I work Monday-Friday. Most of my horse fun is on the weekend, especially in the winter when there are more barn chores to be done. Winter is just beginning--Lord, give me strength! lol
Yesterday, Saturday, I had a visit from a high school friend and her four-year-old grand-niece. This girl was so full of energy! Can I bottle some of that?? She brushed Lucky for a bit and then ran around the yard, climbed on hay bales, and in general made us old folks look like slugs. Rosie was afraid of her, which didn't really surprise me. Lucky was being a little stubborn when the girl tried to lead her around. I had to keep intervening to keep Lucky going. Maybe Lucky doesn't like kids that much after all??? Lucky is my rock solid "safe under any circumstance" pony. She's the one I call on when I need something super safe. Babe thought the child was unique and kept staring at her as she ran around the yard. I think Babe found it entertaining. Mac couldn't see much of what was going on because of his blindness and really didn't react at all. Lucky and Babe have always had appropriate and kind handling. They are confident and calm to be around, even if things in the environment get a little crazy. I don't think Mac has been technically abused, but he tends to be more of a worry wart and gets concerned about things he doesn't understand. Rosie ... well, she has a lot to learn about people and the happenings of the world.
I worked with Rosie quite a bit yesterday and today. Mike also spend some time with her yesterday and she came a long way toward buddying up with him. "I guess he's OK after all." Rosie is a little hard to figure out sometimes. She can get worried and nervous if she doesn't understand something ... but then she will get a child-like "I don't have to listen to you" way about her the next minute. Fortunately, the good-girl times outnumber the bratty times by quite a bit, so I guess we are on the right track. I am finding that what works best with her when she has her bratty moments is to remain calm and insistent that she do what I want. I don't need to get pushy with her; just let her know that we are doing what we set out to do, and that I'm making the decisions, she's not. She always comes around and goes back to her "good girl" mode pretty quickly. It's like she is trying to figure out where the boundaries and limits are and she has no clue where to start. I've never worked with a youngster with this level of neglect, so it's definitely a learning experience for me as well.
I work on leading lessons with Rosie quite often. I want her to be solid as a rock with leading--never know when something might spook her, and I need to know I have control of her. And she needs to also know I am in control and that she can count on me if things get a little scary for her. I noticed something today. She had tried to nip me a couple of times while I was leading her, and I responded with an instinctual "NO!" and a small bop to her jaw as the mouth came in toward my hand on the lead. Well, that stopped the nipping and didn't seem to make her scared, but it made her reluctant to lead forward readily. She lagged behind and I couldn't get her to walk beside me--it's like she didn't think she could trust herself to not nip, and she didn't want to risk getting bopped again. It took me a while to figure this out--why is she lagging like this???? I know, I should have made the connection sooner, but this neglected clean-slate weanling thing is new to me. I took a risk and brought out treats and gave her a treat when she walked at a good pace beside me. Of course, this made her pushy for treats, but in the end it worked out pretty well. When the treats stopped, she got over the pushiness in just a few minutes, but retained the more forward motion and learned that she could walk beside me without 1) nipping at me--she learned some self-control; and 2) that she didn't have to worry about getting bopped in the jaw. I decided to halve my response to future nipping--keep the sharp NO, but no bopping. I think that will work.
We worked on handling her feet. She was great! She is learning to balance better and hold her feet up for longer periods of time. I bet I got five seconds out of each hoof without her struggling to put them down. Next, I will start tapping on them and mimicking what the farrier will do when she gets trimmed on January 21. This is such wonderful progress for a baby who just a couple of weeks ago became very nervous when I tried to just touch her legs. We also did "sacking out" with the end of the cotton lead rope. I flopped it all over her body, including her head and legs. She hardly moved. I was so proud of her and told her so. She loves it when I tell her she's "such a good girl" in my reassuring, you-are-making-me-so-proud voice. I also hold her head in my hands, talk to her in my "cute" voice and give her a kiss on the forehead or her nose, all of which she likes. She is great about having her face handled, which surprises me for a previously untouched weanling.
I've been suspecting that Rosie has stomach ulcers. Babies commonly get ulcers. I would think stressed out babies are even more prone to them. She was not finishing grain and she didn't like her sides/belly being petted--I can pet every other area of her body without a reaction, but the belly gets a head toss, pin of the ears, and she turns her head around like "stop it!" I decided to put her on the gold standard of ulcer treatment--omeprazole in the form of a "curative" dose of Ulcergard, which is Gastrogard without a prescription. Fortunately, she is small and a curative dose for her size is 1/4 of the tube, rather than a whole tube that a "regular" sized horse needs. That stuff is expensive! She's been on it for 4 days, and I think she is doing a little better. I probably won't know for sure until it's been a couple of weeks. She's been through SO much stress for such a little one--taken off her mother, loaded in a trailer and sent to an auction, run through the chaotic auction, loaded in the trailer to go to the rescuer's farm, getting used to new horses and a new environment there (all in one day), later loading in the trailer again for a trip to my farm, and then having to get used to yet another new environment and new horses/people. I'm getting an ulcer just thinking about it all!
I've seen Rosie trying to play with buckets and even flags I put on the fence to help Mac see it. I decided to order her a couple of pasture toys. I chose these:
http://www.amazon.com/Jolly-Pets-8-Inch-Tug-n-Toss-Red/dp/B0002ARYV6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1419789777&sr=8-1&keywords=8+jolly+ball
http://www.amazon.com/Jolly-Pet-8-Inch-Romp-n-Roll-Red/dp/B0002DK9OW/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1419789777&sr=8-2&keywords=8+jolly+ball
I wasn't sure about whether she would like the one with the rope better, or the one without ... decided to just get both. I may need to cut the rope loop in half so she doesn't get her hoof tangled in it--have to see what it's like after it arrives. Should be here in a couple of days.
I had been feeling sad that Lucky is being bossy and unfriendly towards Rosie since her arrival. Now, I'm wondering if this is a good thing. Rosie has turned to me for companionship and follows me around like a dog so much of the time. We have a lot of interaction while I'm just doing barn chores. I wouldn't be half as interesting if Lucky were her friend, would I? Lucky also doesn't let her get away with anything. Rosie is learning lessons about respect. You don't want a 10-year-old child running your household ... a six-month-old filly shouldn't be running the barnyard either. Lucky is taking care of that situation. She's softening a little--I see Rosie getting closer to her before Lucky pins the ears and chases her away. Things will get better between the two of them, but for now I think this works.
I don't have any pictures this time. I'm one of those behind-the-times non-tech people who does not have a smart phone. I have to take pictures with an actual camera. I'll have the camera with me next time.
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