Search result for: VCS-285 zu bestehen mit allseitigen Garantien đ Suchen Sie einfach auf ďź www.itzert.com ďź nach kostenloser Download von â VCS-285 â â°VCS-285 Online Tests
First – think of this in terms of a tiny treat – like half of a peppermint – or something larger, like an extra flake of hay or an extra scoop of feed. Â Then that treat has become part of his diet. The point is to make sure that âtreatsâ donât tip the balance of his forage and feed diet into the unnecessary calorie zone. Â
You also donât want to feed anything that will upset your horseâs stomach. Â Smaller treats will help prevent this, as will treats that are similar to what he already eats. Â Think about the horse who eats alfalfa/timothy blend hay. You could give him few hay cubes of the same combination.
Watch the sugar content of any treats, many horses with metabolic issues donât need the sugars. Â Carrots are surprisingly high in sugar. Peanuts in the shell are not, and make an ideal alternative.
Liv Gude, a former International Dressage Groom for years, founded proequinegrooms.com as a way to unite Grooms in the horse industry. The educational website also serves to entertain and inform horse owners across all disciplines about horse care, grooming, and health. Click here to check it out!
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
Itâs that time of year again â the time for holiday decorations, gifts, and snow, or, in the case of many riders, owners, and trainers: palm trees, horse trailers, heavily packed tack trunks, and warmer weather.
As horses across the country and across disciplines are shipping to more temperate locations for the winter show season, there are several things you can do to help ensure a smooth southern migration. Here are four tips!
1. Make a list and check it twice â or arriving down south may not be as nice.
Remembering to pack up all of the tack and equipment you will need for the winterâyour horse, any feed and bedding needed for the trip, and all necessary paperworkâcan be an overwhelming amount to remember. Thatâs why itâs important to make well-thought-out lists of what you need before you just start throwing items into tack trunks!
Consider breaking down your lists either by category (i.e. tack, grooming equipment, blankets and âhorse clothing,â feed, etc.) or by horse. With BarnManager’s customizable list tool, you can do either, including setting up your own checklists and tables any way that you like and even linking lists to specific horse profiles to remind you of each horseâs packing needs.
Common items to include on your packing list may include:
+ Traveling items such as a spare halter, hay net and hay, buckets for water, and any shipping boots or wraps.
+ An equine first aid kit containing disinfectant, electrolytes, a thermometer, gauze, Vetrap, and bute.
+ Grooming and bathing essentials including brushes, curry combs, hoof pick, hoof polish, baby oil, fly spray, detangler, shine enhancer, sweat scraper, shampoo, conditioner, sponges, and rags.
+ Tack and equipment including saddles, saddle pads (for both schooling and show), girths, bridles, bits, spare stirrups and stirrup leathers, an extra set of reins, any boots for the horse, martingales, breastplates, a leather punch, a lunge line and lunge whip, studs and a stud kit, coolers, sheets, and blankets.
2. Have proper documentation ready.
In order to be shipped commercially or across state lines, each horse will need documentation of a negative Coggins test, as well as a certificate of veterinary inspection (or health certificate). Most states require that the negative Coggins test was produced within a year prior to travel, but some require that the test was performed within 60 or even 30 days before traveling. Regulations also vary by state for how recent the health certificate needs to be; some are valid for six months, some for only 10 days. Talk to your veterinarian about what the requirements are in your state and within the states that youâre traveling through or to.
For ease of access, keep your horsesâ Coggins, health certificate, and any veterinary records in BarnManager so that they are always readily available on your phone, iPad, or computer.
3. Ensure the health of your horse.
Long distance travel can be stressful for horses and humans alike, and horses can be prone to problems like shipping fever (a term often used to describe any viral or bacterial respiratory infection a horse contracts while traveling). In order to do all that you can to prevent such concerns, make sure that any animals being shipped are up to date on vaccinations and in good health at the time of travel.
