but had managed to produce an appropriately frosted and decorated carrot cake as well.

But that’s not even the end of the story!  I mean, the cakes sold, blah, blah, blah!  We raised money, etc… etc…  But… Remember how heavy the CIA cookbook is?  Friday night, I put the lid to the butter dish on the book as a paperweight to keep it open to the pastry cream recipe.  While my back was turned, the bad cooking fairy gave it a good push and it crashed to the floor and exploded into (it turns out) several million shards.  David graciously swept it up right away, but he missed a few splinters here and there.   By Sunday night, I had proven that the most efficient way to clean glass slivers off of the floor is using bare feet!  It turns out that not only am I not agile enough to pull glass splinters out of my feet anymore, but I’m too blind to see them anyway.  This explains why I left work early Monday so that a doctor could shoot my feet full of Novocain and dig shards of glass out of them.  And THAT is what I blame the boosters for—Novocain shots—OUCH!!

And then sometimes… you’re wrong…

Let’s face it—my vet was stumped.  We thought we had this thing figured out, but then… maybe we didn’t?  There is no question that you can look at an x-ray of Dolly’s hoof and see a crack in the navicular bone.  I had dutifully gone home and applied shoes and padding as prescribed to relieve pressure on the crack, but there was no improvement—in fact—it might even be a teeny bit worse?  Either we weren’t fixing the problem correctly, or we weren’t fixing the correct problem.

For me, the immediate concern was getting to the vet with everything I would need to reapply the shoe and goo once we had treated the hoof.  It was one of those perfect, clear, winter mornings—23 degrees out.  I had to hitch up the trailer and collect everything on my F-14 launch checklist before loading up and heading out.   Somehow, I managed to pull this off and even hit the road a few minutes early.  Little did I realize that I was headed for yet another (even longer this time) marathon session of attempted diagnosis.

My vet wasn’t happy with the whole “it’s not improving” thing.  I tried to take credit for a bad shoeing job, but he said it looked really great and should have helped—so much for martyrdom!  So he blocked the hoof yet again.  It is a real testament to Dolly’s good nature that she is still putting up with all of the needle sticks.  And… um… well,… no improvement.  So he had me saddle up and ride (no mean feat when it has, by this time, warmed up to around 30.  Dolly was “a bit fresh,” as they say.) Then we blocked higher, then ride some more, then ultrasound, lather, rinse repeat.  He was not ruling out anything.  (There was even a fellow there who has been using infrared thermography to diagnose lamenesses and he had this guy check everything from the neck down.)   After 4 hours, much discussion, ultrasound and many x-rays, ride in circles at a trot,  and numbing Dolly’s leg to the point where she kept doing the classic “I can’t feel my leg!”   He finally found something.

On an x-ray of her knee, he found an old fracture line and just above it, on the inside of the splint bone is a blind splint.  You can barely see it on the ultrasound.  He thinks it is putting pressure on the nerve which is causing the pain—a neuropathy!  That explains why there is no swelling or heat.  It also explains why shoeing, stem cell therapy and bute didn’t help, and why it didn’t get worse (or better) with more riding. Shoeing changes the forces on the suspensory ligament, which changes how it applies pressure to the nerve, so it also explains why she might have gotten a bit worse.  There may also be some involvement with the navicular bone although it is hard to say how much.

So he shot it up with cortisone in the hopes of relieving it and we will see how it pans out as I increase her riding over the next month or so.  Surgery is a possibility, but the more I read about it, the less I like the prognosis.  I drove home feeling a bit like a deflated balloon.  What more could be wrong with her?   And is this really “it,” or is there something else lurking in there that we haven’t found yet—grrr…

And the punch line of this whole affair?  We never did pull that shoe and inject the hoof, so I didn’t have to reapply it complete with messy goo—at least I can be happy about that part!

Sometimes when you’re right–that’s not a good thing…

There are some phrases you don’t ever want to hear your vet say.  Like “Holy Crap!” for example.  I heard this two years ago as the vet examined an ultrasound of Dolly’s hind leg.  Roughly translated, it means “this is going to cost you a lot!”  I had taken her in for what I thought was a lameness in her right front hoof.  The vet watched her trot around and around and finally had me saddle up and ride her around at a trot.  Finally, he said he thought it was in the hind leg, not the front hoof, which led to the ultrasound, which led to “Holy Crap!”  And yes, it led to me spending a large chunk of money trying to make things right.  Dolly had torn the suspensory ligament nearly completely off of where it attaches at the hock.  If it wasn’t for stem cell therapy, Dolly would be a broodmare right now.

The vet told me the success rate with stem cell therapy was running around 94%, so as a math teacher, I figured this was a pretty good bet.  Of course, you always wake up late at night wondering if you are going to fall into the 6% it doesn’t work on, but then you take a benedryl and go back to sleep.  So I spent enough money on stem cell therapy to buy a couple of horses, justifying it because Dolly is a nice horse and was only 7 years old at the time and because I really don’t want to pay to feed another couple of horses (who will probably tear their suspensory ligaments and also need stem cell therapy).  In the end, I probably still saved money!

The first thing that happens in SCT is that they remove a bunch of fat cells from the horse’s rump.  Those get sent off to the company, which magically transforms them into stem cells and sends them back to the vet’s office where they are injected into the horse at the site of the injury.  (I figure some human doctor is bound to capitalize on this soon:  “We specialize in liposuction and stem cell therapy!  Fix your injuries and lose inches off your waist!”) Naturally, the diagnosis came in November so the actual therapy took place right before Christmas.  There’s nothing like trying to rehab a horse after stem cell therapy… in December… in Nevada.  “Hand walk,” the instructions said—more like flying a kite.  I remember having David plow me a track through 8 inches of snow with the tractor so that I could walk her.

