03.10.08

Frozen in time, Grand Central Station

Posted in ART for art's sake at 1:18 pm by petArtist Cmoses

Improv art, Improv Everywhere:
AWESOME!! Over 200 New Yorkers recently walked into one of the busiest train stations in the world, New York’s Grand Central Station, and at exactly 2:30 pm, all froze in place. There’s one guy in the video who froze just as he was stooping down to pick up some scattered papers. Talk about commitment…

Full backstory at Improv Everywhere

THANKS to DD for passing this to us!

03.08.08

Horses wading in belly deep snowpack

Posted in Horses for the horse crazy at 5:59 pm by petArtist Cmoses

Gilford and Glendale will do anything for a morsel to eat! Today’s rain and warmer temps have softened our deep dense snow enough that they ventured off their beaten track and figured out how to plough through the deep stuff; it is almost up to their bellies.

Bear in mind, this is NOT soft fluffy new snow, this is several snowfalls accumulated and packed down from its own weight and from melting. They sink nearly belly-deep down into it, to nibble on twigs that have blown off the trees.


This is so funny as they take slow steps, feeling their way, then suddenly sink through an underlying thick ice crust layer to the ground. I’m watching from inside the house (warm and cozy), just hoping no one falls over– it might be tough getting up out of this stuff!

At end of this video, first Gilford then Glendale climb back out of the deep soft stuff up onto their track, which they made and have been using since the early snows and which is packed down solid on top, so they are a whole lot higher up!

Now normally most horses won’t go to this much trouble for a mouthful, and these boys are FAR from underfed; they get plenty of hay, at least twice a day and sometimes three times a day, and we keep track of their condition. But Gilford (the black bay) is a chowhound, and younger brother Glen DOES follow his lead, at least sometimes…

03.05.08

Fun in Arabian Costume horse show class

Posted in Horses for the horse crazy at 7:34 pm by petArtist Cmoses

Riding Willow’s Bask, daughter Emmie showed in native costume classes in 1992-94. They showed at Deerfield Fair Open Horse Shows and on the Arabian Circuit in the N.H. Arabian shows, also held on the Deerfield fairgrounds. (All the large area horse shows are held at Deerfield NH.)

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Em showing Willow’s Bask in Arabian Native Costume Class, Deerfield Fair 1992 (CLICK PIX to enlarge, and use BACK button to return to blog) Photo by Doug Shiflet.

Emmie loved the costume class! There were two in a weekend, the Regular (first) class and the Championship class. You had to show first in the Regular class in order to enter the Championship Class. During Deerfield Fair, which is New Hampshire’s largest fair spanning 4 days, the Arabian Native Costume Championship class was always held on a Saturday night, typically the very last class of the evening.

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Trial run in the costume they showed in, which I cobbled together myself (CLICK PIX to enlarge) See how I made it at Arabian costume created from scratch !

We always thought the Fair ran the Native Costume as the last class of the night in order to hold the spectators there as long as possible. It is a very popular class with the crowds of course– think 10-14 Arabian steeds in full regalia, many with bells on, galloping into the ring for their entrance, with the crowd cheering and whistling! They show at the hand-gallop and at the walk. They need to be showy and flashy but well-mannered at the same time. At the end, after all that galloping both ways of the ring, they have to line up HEAD TO TAIL down the centerline of the ring, and back up on signal, for the judge’s inspection.

In one of Willy mare’s first costume classes she reared up when the judge walked by her. Em just laughed it off– she had already learned how subjective horse-showing was and she didn’t take it all so seriously.

Desert Arabian
This is the painting I made of them… (CLICK PIX to enlarge) and more horse art prints are on my site.

In costume classes it seemed the saddleseat Arabians usually placed better (than hunter-types) probably because they were high-stepping. We used to feed Willy higher-protein grain for 2-3 days before the costume classes just to pump her up a little, and she definitely got pretty animated in that open-air ring under the lights at night, while the packed crowds and glitz of the midway were going on all around them!!!