In order to reduce the risk of shipping fever, ensure that plenty of low-dust hay is provided for the horse during travel, and allow the horse to periodically lower its head while in the trailer. This allows the horse to clear particulate matter from its respiratory tract. Shipping fever has also been linked to stress, so avoiding shipping one horse alone for a long distance, which can induce greater stress, is also advised.
4. Arrange reliable transportation.
If you are not shipping your horse yourself, itâs important to know that you have arranged a transporter that you can trust.
If you donât know where to find one, consider using a service like Equo. The horse transportation application makes it easy to find and schedule reliable drivers with at least two years of experience, GPS accessibility at all times, and rigorously inspected trailers and vehicles. Equo also allows for the shipment of a reasonable amount of gear along with the horse at no added cost, as well as, in many cases, one human ride-along!
Once youâve followed these four tips, youâre on your way to hitting the road! Safe travels!
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
Cultivate a little gratitude for your horse! Â Itâs easy to show daily gratitude for our horses with a treat, a hand graze, extra scratches on the itchy spots.
But what about big picture stuff? Like saddle fit? The best diet formulated by an equine nutritionist? Regular bloodwork and soundness exams?
And bigger yet? Â Retirement plans? Â Finding a barn with bigger fields, larger stalls, more horse friends? Â
Or you could go the opposite way – find gratitude in the little things – like trail rides? Days off? Â Longer grooming sessions?
Whatâs your favorite way to show your horse some gratitude?
 Liv Gude, a former International Dressage Groom for years, founded proequinegrooms.com as a way to unite Grooms in the horse industry. The educational website also serves to entertain and inform horse owners across all disciplines about horse care, grooming, and health. Click here to check it out!
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
Our BarnManager team recently caught up with some of the best hunter barn managers in the business to learn their tips and tricks, and now weâre back with more insight from two women working hard in the saddle and behind the scenes to help their hunter operations run smoothly!
Meet This Weekâs Managers
Karli Postel â Karli Postel rides and assistant trains for Archie Cox at Brookway Stables in California.
Cara Meade â Cara Meade manages for John and Stephanie Ingram, LLC, based out of Tennessee.
Q: What is one thing that you or your horses never go to the ring without?
Karli: The grooms never come without a backpack, and in the backpack there are back boots, hoof oil, brushes, hoof pick, and rags; they always have a whip in the backpack. They always have a little bit of boot polish in the backpack. Show Sheen, rubbing alcohol, and fly spray. The backpacks are heavy!
Cara: A towel. There are so many uses for a towel at the ring. Horses always need to be dusted offâlegs, belly, sweat marks, green mouth, tackâand your riderâs boots can always have one last wipe-down. It can also be used on the jump or ground as a way to prep a spooky horse.
Q: Whatâs the biggest challenge of the job?
Karli: Orchestrating timing is probably the hardest, just because of the nature of our industry. Nothing generally runs specific to the laid-out time schedule, so you have to make your schedule but then be flexible within it. You have be able to recognize âOkay well this ring is running a little bit faster, and this ring is running a little bit slower,â so itâs going to work out a little differently than I had accounted for originally. I think if youâre not good at time management and you canât be flexible within a schedule that you make, youâre going to have a hard time because you might get flustered.
Cara: Communication! Whether itâs with someone who speaks a different language or just simply how someone else translates the task, idea, or information you are trying to explain. Clear and consistent communication between all parties is always a good challenge.
Q: Whatâs your biggest time-saving trick in the barn?
Karli: Using your resources and using your network. I see it all the time where people are at one ring and theyâre like, âWell I need to check on the other ring, so I need to walkover there.â You have the resource of the gate guy. Go and ask him to radio over. He wonât mind as long as you arenât rude and you wait until he has a convenient moment to do it; youâre saving yourself the trip. When we go to HITS Thermal where there are seven hunter rings, four jumper rings, and the barn is way far away, those 10 minutes that it takes you to walk from one ring to another are valuable. So I say definitely you need to use your resources. Sometimes getting the gate guyâs phone number is helpful. If youâre in the warm-up ring and canât hear the count, itâs nice to be able to reach out to them personally.