So after months of careful rehab, Dolly finally seemed to have recovered.  My vet gave me the go ahead to do whatever I wanted with her.  Except she was still off on the right front hoof!  How off was she?  You know how they grade lamenesses 1 to 5?  This was like a grade 0.5 lameness.  So I fiddled and I farted around.  I tried barefoot, barefoot with boots, boots with pads, glue on shoes, rubber glue on shoes, rubber shoes with pads, aluminum shoes with pads, aluminum shoes without pads, hopping up and down on one foot and chanting mantras—none of it really helped.  I began to call it her “offishness.”  It had a life of its own.  I was worried that it was her hind leg still, so I kept having the vet check that instead of just saying “I’ll pay for x-rays.  Take a bunch of that hoof!”  (Like I should have.) Prescription—keep on riding.

Then two things happened—Mom fell and broke her hip, necessitating a lot of time off for Dolly, and Easyboot announced the introduction of the Glove in new wide sizes.  So I pulled Dolly’s shoes and ordered a pair.  I was so excited when I received my new boots.  I put them on the next day and they fit perfectly!  I saddled up, put Dolly on line to warm up… and she was lamer than ever!  (And this after a month’s rest.)  Put on the old boots—not so lame.  Tried frog pads in old boots—wow was she lame!  Whatever it was, I knew it was in the heel and I finally knew I was right—there was something wrong with that hoof!  The tightness of the new boot irritated it and pressure under the frog did the same.

This time I got smart.  I videotaped Dolly trotting around in my arena with and without a rider and with and without boots.  David (aka Hollywood Dave) used his movie making skills to burn this onto a DVD which I then took to the vet with me.  He finally saw what I was seeing!  So we x-rayed the living daylights out of the right front hoof.  This time, he said “That’s interesting,” when he saw the x-ray.  Turns out she has a cracked Navicular bone.  (I never even knew they could break the navicular bone, but it turns out they can.  Hers is just cracked.  If she had broken it, she would have been dead lame.) I guess now we’ll see how “That’s interesting” compares to “Holy Crap!” on the grand scale of vet statement to repair expense proportionality.

The vet thinks she did it sometime in the last year.  I will defer to his professional opinion, but I suspect it could have happened a lot earlier since she has been lame for a long time.  I suspect that this could be the original lameness I took her in for two years ago and it was just overshadowed by the suspensory injury.  Still, the vet is very hopeful that we can bring her back to soundness.  His prescription is to put on aluminum shoes that are very similar to the Natural Balance shoes I was using only they have a bit more extreme breakover and wider web in the heel, and then pad her up with Vettec products to support the sole and decrease pressure on the navicular bone.  The nice thing about shoeing my own horse is that he just handed me a pair of shoes—no long explanations necessary.

So that weekend, I pulled out all of my equipment, sharpened my knives, rounded up my hammers, which always seem to be wandering off somewhere, and pulled out my big box-o-Vettec products.  The actual process of attaching the shoes is not really a big deal (don’t tell my back that, though)—it’s applying the padding that is a challenge.  Using any of the Vettec products is kind of like flying a fully armed F-14 off of an aircraft carrier.  I actually need to create a checklist so that I won’t forget anything before starting.  It would help if I installed a hitching post up by the garage so I could tie the horse up and go grab the three things I forgot, but as soon as I install one, it is going to be in the way of some new home improvement project and I really don’t want to have to move the darned thing!  First, you have to have stuff to clean the hoof with—denatured alcohol, wire brushes, couple of nails, screwdriver, hoof knife, hoof pick, because the hoof has got to be clean.  Next, you need stuff to dry the hoof—rags, heat gun, extension cord for the heat gun, remember to plug in the extension cord for the heat gun, because the hoof has got to be dry.  Then you’ve got your Vettec products—tube of compound, compound gun, nippers to open the tube of compound, scissors to cut the plastic wrapping around the tube of compound, gloves to protect your hands from the compound, mixing tips to put on to the tube of compound.  I would keep going, but you get the idea, and besides I know I’ve left out about 23 of the most essential steps in the process.  (Next time, I’ll write that checklist!)

Anyway, this time I got through the whole padding process without any major disasters.  Last time, Dolly jerked her leg and broke the mixing tip while I was dispensing the product and I managed to spew Equi-build all over my shoe, my leg, Dolly’s leg, and the ground before shutting off the gun.  You can buy these sticky cardboard squares that you put over the shoe either before dispensing or after you are done so that you can set the hoof down while it cures.  I have discovered that these, also, are a disaster waiting to happen if you don’t trim them down to a hoof shape before using them.  Dolly always seems to manage to step on the corner of the cardboard with the other hoof, yank the whole thing off, then set the hoof down in the gravel before I can stop her embedding hunks of driveway gravel into the padding which, I’m pretty certain, are counterproductive to the whole padding process.  This time, I realized after getting all of the goo where I wanted it and secured with a cardboard cover (which I had remembered to pre-cut to fit) in both hooves that I’d forgotten the most important piece of equipment—a chair to sit in while I wait for the stuff to cure completely.

And the end result?  She’s still lame…  So it’s back to the vet next week.  He wants to inject the hoof with Adequan or Legend (I think) to help take the residual pain out of the injury.  I also want to take a “thumbtack x-ray” where you put a standard thumbtack in the tip of the frog, then do an x-ray from the side.  The tack isn’t long enough to cause damage, but it shows up on the x-ray really well so that you know exactly where the tip of the frog is located in relation to the navicular bone.  That way, I can do a better job of relieving pressure on the navicular bone when I apply the compound.  I used the very scientific method of basically guessing this time.  And then we’ll see.  We’ll see how much “That’s interesting” is really gonna cost.

Walking on the land

It is the last day of daylight savings time and I just have time to do something with the horse.  I don’t really have time to saddle up and ride, so my choices are ride bareback or go “walkies.”  Since it is just above freezing with a cold wind outside, and since I haven’t ridden all week, I decide on a walk.  First, I must don the appropriate amount of layering—long underwear, sweats, long sleeved t-shirt, fleece jacket, gloves, neck gaiter and headband.  I test it out on the back porch—brrr…  I go back in the house and add a pair of wind pants.  Okay, now I think I’m ready.  The wind pants mean that I won’t be able to hop on bareback if I feel like riding at some point.  Have you ever tried to ride in wind pants?  It’s like trying to ride a greased pig!