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Em and Willy with Nana

Although Em and Wil did very well in huntseat showing on the Arabian circuit (Reserve Championships their first year, Championships their second year in all her Junior-to-ride categories: hunter pleasure, huntseat equitation, hunter-under-saddle), they only got some placings and one Reserve Champ in the Arabian Open Costume Class… but she had tons of fun! And that mare with Em on her was the nicest Arabian hunter you could imagine! To think that she was “just” a backyard horse was unimaginable for many of the large barns. And at age 14, Em entered an Open Equitation class at Deerfield Fair (not just Juniors) and beat out 16 other riders for the blue ribbon! NOT too shabby!

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Waiting for mare to get urine inspection…

Urine inspection… REALLY?? It’s a funny story, Em was singled out for a random urine test for drugs at the horse show. The woman with the blue bag followed her around nearly an hour. Even after putting Willy back in her stall (fresh shavings almost always guarantees a fountain release), the mare never would pee and the tester finally gave up. What a job, huh!

See how I made this costume, and more horse costumes on petArtistWithPeaches…

winter sucks

Posted in Other fun stuff at 7:33 pm by JDTP4E

Pretty sure I mentioned this already… JDTP4E sent us this photo in agreement!

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he he he

Did you say Horsewoman?

Posted in Horses for the horse crazy at 6:16 pm by Q L Caballo

Oh where do we begin on this one? At the beginning…

I was laid off in January from a job I loved but which was also very unique. I know I have a lot of interviews in my future and like most people I would prefer to schedule root canals.

For those of you who have not been interviewed lately by the dreaded Human Resources person, the big trend seems to be phone interviews and the one-word description of yourself. It is like the beauty pageant question where you have to say “World Peace” to be in the top five.

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Just call Q in the Human Resources department…

Well there I am on the phone with a total stranger validating myself as a worthy employee and human being when she asks, “What one word would you use to describe yourself?”

I have to admit I was tired after having gotten back late from the barn patching up “Booboos Horsey”, (a.k.a. Q) the night before. Without hesitation out of my mouth came “horsewoman”.

Dead silence from the interviewer, then a puzzled voice asked, “Did you say horsewoman?”

I knew there was only one way to go now I had committed myself in that direction so I responded, “Yes, horsewoman.” She of course wanted more elaboration so here is what I said.

I’m a horsewoman.
When I see something that’s broken - I fix it.
If it is in the way - I move it.
If it is going to be a problem later on - I stop it from happening.
I teach others how to do things in case I am not there to do it.
Most importantly, when everything is hitting the fan I stay calm.
In a crisis or emergency I break the problem down into manageable sections and take care of it, piece by piece. I have learned that through experience.
When I think I can’t possibly get it done - I do – I find a way because I have to.
I’m a horsewoman.”

Having an existence with a horse proves a great deal about the type of person you are.
You realize you learn more from your failures than successes.
You learn that if you don’t try you’ll never get anything done.
You accept sometimes it will take many tries to get things done right.
You know doing something right is the only way to do anything.
You understand today’s challenges will be different than those of yesterday’s and tomorrow’s.
You can plan all you want but can never control everything – especially forces of nature.
You have to be able to adjust and change.
Most importantly you realize it’s best to take one gait, one jump, one horse at a time.
You have to believe in yourself and not accept something just because it is easier that way.

The interviewer wanted to schedule my next interview almost immediately.

I decided to take my own advice and told her I really appreciated the offer of a second interview but I was overqualified for the job. I thanked her for her time. She thanked me. She said she would always remember my unusual answer.

She should. It came from a horsewoman.

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Thanks so much to Q L, our newest Ghost Rider, for this perfect insight!!!

03.03.08

cavalo e fantasia, Spectacle equestre Tarbes

Posted in Horses for the horse crazy at 9:00 pm by petArtist Cmoses

cavalo e fantasia– José Vintém and the lusitano horse “Baucher” presents dressage[-like] in-hand work.

Spectacle equestre Tarbes– Vaulting, trick riding, and horses performing airs above the ground, with trick riders …


Numéro complet famille Hasta Luego.

03.01.08

Ralphie the rescued dog, friends and family

Posted in Dogs for dog lovers at 3:58 pm by petArtist Cmoses

You just must see… Katrina animal rescue trips, photo collections by danakay. Dana is apparently doing wonderful work to save unwanted animals and either find or give them new loving homes.