I also like to keep my schedule on my phone so that I always have it on me, and I try to make sure that everyone has a schedule. Archie [Cox], myself, and then our head guy Carlos, just so that all three of us have an idea of whatâs happening.
Cara: My time-saving trick is organization. Iâm not naturally the most organized person, so the more organized I can be with all of the supplies I use each day, my thoughts, and the order of how tasks get done makes a big difference in how long the days take to get finished.
Q: Whatâs the most rewarding part of your job?
Karli: Itâs so fun when you get to the weekend, and the clients come. You had your whole week and feel like youâve done all the prep.When they go in and they have success, and they come out and theyâre happy, thatâs the most rewarding for me. Especially when itâs kid; I love the amateurs, but with the kids itâs really rewarding because you can really see it on their face when theyâre so excited about winning. Even if they just went in and had a really good round, when they ride well itâs exciting!
Cara: The most rewarding part is seeing the horses perform well. There is SO much effort and detail that goes into getting each horse prepared exactly right to go to the ring. To see all of that effort pay off for horse and rider is definitely the most rewarding part.
Q: Whatâs your best grooming tip? And what five things do you use most in the barn?
Cara: My best grooming tip is to be organized as best you can. The more readily you can have all your grooming necessities and tack available the easier it will be to work quickly and efficiently.
I definitely use the dry-erase board; I wouldnât make it through the day without it. A towel and some Pledge; there is never something that doesnât need dusting. Scissors or a pocket knife, sunscreen, and tack soap.
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
Through our âFree for 501(c)3â program, our team at BarnManager has had the opportunity to learn more about incredible equestrian non-profit organizations from across the country. Each month, weâll be featuring one such organization here on our blog!
In 1980, the Fairfax 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program was launched with one borrowed horse and a handful of riders.
Today, 38 years later, that program has evolved into the Northern Virginia Therapeutic Riding Program (NVTRP), with a herd of 15 horses, four full-time and eight part-time staff, and a team of up to 250 weekly volunteers that serve approximately 115 riders each week.
With an ever-growing team, the need for organization is paramountâthatâs why NVTRP Equine & Facilities Manager Christina Duffy found herself searching online for a horse management tool. In her Googling, she came across BarnManager.
âBarnManager seemed to best fit our program needs and was the most user-friendly option,â explained Duffy. âBarnManager has helped to keep all of our files in one place and helped keep track of any events or illnesses that arise with a specific horse; it is much easier to remember to type something up then write it down! It has also made information about our horses more accessible to instructors and staff.â
This streamlined organization makes it easier for NVTRP to continue to focus on fulfilling its mission of providing equine-assisted therapeutic services to children and adults with disabilities, youth-at-risk, military service personnel, and their families in an inclusive, community-based setting.
NVTRPâs number one goal is to use equestrian-based services to provide a range of physical, social, and emotional benefits, and to help riders attain the healthiest, most independent lives possible.
Today, in order to meet the growing demand for NVTRPâs services, the organization has begun construction and a capital improvement project. Part of the project includes a new, larger, lighted outdoor riding ring, an accessible playground, and improved parking and access. To learn more about NVTRP and to get involved in the capital campaign, visit http://nvtrp.org/capital-campaign.
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
So what triggers your horse’s winter coat to come in? Your horseâs eyes and the summer solstice!
Every June, the solstice signals the start of summer. The days get progressively shorter. Your horseâs eyes slowly start to notice thisâŚsending signals to his brain to start thinking about winter. Sure, heâs not going to start sprouting a new coat mid-July, but heâs noticing.
The primary stimulus for a horseâs shedding and coat growing cycle is sunlight! Very little of the temperature and blanketing situations has an influence on the hair growth cycle.
 Liv Gude, a former International Dressage Groom for years, founded proequinegrooms.com as a way to unite Grooms in the horse industry. The educational website also serves to entertain and inform horse owners across all disciplines about horse care, grooming, and health. Click here to check it out!
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
On September 21, spectators and show jumping fans from around the globe watched as McLain Ward and Clinta delivered an incredible jump-off performance to anchor the U.S. team and clinch the USAâs first World Equestrian Games (WEG) team gold medal.