I decide that today will be a “cookie” walk.  Usually I don’t carry cookies , but I have found that if I do an occasional cookie walk—where I stuff my pockets full of goodies and let them know it—the effect lasts a good long time.  And for these girls at least, I guess hope springs eternal because they generally stay with me even when they know I don’t have anything.  They must figure I have the power to magically conjure cookies on a moments notice, so they’re not taking any chances.  Only they have to earn their cookies.  They have to go off and graze, then put effort into coming back to me—only then do they get the reward.

I let them out, and Annie immediately begins shadowing me.

“Cookie?” is her obvious question.

“No cookie,” I say, gently shooing her away.

Dolly closes in from the other side “Did you give Annie a cookie?  Because I want one too then!”

“No cookie,” I repeat, gently shooing her the other way “ you have to earn them.”

So we wander down the ridge and they finally begin moving off to look for the clumps of dried grass that are still hiding among the sagebrush.  As we leave our property, Dolly stays behind to munch on some weeds then trots to catch up.  I reward her with a cookie.  Annie trots over indignant, so she earns one also.  It becomes a competition between them.  They watch each other as closely as they watch me.

We reach the bluff that overlooks a large wash.  It is a short steep drop into the wash proper.  The girls stop to graze on some nice clumps of grass at the top of the bluff.  As I slither down the hill, I wonder how long it will be before the angry scars of recent flash flooding will fade away.  The hillside is cut by dozens of parallel erosion channels leading down into the wash.  The wash itself is a mess.  Where there used to be a soft sandy floor, there is only hardpan and harsh gravel.  The banks no longer slope easily, but are cut deep and jagged.  I hear both Dolly and Annie clattering down the bank behind me.  Dolly finishes with a flourish by cantering through the sagebrush and coming to a screeching halt beside me.

“Cookie?”  Yep.

We choose to cross this wasteland and seek the nicer footing above the far bank.   Dolly gives a little hop and halfhearted trot—sorry, not enough effort.  We continue across the wash to the far bluff where there is an abundance of bunch grass.  Both Dolly and Annie know this place and immediately tuck in.  I find a nice rock halfway up the bluff and sit to enjoy the world around me for a while.   Grey clouds punctuate a crystal clear winter sky.  To the west are the strato-cumulus, soft and fluffy, but to the east are dark grey lenticulars, sculpted into fantastic shapes by the winds aloft.   It is the golden hour where the quality of light is at its best.  The sky to the east appears to be a darker shade of blue even though the sun is still above the horizon.

If I had enough talent to write poetry, this is the time and place I would most like to write about.  Too often, people mistake the desert for a barren wasteland, but it is not so.  Down below me, there is a sandy channel with the tracks of the hundreds of small animals who call this little area home.  There are ground squirrels and chipmunks and a whole multitude of rabbits living here along with dozens of lizards, their tails marking their tracks as reptilian in origin.  It is too cold for lizards or their shyer cousins the snakes right now, but during the summer, they dash away in all directions as I walk through.  There is a large covey of quail that roam this area and will sometimes explode in all directions when I venture too near. Their tracks are all there, telling me stories about the lives they lead.

In addition, there are the larger animals that prey on all of this fare—the coyotes, hawks and eagles that I will occasionally spot as I walk or ride the horse.  One of the most amazing things I have seen is a Golden Eagle taking wing from about ten feet away when I startled it away from a rabbit it was eating.  And there are the unseen animals—the pocket gophers and packrats and mice who only make their presence known by causing a mess in my haystack or horse trailer.   I have even spotted a few foxes over the years, though usually late at night when I was driving home.  They live there, all of these animals, because there is plenty of food in the form of bitterbrush, pine nuts, and the seeds of the many grasses and flowers that grow abundantly here if you know where and when to look for them.

Annie stops by for a scratch.  She knows I won’t give her a cookie, but she will stop by for a scratch just in case I make the offer.  She enjoys the scratch almost as much as the cookie anyway.  Dolly is slowly moving up the bluff now, so I climb to the top.  She canters the last few strides and earns another cookie.  Annie, of course gets hers as well.  We decide to head downhill today and make a big loop around to the left that will bring us back home.

Suddenly, a flock of birds rises out of the sagebrush and flows downhill like quicksilver.  The sun glints brightly off of their wings and they make a high pitched “chee, chee, chee…” as they fly.  Then another flock and another, rising with one fluid motion, then flying nap of the earth, skimming the top of the sagebrush in ever widening circles until it looks like a giant maelstrom of tiny birds.  And then they disappear, settling back into the sagebrush as suddenly as they ascended—invisible again to the outside world.

We find another patch of nice grass to graze on for a bit, then I continue to move off to the west.  There is too much grass here, though, and Dolly is thinking about ignoring me and moving away into better grazing so I move off in the opposite direction.  I find an unexpected ally in Annie who sees her chance to hog a few cookies as she follows me.  She almost makes it, but at the last moment, Dolly gallops after me and catches up just before Annie does.  They both get two cookies for leaving such good grass to be with me.  As I continue to walk down slope, paralleling the wash, Dolly canters off to the right, then circles around to stop right in front of me again—I think she has the idea!

I keep trying to get one or the other of them to pose for a picture with the big lenticular behind them against the bright blue sky, but they don’t cooperate.  We finally cross the wash again about a half a mile below where we did earlier and continue south towards home.  As we walk, we pass the “sheepherder shacks.”  David and I call them that because the sheepherders sometimes camp there, although we don’t know what their original purpose was or who built them.  Dolly is always fascinated by the junk that is laying around loose near the shacks.  Today, she noses at an old hunk of plywood on the ground as the sun finally slips behind the mountains.  Soon, we won’t even have time for this luxury after school.  Our walks will range closer to home if we can take them at all.  For now it is enough to enjoy the perfect twilight and the companionship of our little herd.

How many dead bugs does it take?

