SEL
Well-Known Member
My most time consuming bit in the morning is the walk to and from the fields - especially as they are now a swamp. In order to get 24 hour turnout for my 2 that didn't have ad lib haylage (they are fat and it makes one of them sick) they are in a lovely large field about 1/4 mile walk across the main winter field with the riding school ponies in it.
So about 7:30am (which will get earlier when we finally see daylight again) I paddle past hoards of wet, soggy riding school ponies. If the haylage has been re-stocked then they all ignore me but if it has been demolished overnight then I get mugged.
7:40 ish - arrive at my field gate to be yelled at by my mare. Gelding stands in the distance looking a bit bewildered (his normal look). Struggle to open gate without sinking into the bog, tussle with mare to put headcollar on, tussle with mare to lead back through bog, tussle with mare to wait patiently whilst gelding realises its breakfast and comes through at his own very, very steady pace (by which time me + mare are thinking HURRY UP!)
Lead mare down to yard avoiding hoards of hungry ponies who file in behind us like something out of the pied piper. Gelding wanders down in his own good time stopping for a poo and a pee.
Get to gate to main yard and tussle mare through swamp #2 and gate without letting riding school ponies out. Gelding suddenly realises he's left behind and splatters through covering everything within 100m in mud. He wanders off to find something to eat whilst mare gets thrown in stable with net. Go find gelding & persuade him to go in a stable without stealing everyone else's food. Usually fail and have to apologise to other liveries. Depending on how cooperative everyone is being its usually around 8:00 now.
Throw diet breakfast into both of them and grab tack from car.
About 8:15 - 8:30 drag mare out of her stable, pick out feet and either lunge or ride her depending on what time I have to be at work. Annoyingly they won't lead nicely back to their field together and having the argument when its as muddy as it is in the gateways just means I end up looking like I've been swimming in it. I leave the mare with a handful of hay after riding and cart the gelding plus a haynet all the way back to the field again. Leave him there eating, check water (trough unreliable) and then trudge back to get the mare, put a rug on her and haul her back up.
Finally get into work around 10 with hair that looks a mess, jeans that probably have mud on them somewhere and a slight pong of pony (& who knows what else!)
Evenings for me are a waste of time because the mare has CSNB and doesn't lead well in the dark. If its a short walk and she knows the route then its manageable but where she is now and crossing a field full of horses its a no-go zone. So if they've been in at night then I'll pop back in the evening to muck out, but otherwise everything has to be done in the morning.
So about 7:30am (which will get earlier when we finally see daylight again) I paddle past hoards of wet, soggy riding school ponies. If the haylage has been re-stocked then they all ignore me but if it has been demolished overnight then I get mugged.
7:40 ish - arrive at my field gate to be yelled at by my mare. Gelding stands in the distance looking a bit bewildered (his normal look). Struggle to open gate without sinking into the bog, tussle with mare to put headcollar on, tussle with mare to lead back through bog, tussle with mare to wait patiently whilst gelding realises its breakfast and comes through at his own very, very steady pace (by which time me + mare are thinking HURRY UP!)
Lead mare down to yard avoiding hoards of hungry ponies who file in behind us like something out of the pied piper. Gelding wanders down in his own good time stopping for a poo and a pee.
Get to gate to main yard and tussle mare through swamp #2 and gate without letting riding school ponies out. Gelding suddenly realises he's left behind and splatters through covering everything within 100m in mud. He wanders off to find something to eat whilst mare gets thrown in stable with net. Go find gelding & persuade him to go in a stable without stealing everyone else's food. Usually fail and have to apologise to other liveries. Depending on how cooperative everyone is being its usually around 8:00 now.
Throw diet breakfast into both of them and grab tack from car.
About 8:15 - 8:30 drag mare out of her stable, pick out feet and either lunge or ride her depending on what time I have to be at work. Annoyingly they won't lead nicely back to their field together and having the argument when its as muddy as it is in the gateways just means I end up looking like I've been swimming in it. I leave the mare with a handful of hay after riding and cart the gelding plus a haynet all the way back to the field again. Leave him there eating, check water (trough unreliable) and then trudge back to get the mare, put a rug on her and haul her back up.
Finally get into work around 10 with hair that looks a mess, jeans that probably have mud on them somewhere and a slight pong of pony (& who knows what else!)
Evenings for me are a waste of time because the mare has CSNB and doesn't lead well in the dark. If its a short walk and she knows the route then its manageable but where she is now and crossing a field full of horses its a no-go zone. So if they've been in at night then I'll pop back in the evening to muck out, but otherwise everything has to be done in the morning.