What most spectators did not see however, was Lee McKeever outside of the ring, overseeing every last detail of Clintaâs care or McKeeverâs wife, Erica McKeever, coordinating all of the logistics involved with Ward and Clintaâs WEG appearance and managing the 30 additional horses back home at Castle Hill Farm in Brewster, NY.
Behind every great rider is an equally great barn and horse management team, and while they might not be the ones atop the podium, for the last 30 years, Erica and Lee McKeever have been an essential part of that team at Castle Hill.
With more than three decades spent overseeing horses at one of the top show jumping barns in the country, there are few with more ongoing, high-level barn management experience than the McKeevers, so we asked Erica to share more about her own management career!
Q: How did you get started at Castle Hill?
When I came to the U.S., I was working for Tim Grubb in New Jersey, and Brigette that was working for Timâs barn brought me to Castle Hill during the horse show at Old Salem.
I first met Barney Ward that night. It just seemed like a really fun place. Everyone was hanging out together, and he called everybody his family several times while we were there. I felt like, âWhoa what a really neat place that is to work.â
Then I guess he must have called Brigette shortly after and said that he was looking for someone who could manage the show horses and go on the road with him. She asked me if I thought it was something that I was interested in doing. I said, âOh I donât think I could.â I had experience but not being in sole control of the horses. She said, âWell I think you could do it.â I did a trial, and we kind of hit it off right from the go. He was awesome. He taught me so much about horses and horsemanship. It was really special. I figured it out, and I never looked back.
I went on the road with him for a lot of years. McLain and Lee kind of went their way, and we went our way. I pretty much ran the show side of this barn. He had his managers at home, and thatâs kind of how it started.
Q: You had your son, Bradlee, in 2002, and your daughter, Baylee, in 2004. How did your role at Castle Hill change after having kids?
I took care of Sapphire when we first got her. Iâd just had Bradlee, so I tried to go on the road and still be a mom, and it actually was about virtually impossible. We had a fabulous babysitter who was with us from when Bradlee was six months old, so I tried to still go on the road and keep the same role, but it was really hard. I couldnât do it.
Then I started to stay at home and run that side of it. Instead of having a bookkeeper or a secretary, I did it myself. I still tried to occasionally go with Sapphire. I still traveled to Florida, and I still tried to do the barn as well because thatâs really important to me. Thatâs what I love to do. Then I had my second child, and it became very difficult to do it all. So, I stayed home, and I run things at home. Itâs great because now there are so many horse shows, you constantly have horses getting ready for the next event, which makes it really exciting at home too.
Q: Whatâs a typical day like at home now?
I like to be home until my kids leave for school on the bus, and then I go to the barn. I usually do a couple of hours in the office. We do a plan for the day of what horses are going to be doingâwhoâs riding which horse, who needs clipping, who needs the vet. We plan all that early in the morning.
The key to this is to surround yourself with great people, and then itâs easy. If you have good people in the barn that you trust and are good at what they do, it makes our jobs really easy too. You have to find good people that really want to do this and love the animals.
Q: What do you think it takes to be a good barn manager?
I think you have to be responsible. You canât leave it for someone else to do. You have to do it. I think managing is the perfect word â you have to pretty much manage everything from the help to the horses to the farrier. Itâs a huge role, and itâs a huge responsibility. I love it because I like to be in control a little bit.
Organization is important. We have a plan in place because McLainâs a huge planner. The horses are planned where theyâre going now through week 12 of Florida.
Again, I think the most important thing is that you have good people around you that care as much as we do, and they do this not for a job but because itâs what they love. We try to encourage the people to be a huge part of each and every horse. They all ride; they all take care of them. When McLain wins, we all win. Everybody contributes to that.
Q: What are the challenges of the job?
It can be a little stressful; sometimes itâs a little overwhelming because thereâs always something going on,
Now my daughter shows. She does the ponies. Thatâs become stressful in itself! I feel like Iâm managing a whole other operation; I donât know whatâs going to happen when sheâs doing the equitation! I just spent some time at the [ASPCA Maclay] Regionals last week, and that looks more stressful than ever. We just did the world championships, and that didnât seem as stressful as some of those kids!