Okay, so I cleaned my house the other day.  I’m not proud of it, but sometimes it just happens.  What happened was that I needed to go to the dump.  See where we live, A. There is no garbage service, and B.  We generate garbage.   I have not yet figured out how to not generate garbage.  Wal-mart doesn’t seem to sell the handy Recyclohome, home recycling center, and in spite of the fact that we own 100 acres, I’m pretty sure the neighbors would notice if we started to bury it all back in the canyon.  So trips to the dump are SOP, literally Sort Of Problematic because the dump is in another state and is only open two days a week so you have to plan these things out.  I usually end up going every 3-4 weeks.   In the fall, if I plan carefully, I time it so that I can go by school and watch the football game too.

Now, your normal trip to the dump does not always precipitate a house cleaning on my part, but this trip happened to coincide with my reaching critical mass.  I don’t know how you clean your house, but the “Critical Mass Method” is how I clean my house.  This is the method whereby you keep noticing the clutter but not doing anything about it until one day, you get tired of looking at all the little dead bug bodies on the bathroom counter and actually begin cleaning something.

My mother-in-law, on the other hand uses the Good Housekeeping approved method of actually cleaning the dirt up when she sees it.  She is the absolute stereotypical, cliché, sitcom mother-in-law.  Her house looks like the staff from Architectural Digest, or maybe Sunset Magazine just finished up a photo shoot, only you never see them because she made them hide, along with all of their equipment, in the closet when she saw you coming up the driveway so the place wouldn’t look cluttered.  This is how she operates:  Say she is sitting innocently on the toilet doing what people normally do there and she looks up and notices a cobweb in the corner of the bathroom.  She will immediately (upon finishing her business) proceed to find a long handled brush or let’s say a small shop vac, which is what I would use.  But let’s say the shop vac is in the garage because my father-in-law has been using it to vacuum his boat, which is where it would be in my house.  She will immediately ask him in strenuous tones to indicate that this is IMPORTANT to please bring it into the house so that she can remove the cobweb.  He will do so (muttering under his breath because all of the Soule men mutter under their breath when put upon by their wives), and he will gallantly remove the cobweb himself because the Soule men are gallant that way.   My Mother-in-law will then suggest that next time he makes a trip to Home Depot (they don’t shop at Wal-Mart) maybe he should buy his own shop vac to keep in the garage strictly for boat vacuuming purposes.

This is how it works in my house.  I will notice as I am sitting on the toilet that there is a cobweb (usually it includes a spider in my house) in the corner.  I will think, “huh, there is a cobweb in the corner.”

I will immediately forget about the whole thing until the next time I use the bathroom.  You see, I’m okay with the spider unless it decides it’s a good idea to move into my shower.  I have been carefully weeding out the spider gene pool to remove the shower-dwelling gene for several years now and I think I’m beginning to have some success at that.  So the spider is really only in danger if I get the shop vac to clean up the cobwebs because then, it just makes sense to remove the spider as well.  In fact, the spider has a better than even chance of living a long and healthy life in my bathroom corner because the next thing that happens is that one day, I accidently happen to notice that the shop vac is not in the closet where it belongs.

Several days (or maybe years) after this, I will actually ask David where the shop vac is.  He will tell me it is in the garage because he has been using it to vacuum his boat and I will say in a very non-strenuous tone “huh, well if you get a chance, bring it in the house so I can use it sometime.”

Then one day as I am walking into the living room, I will trip over the shop vac and think “huh, David moved that into the house.”

Then, finally, after much time has passed, after I have tripped over the shop vac 47,000 times, after the spider has died of old age and is just a desiccated little exoskeleton hanging limply from one of the now multitude of cobwebs draped artfully around my bathroom to the envy of haunted house designers everywhere, I will reach critical mass and I will know that it is time to clean the house.

Only I don’t have time to clean the house…  So I will think about cleaning the house—while I am off riding at a clinic or on the Alzheimer’s ride—while I am off sailing with David on the Delta or Tahoe—while I am visiting my mom—while I am at work.  Until finally, one weekend, the stars align and I need to go to the dump anyway and my horse is lame and David has gone off hiking and I have time—and THEN and ONLY THEN, will I clean the house.

The cleaning itself is pretty unremarkable.  There is the usual amount of windex and pledge involved.  But most of what makes up cleaning in my house is REMOVING CLUTTER  (so having this coincide with a dump trip is a pretty good idea).  Only a portion of the clutter actually goes to the dump.  Most of the clutter is just stuff that has managed to crawl out of whatever place it actually belongs so that it can commune with the other clutter on some flat surface.  Right now, if you go into my laundry room, you will find at least two of my ball caps on the counter or on top of the dryer.  Why aren’t they hanging neatly on their hooks?  Good question.  And there are at least 10 pairs of shoes there.  This might make sense in some cultures, but at least 6 pairs of them ought to be in the bedroom closet.  Coffee table?  Books that ought to be on the book shelves.  Dining room table?  David’s sailing/camping stuff that has inexplicably clawed its way out of its storage container and is attempting to scuttle off of the table and into whatever dark corners it can find.

And the knick-knacks!  There is the decorative Grappa bottle displayed in the living room waiting, I presume, to be joined by other decorative Grappa bottles in the future.  I have to ask myself why I would want to broadcast how much Grappa I drink to casual visitors (one bottle folks—it is still waiting!).  I have to ask myself if I can really drink enough Grappa to make up a collection worth talking about after I get out of rehab and assuming I haven’t just blacked out the entire concept of collecting Grappa bottles.  I have to ask myself if I shouldn’t just recycle it right now and get it over with!

Which brings us to my Mother-in-law’s deepest darkest cleaning secret.  She CONTROLS CLUTTER (with an iron fist)!  If you look in any one of her closets, you will find where all of her clutter hides—banished there along with the Sunset photographers and their equipment.  Every few months, her house has a new “theme” wherein she allows certain items of clutter a reprieve from the dark, as it were, and banishes the old theme items to the closet.  If I were to pull this off, I would need about 8 more closets!  Still, I often think maybe I should spend about an hour once a week banishing clutter—hahahahahahahahaha…

The Moon’s the North Wind’s Cooky

One of the reasons I love living where we do is the seasons.  I know I like to joke about only having two seasons in Nevada—Winter and Road Construction, but the truth is we have four distinct seasons and I love all of them.  It is fall now, and you can see the slashes of color up in the mountains.  The other day, David and I drove up to Obsidian campground with the horse.  He hiked.  I rode.  The color was spectacular.   The aspens rise in rolling benches off of the floor of Molybdenite Creek and each bench seems to be a different shade of amazing.  I had to simply stop the horse and stare at times (or risk riding into a low hanging branch).  Down in the valleys, the leaves are just beginning to turn.  A really good fall is one where we don’t get a huge windstorm until after we’ve had plenty of time to enjoy the color.  My fingers are crossed (as always).

Another thing that happens to me in the fall—usually in early October is that I have to start going down to feed in the dark every morning.  It is then that I am reminded how much I love the waning moon.  It lights my morning excursions to the corrals as long as there are no clouds out.  I have a game I play where I see how little I have to use my flashlight.  For the week after the full moon, I rarely use it at all.  I revel in the almost daylight and marvel at the strength of the shadow it casts.  I use a small light in the hay barn, but navigate to feed through the corrals easily in the glow of moonlight.  As the moon narrows below half in the second week, the light becomes dimmer and dimmer and I have to use my flashlight to get through the rough spots on the trail or risk breaking an ankle.   Finally, it narrows to a mere sliver which amazingly still casts a shadow, but forces me to use my barn spotlights to get around the corrals as I feed.  Even then, Annie who is out of range of the spotlight appears only as a dark shadow, hiccupping in her eagerness to be fed.

Once I finish feeding, I head back up to the house.  My eyes have adjusted almost fully to the darkness by then and it is even easier to walk without light.  It is a good thing the road is fairly smooth here as I am usually gazing at the stars as I walk back.  Orion hangs high in the western sky, locked in eternal battle with Taurus, heralding the approaching advent of winter.  Venus is there, too, perched over the mountains. Often, I will see the steady dim light of a satellite streaming past way overhead.  Several times now, I am pretty sure I’ve seen the International Space Station go by.  It was too bright and too low for a satellite, too steady and too fast for an airplane.   And the Leonids!  It is early, but they are beginning now.  Some mornings I see only one or two quick streaks, but others, there will be 3, 4, even more meteorites dashing across the northern sky.  Sometimes, I stop and try to take it all in.  I try to pick out all of the stars in the Little Dipper, or even more challenging, all seven of the Pleiades.  Even the dim glow of lights from Carson City and Reno are enough to make this difficult.  I love to feel the chill eastern breeze on my face knowing that winter is coming soon.

The moon is gone now.  I am forced to rely on artificial light for the next two weeks until it returns.  The stargazing and the Meteor showers will get better, but it is not such a friendly place out there when the best I can do is poke at the darkness with my ineffectual flashlight beam, pushing it back in one direction while it closes in in another.  It used to creep me out, walking around in the dark imagining mountain lions behind every tree, but now I merely embrace it as part of the cycle.  We will repeat this cycle, the moon and I, waxing and waning, waxing and waning, as the winters themselves wax and wane throughout the cycle of our lives.  Until one day, as I’m heading back from feeding, I will slowly realize that rather than my eyes adjusting, the light itself is softly returning.  By then, Orion will be fading into the east, waving goodbye to me for another year.

The Moon’s the North Wind’s cooky.
He bites it, day by day,
Until there’s but a rim of scraps
That crumble all away.

The South Wind is a Baker.
He kneads clouds in his den,
And bakes a crisp new moon that…greedy
North…Wind…eats…again!

Vachel Lindsay

Why I hate my crazy neighbor (or The Fencing Project from Hell)

I love my crazy neighbor because he is an enabler.  He has enabled me to buy new fences and nice new horse shelters.  He enabled me to begin building a turnout area—I mean buffer zone—protecting the horses from his stallions.  He even enabled us to buy a tractor!  What a guy!  And now (by the laws of deductive logic), he is enabling us to buy all sorts of implements for our tractor.  Those of you out there who own tractors know what I am talking about.

A typical trip to the feed store:
Me:  What is that implement thing out there on display?
Feed store guy:  It’s a Lurminator.
Me:  I need one.  What does it do?
Feed store guy:  It Lurminates.
Me:  How much does it cost?
Feed Store Guy:  $700
Me:  Here is my credit card.

After this, I go on my merry way, secure in the knowledge that A.  If I ever need to Lurminate, I will possess the correct implement and B.  Any tractor implement under $1000 is worth having.

We bought this blade.  But it couldn’t be just any blade.  David did his research and it had to be a Swiss Army Blade that will not only fold, spindle and mutilate, but has those teeny-beeny tweezers in a pocket so that you can pull out any annoying little splinters.  And we bought an auger, which it turns out consists of several parts (sold separately) such as the “arm thing” and the “spinny things,” which come in several different sizes—small, medium, tall, venti, and ridiculous.  Buying an “arm thing” without at least two “spinny things” is kind of like buying Malibu Barbie without also buying the Malibu Convertible, Malibu Ken, Malibu Beach Mansion and optional Malibu Sunglasses (for both Barbie and Ken, naturally).

So we drove home triumphantly from the Tractor Supply Company store with our latest kill and, somehow, David managed to assemble the whole shebang.  (Little known fact:  Albert Einstein died of old age while trying to assemble the “arm thing” for his tractor.)  And we drove the tractor to a place on our property that I had scientifically determined would be the absolutely correct place to put a fence post and we drilled our first hole!  And it was one foot deep… Because after the auger went down about a foot, it hit a layer of soil that geologists refer to as “concrete,” and then it just sat there spinning happily away, but not actually doing anything useful in terms of what geologist refer to as “digging a hole.”  And now you know why I hate my crazy neighbor.  I am quite certain that he is down there living in his disgusting, filthy trailer with his stallions running around loose because he has crappy falling down fences, looking through his expensive high powered telescope at us struggling to dig post holes—and LAUGHING AT US!  I’ll bet he lets his stallions out every few weeks just so he can come up and laugh at our feeble efforts at erecting a fence to keep them out.