Q: Whatâs your favorite thing about working for Castle Hill?
The family aspect. To be appreciated by McLain as much as he does. Itâs so special the way he involves our children in the whole thing â his father was the same. It was always about family. McLainâs really, really kept up with that. I would think he would make his dad very proud with how he is. I think giving the appreciation to the people around him, thatâs huge for everybody. Not just for me, but for my husband, and Virginie [Casterman] who took care of Clinta at WEG. Thatâs so important to be appreciated.
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
The Capital Challenge Horse Show attracts the best hunter horses and riders in the country â and in turn, the best hunter barn managers! While at the show, we caught up with several of them to learn their tips and tricks and the challenges and rewards of their jobs. Now, weâre sharing their feedback in a two-part series of blog posts!
Meet This Weekâs Managers
Kassie Gustafson â Kassie Gustafson manages for Hunt Tosh Inc., based out of Alpharetta, GA.
Molly Sewell Schott â Molly Sewell Schott is a rider and assistant trainer at Over the Hill Farm in Sanford, FL, where she has worked with Bill Schaub for the last 17 years.
Kate Wood â Kate Wood has managed for Liza Boyd at Finally Farm in Camden, SC, for almost two years.
Q: Whatâs the biggest challenge of the job?
Kassie: At a show, Iâd say just communicating. Making sure that all of the pieces are working together â whether youâre getting horses to the ring or youâre in a situation where you have a lot of clients. It really just depends on that â getting your whole team to work together. If youâre at home, not at a horse show situation, I would actually say pretty much the same thing: just making sure that everyone is communicating. There are a lot of moving pieces that make a barn run efficiently. Being able to manage all of that is probably the trickiest part.
Molly: For me, I think my challenge is juggling multiple roles. I ride and also manage the grooms and the horses. Thatâs the hardest thing. Iâd also say, making sure that communication is good between all of us.
Kate: Keeping all of the pieces moving; making sure that if there are lessons for the day that need to get done, that theyâre getting lined up in between showing â just trying to make sure that the day runs as efficiently as possible. Itâs really hard to do, because youâve got horses showing in the ring, and youâre trying to get other lessons put together. The time management is really the big thing.
Q: Whatâs your biggest time-saving trick in the barn?
Kassie: Iâm a huge multi-tasker. At the end of the day when you have a tack hook full of bridles, tack cleaning takes up a lot of time. So, any little stuff you can do throughout the day – like tack cleaning, those little types of things â they really help.
If people ask me, âWhat can I do to help you?â I hand them a pile of polo wraps to roll. Huntâs daughter, [Maddie Tosh] is great. She always helps us in the barn. I call her my little secretary because she is just fabulous. You donât realize how much it helps you when someone can do those kinds of little things for you. It allows you to have that time to do something else that you need to. Keeping up with the little things like cleaning tack and rolling polos throughout the day makes a difference.
Molly: I like to make sure that everything is organized when I close up shop every day. It saves time in the morning. I would rather stay at the barn later and then have everything smooth and efficient in the mornings, as far as tack being perfectly organized and that sort of stuff.
I like everything to be done the night before because you have very limited hours in the morning. When I get to the barn, I want to be able to pull every piece of tack out of the trunk and have it exactly where it needs to be before everyone starts riding. I even pack the trunk at night based on what weâre doing first, so Iâll put the schooling bridles on the top so that we can just get them out and get the horses out the door and to the ring. Thatâs probably my biggest time-saving thing as far as being organized.
Kate: Just really overcommunicating â even if you repeat yourself five times. Making sure that everyone knows the game plan; writing everything down. Liza and I donât leave the barn before we go over the board together and make sure that Jack [Towell] is clued in on what the morning is bringing. We just like to have a good game plan before we leave that day.
Q: What item or items do you use most in the barn?