At first, we worked really hard at this project.  We would dig any time we had a spare day.  We began by drilling the 12” holes for the big posts that would be our corners and gate supports.  These holes needed to be 4 feet deep, so you can see that a 1 foot hole just wasn’t going to cut it.  We discovered that by pouring water down the 1 foot hole, we could soften up the soil and a few days later, we could drill it all the way down to 15 or even 18 inches deep—progress!  We also discovered that through the use of backbreaking labor with a “rock bar” we could loosen up the soil for the auger and make another inch or two of progress.  And occasionally, we were lucky enough to actually dig an entire hole at which point, we would put a post in it and celebrate.  Our property began to look like we were sprouting a random crop of railroad tie trees.  We also had to purchase an “extension thing” for the auger because, at first, it would not dig a 4 foot hole—silly auger.  (I guess you could call that auger augmentation.)

And we discovered the existence of “shear pins.”   A shear pin is an evil piece of equipment that is designed to protect your auger from being bent (HA! We’ve proved that one wrong) by breaking anytime it thinks the auger might get damaged by hitting a rock or a tree root, or if it’s a little stressed that day, or if it had one too many cups of coffee or has PMS, or somebody sneezes or a rabbit runs in front of the tractor.  We discovered that it is not humanly possible to possess enough shear pins to get through an entire post hole digging operation, because due to Newton’s fourth law of Shear Pins, you will always have one fewer shear pin than you need to finish the hole!  We now measure our hole digging efforts in terms of SPU’s or Shear Pin Units.

“That was an easy hole—it only broke four shear pins!”

And then we stalled out…

And when I say we stalled out, I’m talking about “for several years” stalled out, not just for a couple of weeks or months.  We were killing ourselves physically, not to mention wiping out the shear pin population of Northern Nevada, and we still had some holes that we had made ABSOLUTELY NO progress on.  There were these divots on the ground where holes were supposed to go and that was as far as we could get.  There was one corner post where we had hit a rock about 3 feet down and we absolutely couldn’t get around it without dynamite or some sort of tactical nuclear weapon.  Oh, we had tried a few different “tricks” that our “friends” had told us about.  (Like pouring very diluted battery acid down the hole to dissolve the clay?  Ignoring our fears about poisoning the environment on the theory that it would be worth it to create 6 legged horned toads if we finally had a fence, we tried this—it didn’t do diddly squat.)  We think now that our friends were down at Tom’s using his telescope and laughing along with him.

And then Providence showed us the way…  Our neighbors down the hill decided to put in a fenced yard for their dogs.  They didn’t actually do it themselves—they had some fencing guys do it for them.  I watched this project unfold over several days driving to and from work and finally had to stop and ask—“HOW THE HELL DID THEY DIG THOSE POST HOLES!”  I probably said it a little more nicely than that, but that was the gist of it.  It turned out that they had used a Bobcat.  The difference between the Bobcat and our tractor is that the Bobcat possesses a mysterious, magical force known as downpressure.  This would be like having a second tractor jump up and down on top of the auger while the first tractor was digging the hole—BRILLIANT!

So we rented a Bobcat—actually a “Skid Steer” (because it is made by Case and not Bobcat).  Whatever it was, it was pretty reasonable to rent—only about $100.  Of course, it cost $200 to have it delivered and picked up, and each of the two augers cost about $100 to rent, but it was still worth it.  The Skid Steer had downpressure and it didn’t have any shear pins on the theory that if you got it stuck enough to bend one of these augers, you would create enough force to spin the planet Earth off of it’s axis causing global devastation anyway.  And we dug 52 holes in two days!  I sure hope Tom happened to notice that we were out digging and thinking to have himself a knee slapping afternoon, glanced through his telescope at which point his eyeball must have shot cartoon like out the other end of the telescope in amazement—take THAT!

We don’t, at this point, have any actual fences yet.  All of the wooden posts are in, though.  They march along in straight lines instead of random patterns, beckoning to me.  Now all we have to do is install all of the H’s, drive about a gazillion T-posts and string fence.  And now I can truly say “Thank you Tom, for enabling us to go out and buy a T-post driver implement for our tractor!”

Why I love my crazy neighbor

Some of you know I have a crazy neighbor.  And when I say I have a crazy neighbor, I mean that literally.  And when I say literally, I mean that in the literal sense of the word literally, not the metaphorical (or hyperbolic) sense as in “like literally” which translates into:  I think I am really exaggerating when I say this, but I’m literally showing my ignorance because I don’t know what the word literally means.  But I digress.  Anyway, somewhere out there, there is a test—I believe they are referred to by the politically correct as “inventories” such as the ABC1 or OCD3, and if you administered this test to my neighbor “Tom” (we’ll call him, not that that’s his real name), he would qualify as having some actual (literal) mental disorder.  Using my vast knowledge of psychology (gained from one high school class and one college class) I have decided that he is schizophrenic or bipolar or maybe something else. Actually, just understanding that he is literally mentally ill has made the situation easier for me to deal with.   I now have a sense of humor about it—he’s not a jerk, he’s just nuts!  And I’m not angry with him anymore.  Even though sometimes I really want to scream at him “Take a bath! Get a haircut! Put on clean clothes! and Get a job!” I understand that he is not truly capable of these things, so I am free to deal with him on his level and not expect too much.

Anyway, apparently God talks to Tom and somewhere along the line God told Tom that he needed to own three horses.  This is according to my other crazy neighbors who have talked to him (and now I mean crazy in the metaphorical sense of “wacky” or “a little off” which are strict requirements on the entrance exam for those moving into our neighborhood).  According to the neighbors, Tom has two grown children hiding out there—I mean living somewhere else—and God told Tom that his children would return to him and they would all need horses to ride.  No one seems to know when this would happen or where God told him to ride the horses or if God told him to ride English or Western or use a bitless bridle or go shod or barefoot or anything interesting like that.  Whatever is supposed to happen hasn’t happened yet and we’ve been here going on ten years now.  So Tom started with one appaloosa mare and (I’m kind of speculating here) bred her to produce a colt?  Then either he bred her again or maybe she bred with her colt?  I don’t like to think about that one, but the end result was another colt.

The problem is that God left out one very important piece of information that belongs in this puzzle.  God forgot to tell Tom to geld these colts.  Tom actually  believes that God has told him it is a sin to geld a horse, which is sort of counterproductive to the situation.  So time passed… and they grew up… and now they are full-grown stallions… and I have a mare… and eventually they figured that out.  So one day, they showed up at our place to “visit” my mare.  They broke her out of her electric corral and fortunately, she was so freaked out about being chased around by two crazed stallions that when I opened the gate of a solid pipe corral, she shot in there as quick as she could to get away from then and I slammed the gate in their faces.  God also seems to have forgotten to tell Tom to teach them manners.  You (metaphorically) could not pay me enough money to stand within 10 feet of one of these horses.  I’m not afraid of them, but I’m not stupid either.   Neither is Tom  (stupid I mean)—he may be crazy, but he is smart enough to know that leaving his horses rampaging around our property might be a bad idea.  He came right away and got them.

Thus began a long cycle of stallion visits from one or the other or even both of the two stallions.  And thus began a series of corral upgrades on my side of things.  Can you see why I love my neighbor now?  Well, first, the horses had to have all pipe corrals—no more electric fence.   So we bought a bunch more pipe fencing.  And they needed better shelters, so we bought two more of those.  The shelters had to be well anchored to prevent them from blowing away which meant digging holes to pour concrete posts to attach the shelter to.  The holes were really hard to dig, and how were we ever going to move the dirt necessary to fill the foundations?  You guessed it—we had to buy a tractor.  Then the whole shootinmatch needed to be enclosed in a perimeter fence so that the stallions could rampage to their heart’s content “over there” and not near my horses.  So I drew up plans to fence off about 10 acres with our little horse area on the inside.  Then we moved our “bathroom shed” which has a composting toilet over to the horse area so I now have a little tack/storage shed, but also a bathroom.  I often feed in the dark in the winter, so David has installed “much needed” lighting.

I have not, yet, figured out how to justify a new saddle or a real hay barn or a new trailer out of this, but I’m working on it.

And for those of you who wonder why I don’t “do” something about the stallions, I don’t have a lot of options.  Fencing them out is the Nevada way of dealing with them.  I could probably shoot one of them and claim self defense and get away with it, but I don’t blame the horses for this situation.  It would be better if I tried to shoot one and missed and “accidentally” hit Tom, but I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t get away with that.  I have offered to pay to have the horses gelded, but Tom just said that God would think that was wrong.  I have even considered offering to buy the two horses and gelding them myself, but I’m pretty sure Tom wouldn’t sell them to me (he’s crazy, not stupid, remember?  He knows the first thing I’d do to them.).  One friend and I came up with a wild scheme to put a loudspeaker under Tom’s trailer and speak to him in the middle of the night:

“TOM! THIS IS GOD!  GELD THE HORSES!”

But hatching that scheme is one thing—carrying it out would make ME certifiable—and I mean that—like literally.

The Adventures of Tigger the Tractor

When people commented on Facebook that we should turn our lives into a sitcom, several tractor episodes sprang immediately to mind.  Tigger is our tractor.  Someday after I win the lottery, inherit a fortune and rob a bank, I will have her paint job redone in orange with black stripes and perhaps a cute Tigger face painted on her cowling.  Why Tigger?  All one needs to do is take a ride around the property to understand. She is bouncy, jouncy, pouncy, flouncy, fun, fun, fun, fun, fun…

Heck!  Just buying Tigger was a real adventure.  We knew we needed to buy a tractor, so David, my “more of a sitcom husband in real life than anything Hollywood writers could think of” husband did what he always does—he did research.  David’s nickname is “The Research King.”  I can’t tell you how many brochures we have collected over the years for things we will probably never buy because he wanted to know more just in case someday he ever does decide to buy one of those things and thank God we have a brochure for it (if we can actually find the brochure) because it might prevent us from buying the wrong thing and thereby avert almost certain disaster…  When I bought our truck, he called horse trailer dealers all over the west coast and asked them what kind of truck they thought we should buy based on their horse hauling experiences.  You can see why he is the perfect sitcom husband.  Fortunately for us, the Internet has eliminated the need for a larger house to hold all of our brochures.

And the hell of it is that he is right.  I can’t make as much fun of him as I’d like to because he often uncovers facts that help us make better decisions.  So he went on the Internet and decided that we should purchase a Kubota tractor because Kubota is the gold standard of tractors.  They hold their value well, they are widely available and unlike the tractors made in Korea or India or Poland (yes, there are even those), parts and service are widely available and the company (and/or country) doesn’t seem likely to go belly up anytime soon.  We also decided we need something around 45 horsepower to do the work we need done.  So one day, we drove around to tractor dealerships and looked at Kubota’s.  Mostly we looked at new 25 horsepower tractors, because these are what the dealers have in stock.  Seems everybody wants one of those “cute little tractors” not realizing that they can’t do a whole hill of beans unless you are lucky enough to live on, well, a hill of beans which are really easy to dig in.  Plus new 45’s cost a whole lot more.   Hmmm…  Maybe we should be looking for a used tractor?

This is when we discovered one of the absolute truths of tractor ownership.  A certain percentage of tractor buyers are perfectly happy with their 25 horse power tractors because they probably didn’t need to move much dirt anyway and just wanted it to prove to their neighbors that they are real heavy equipment stud muffins.  But the percentage like us—they know what they want—they have work to do—they want a bigger tractor!  So they move up.  The smart ones go sink a boatload of money into a used skip loader or backhoe that a construction company is selling off and are done for life.  Many, though, move up to a 45.  And then they discover?—they want a bigger tractor!  Unfortunately, although you might think the expression “boatload of money” is hyperbole, it is not.  Still, there are a lucky few who will have the wherewithal to move up again and they will sell off their used 45 horsepower tractors.  So there are used 45’s out there to be had, only there is a large segment of dissatisfied 25 horsepower owners out there waiting cat-like, to pounce as soon as they go on the market.  This doesn’t work well for David at all—he likes to think about things.  He likes to do his research.