Kassie: Anything I post for them I always hashtag #ShapleysSavesLives because it does. Weâre a huge fan of Shapleyâs products. Whether itâs the High Gloss, the Spray Paint, whatever â weâre huge fans. We use a lot of MagnaPaste for hoof packing.
Molly: Venice turpentine â at least thatâs what Iâm always buying! Itâs for their feet; weâre always making sure their feet are comfortable because thatâs the most important part. If you donât have any feet, you donât have any horse.
Kate: We love our Seashore Acres products. We use a ton of that stuff for scratches and for fly spray. I also have to say our rubber jump poles. Theyâre safer than regular jump poles; if you want your horse to land a little further out off a jump, you can place them on the ground. If they land on those, itâs a lot safer than if they were to land on a wooden pole. And again, our radios. Our radios are very important to us.
Q: What is one thing that you or your horses never go to the ring without?
Kassie: I never go anywhere without my backpack. I always say that itâs full of my magic tricks. I always have a hoof pick and a tail brush. We take all of our horses up with a chain lead shank. It makes it easier to hold them while theyâre getting ready. Iâm a really big fan of the baby oil thatâs a gel; itâs super easy to carry in a backpack. You donât have to worry about it spilling or anything like that. Baby powder of course, hoof oil, all the basic stuff. I have a kit of makeup that I take with me, in case we need it for any touch-ups. You never know whatâs going to happen!
Molly: Our horses and ponies are very spoiled; they definitely never go to the ring without peppermints! Then our grooms all have their essentials like hoof picks, fly spray, and towels in the backpack that goes to the ring with each horse.
Kate: My radio. Thatâs how we survive. And normally my hat and my boots just in case!
Q: Whatâs the most rewarding part of your job?
Kassie: Any time that a horse goes well â especially if itâs one that I had to get ready in the morning. With Huntâs farm, I love seeing Maddy do well because theyâre such a close family, and theyâre all so dedicated. They put so much into it. The whole family gives 150 percent every single day. Thatâs wonderful to be a part of.
Molly: I think the most rewarding part of my job is of course going in and showing â thatâs my favorite thing and my passion. But itâs also so rewarding when the ponies and horses go to the ring and theyâre prepared beautifully â when theyâre perfectly tuned and schooled and yet theyâre also gorgeous to look at. Itâs very satisfying to see them all braided up; they go to the ring and do their job and then theyâre champion our reserve.
Kate: I really love when the horses go in and do their job and everyone is happy. I like it when the horses are happy most of all. Thatâs the most fun for me, preparing the horses and then watching them go in the ring.
Q: Whatâs your best grooming tip?
Kassie: Fly spray. I use the wipe and spray. It is phenomenal. If you put it on their hooves instead of hoof oil, the footing doesnât stick to it. Iâm a huge fan of that. You can fix anything with some fly spray â brush it into their coat, wipe off the dust – fly spray is my go-to trick for sure!
Molly: I would say our biggest, best grooming tip would be for the wintertime when we do body clipping. We always clip our horses if they start getting the slightest bit of hair on them because we find that if you clip them when their hair is shorter, they keep their color longer. If you let the hair grow out long, they lose all their color.
Kate: I think just being aware of the details, not just with the horse being turned out well, but making sure that they donât have fungus; making sure that their coats look good, they donât have hives or bumps. It pays off to just pay close attention and know your horses.
BarnManager is designed to be a part of your team, with the compatibility and credentials necessary to improve communication, simplify the management of horses, and get you out of the office, off the phone calls, and into the barn with the horses you care about! Click here to get a free demo and find out more!
Originally posted by Nicole this time four years ago, this is the story of her childhood horse, Alaska, and the amazing journey they shared. This week, we decided to look back on the story of how Alaska inspired Nicole’s interest in management and horse care as well as how he ensured she would be around to create BarnManager.
Before moving into the Washington International Horse Show for the week, I made a quick trip down to Gordonsville, Virginia to visit the beautiful rehab facility and farm that is Oak Hill Farm. Oak Hill is owned and operated by Dr. Timothy Ober DVM (USEF Show Jumping team vet), and his amazing team. But most importantly, Oak Hill is the home to my horse Alaska for his retirement years. Alaska turned 20 this summer, and my visit featured much celebration and reflection on our time together.