We had five or six tractors sold out from under us before we could even go look at them.  Soon, we learned the correct language to use:

“Hi, I see you have a used 45 HP tractor for sale.  Here is my credit card number.  Please hold it for me—I’m on the way now.”

We actually found one in San Bernadino.  We were working out the logistics of having it trucked to us.  We faxed the credit application.  The nice lady on the phone said “Okay, everything is in order.  All I need to do now is go look up the serial number of the tractor…”

Um… yeah… she couldn’t find it.  It was filed off.  The tractor was stolen.

Turns out the tractor was stolen when it was brand new.  This was the fourth “owner.”  He had no idea.  But really, the tractor belonged to Kubota.  We wanted it anyway.  Would they sell it to us?  Sort of, but it would take some time to file all of the proper paperwork, blah, blah, blah.  Then… later that same day, another 45 HP tractor came up for sale in Klamath Falls.  We gave them our credit card number, borrowed a truck (too heavy for mine), borrowed a trailer and left for Klamath Falls about 4 the next morning.  By one o’clock, we were the proud owners of Tigger.  About an hour out of Klamath Falls, we stopped to let the dogs pee and David checked that the serial numbers matched—whew!  Not stolen.

Wow!  That’s a whole episode right there.  There will have to be another one where we discover that we “need” at least one of every implement made for a tractor (and how much they cost).  There is definitely an episode about the time we got the auger stuck in the clay and practically had to disassemble the tractor to get it out (and then actually bent the auger).  There has got to be one about all of the crazy things you can do with a tractor that you didn’t think you could do.  And I’m pretty sure there’s an episode entitled “things you should not do with your tractor.”  And if you know anybody who is selling a nice 70 to 100 Horsepower used Kubota, I have a credit card number just waiting for them.

TnT notes: If I blow in your ear, will you follow me anywhere?

Still on the first morning!  Our first activity was working with Trevor on a 12 foot line.  He asked the question “How do you lead your horse?”  Because how you lead your horse around on a regular basis is going to affect how well your liberty is going to go.  Is your horse really “with” you as you lead him? The challenge he gave us was to lead our horses on a loose line and encourage them to bring their withers nearer to our shoulder.  Basically, you would be leading from about zone 2 or 3 as you would if you were playing “stick to me.”  Those of you who were at the Jonathan Field presentation last year may remember he referred to this as the sweet spot. Next, Trevor challenged us to turn this into a circling game where your horse is still mentally with you.  To do this, you would ask the horse to continue to bend his body around you as he circles as opposed to pushing his ribs or shoulder into you in a brace.

Yeouch!  This is a real challenge for Dolly and me.  This is one of those intangible “things” I have been trying to figure out since I started Parelli.  How do you get your horse to bend around you on a small circle at liberty?  I see videos of people circling their horses at the trot and canter at liberty.  The horse is on less than a 20 foot diameter circle and his body is bent around the person in a sort of moving bear hug.  I got Po to do it, but the darned thing is:  I Don’t Know How!  I’m beginning to think it is not really a behavior as such at all, but an outward manifestation of the quality of the relationship.  You can’t really teach the horse to do it.  You just keep plugging away at the ingredients long enough and building the relationship of trust as you go until one day, the horse just wants to do it.   (At least that is how it was with Po–one day, he just somehow “got it” and that was that.)  So what Trevor had us doing was working on the ingredients, but the actual “hug” may not come for a while.

Dolly and I were quite successful at walking with her in the “sweet spot,” because we have been leading this way ever since seeing Jonathan Field talk about it last year.  We are also good at bending her around me while leading because this is something I have been doing since I first audited a Karen Rolfe clinic.  But when we try to turn this into a circle it all falls apart.  Dolly immediately goes “bad banana” on me.  I can almost feel her pushing that inside shoulder against me as if to shove me aside even though she is at the far end of the lead.   This is how she will do it at liberty also—if I can even get her to stay on a small circle.  It is more like a weird sort of triangle.  We start with the send… I get about a quarter to a third of a circle-ish segment, then she drifts out…I partially disengage and she says:

“Fine, you want me close, I’ll give you close!”  And here comes the shoulder.

I say, “please get that shoulder out of here.”

She says, “fine, you don’t want me close.  I’m leaving!”

Partial disengagement, lather, rinse, repeat…

I have had limited success using a neck rope for this.  The idea is “look, I have nothing on your head, but you still need to stay on this small circle!”  Dolly is not convinced.  But since Dolly and I have just reached a new level of trust and understanding this year, I am willing to be patient.  This, too, will happen.  Right now, we will work on ingredients.

As we played (struggled really) with the circle at the clinic, I heard Trevor talking to another participant about asking the horse to move the ribs away to help achieve the proper bend.  I have been doing this previously, but decided maybe I should be doing more.  I got more assertive about asking her to move the ribs away and she leaped into the air.  But she did achieve the proper bend for a few strides.  Hmmm…  Later Trevor made a comment about how I have a lot of energy in my body (really?).  In the next segment, Tara made the same comment, which really made me think.   Hmmm….  Either they are telepathic, or maybe… maybe I have a lot of energy in my body.   And is this perhaps contributing to the brace?  It kind of feels like somebody handed me a diving belt right now.  If you’re a scuba diver, you need a heavy belt to counteract your buoyancy and hold you underwater long enough to see interesting or important things.  Without the belt, you would just keep popping out of the water before getting a good look around.   (Kind of how I feel at clinics sometimes.)  So now I have this belt and I’m wandering around in the murky depths trying to see something interesting or important—I know there is something really profound out there, but I am still groping around and trying to make sense out of it.  How is my energy causing the brace and what do I have to change to make the whole picture change?

I’ll tell you if I ever get there.  I have played with the circles a few times since the clinic, but still without much change.  I try toning my energy down and Dolly moves like she is swimming through molasses—if at all.  (And she still braces the shoulder).  I know I am expecting too much of myself right now.  We have gone from being absolutely unable to do liberty because she would just panic and run and run until I simply had to walk away, to having some nice things happen and having some good trust and communication between us.  So my mantra now is “ingredients, ingredients, ingredients.”