Anyone who loves an animal understands that there is a unique bond between human and animal. There is a silent language, often accompanied by looks of understanding, unsolicited displays of affection, and a certain loyalty that two humans are not capable of recreating between one another. Whether it is a dog who never leaves your side when you are homesick or a horse that makes you question whether you are the one in charge, they make us feel whole.
The joy that I felt in seeing how happy my horse is living out his retirement surrounded by breathtaking scenery, caring people and an abundance of everything that a horse could ever dream of was all-encompassing. I walked around the farm smiling from ear to ear, inhaling slowly and allowing the fresh country air to sweep me into a state of bliss.
On a quiet Sunday morning, I sat in the grass in the middle of his beautiful green paddock. I watched him move slowly and pleasantly around the field following the best grass. Every few minutes, he came over to where I sat and checked in, patted me down in search of treats, looked at me with is big warm eyes and went back to munching. I think that anyone who passed by probably thought that I was crazy, but I never feel more at home than I do when I am near him.
Alaska came into my life by accident. He came to me as a circumstance of coincidence and luck, and I never could have predicted just what luck he was bringing along with him. He was a kind and generous teacher. One that never held a mistake against me for even a nanosecond and who rewarded me generously for my growth and development. As a rider and horseperson, I was better for having him in my life.
He spurred my interest in horse care and management. Growing up a barn rat, I spent as much time with the horses and in the barn as I could. But with Alaska, my time in the barn became more focused. I wanted to learn to care for him in the best ways. I stalked vets, farriers, chiropractors and more, listening, trying to see what they were seeing. and feel what they felt. I became more in tune with the subtleties of communication between animal and human.
And in the meantime, Alaska did his thing. He taught, he was patient, and he brought happiness and purpose to my life. And so, it was only appropriate that he played a leading role in shining a light on what was to become the most trying time in my young life.
At 17 years old, thinking that I had life nearly figured out, my world came crashing down. Alaska was so gentle and kind that to fall off of him was an embarrassment in itself. At the time, I had never had the pleasure of falling from the 18.2 hand equineâs back. So when I lost my balance and struggled to come off as gently as possible, I found myself in a special kind of pain. Along with a bruised ego, I had fractured a couple of ribs. Broken ribs required an x-ray.
From Alaskaâs back, I quickly moved found myself subjected to x-rays and CAT Scans and blood work and PET Scans. A tumor had been growing inside my chest. Did he know? My parents were convinced that his wisdom extended into the supernatural. To them, he saved my life. All that I know is that it happened. I fell off of him for the first time during our partnership, and I fell in such a way that a chest x-ray was required, and a chest x-ray got the ball rolling that led to a diagnosis of Stage 3 Lymphoma.
I donât know if he was an agent of fate. I donât know if he was brought to my life for this reason. But as I sat on the grassy hill, watching him make his way slowly across the field in my direction, I didnât care. I am not here without him; I am not me without him.
Cancer is terrifying. Everything in your life turns backward, upside down and inside out. We all go through challenges in life, and we all handle these challenges to the best of our ability. But Alaska made it easy. He remained a constant source of light, love, and happiness. While some people looked at me with sadness or fear and struggled to find things to say that did not need to be said, Alaska looked at me the same. If possible, he was maybe kinder and gentler than ever. He sustained me. He rescued me from dark places, he gave me consistency, hope, and peace.
As I sit here today, 8 years of remission under my belt, I am so grateful to see him living the life that he deserves. We celebrated his 20th birthday with a birthday bag filled with 20 lbs of carrots. I think he is in the prime of his life. He spends his days surrounded by beauty, perhaps the same beauty that he brought to my life.
The beauty of waking up each day and looking forward to what life has in store for you. The beauty of appreciating each day for what it brings and not wanting for more. The beauty of knowing that no matter where you go or how you get there, you are lucky enough to be here in the first place. And the beauty in knowing that we found each other, and the rest just is.