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Just one dog among the many saved by Dana from a kill shelter…

danakay shares his critter photos on flickr, so I don’t think he’ll mind my mention… find here many pic collections of rescued and shelter dogs and other animals, including horses.

This is a followup to Peaches’ blog (last March) on Ralphie and several other critters rescued by Dana after hurricane Katrina hit the New Orleans area.

Dr. Teskey on nerving the navicular horse

Posted in Horses for the horse crazy at 3:08 pm by petArtist Cmoses

Reprinted from Dr. Tomas Teskey, DVM, with more links and medical-caliber photos found here; from the barefoot website naturalhorsetrim.com
Dr. Teskey is author of The Unfettered Foot: A Paradigm Change for Equine Podiatry Email Dr. Tomas Teskey

I was recently approached about consulting with a dressage stable owner and his plans to purchase an eight year old Swedish warmblood mare that had been diagnosed with navicular syndrome. He was interested in just using her as a brood mare since she was approaching “middle age” and the lameness problem was “incurable”. I was informed that her fantastic breeding and records in the show ring would likely make her foals highly desirable. The previous owner was selling the mare because she was unable to afford the necessary surgery that the mare needed to remain sound and usable. Her veterinarian was planning on performing a digital neurectomy on both front lower legs of the mare and has been in touch with this potential new owner about following through with the necessary procedure. This stable owner decided to purchase this unsound eight year old mare at a much reduced price, and has been in consultation with me from the time she stepped foot on his property. This was six and a half months ago. He has also been in contact with the referring veterinarian over this time and has kept her informed of our progress in treating this mare for her diseased front feet.

One of his original questions for me before I met him or this mare, “Crystal”, was as follows:
He writes in his email, “I’m hoping you can help me out. I’ve just purchased a broodmare with navicular. Would it be possible for you to provide me with some information before breeding this mare? I looked at the x-rays with the previous vet and she suggesting cutting the nerves on this mare and didn’t understand why the previous owner hadn’t done it sooner. What are the pro’s and cons of this nerve cutting? Thank you for your time.”

My response to him four months ago was as follows, and with his permission I am sharing this information with any and all of you who would like to explore with me what has traditionally been happening with these horses and why it is high time we reevaluate the way we think about and treat these very common hoof problems:

The procedure you are referring to is known as a “neurectomy”.
[nerving] is known as a “neurectomy”. It is generally
performed on horses that have had chronic pain problems in
their feet, most notably “navicular” problems. The horse is put under
general anesthesia and the digital nerves on both sides of the lame
leg AND the more sound leg are isolated and cut–most often a section
of the nerve on both sides is removed and the ends “capped” with the
leftover nerve sheath. The reason that both legs are surgicated is
because most horses end up quite lame in the leg opposite the
originally lame one if it is left intact.
Thus, one can easily appreciate that even though a
horse only shows lameness in one of the forelegs,
both are affected in a horse with “navicular” disease
or “navicular” syndrome. The result of the surgery is that the horse
loses sensation from this point downward and is unable to feel the
pain from the diseased foot anymore. Usually the limping that was due
to the pain in the area goes away and the horse can continue to be
used.

The horse is thus returned to “soundness”. This procedure costs
anywhere from $250 to $1500 depending on where it is done and who
does it. It is “effective” for around one to two years–sometimes not
that long, sometimes longer, but all of these horses eventually
regrow some nerve connections and regain sensation of the area that
was originally desensitized. The lameness then returns and the
procedure can be repeated at that time to keep the horse sound. As
you can easily see, this procedure addresses only one thing for the
horse and the owner: the head bobbing lameness.

There are some very real and potentially devastating negative side
effects of digital neurectomies in horses. Often times the raw ends
of the nerves become irritated to the point of developing extremely
painful nerve tumors called neuromas, leading to further surgeries to
remove them. Other times, the digital arteries and veins that lie
immediately parallel to the cut digital nerves become scarred and the
resulting stagnation of circulation leads to foundering of the worst
degree. Localized infections, scarring of tendinous and ligamentous
structures and unsightly swellings are also common. Thus, a procedure
designed to provide temporary relief from a widely misunderstood type
of lameness often leads to further pain, loss of use and early death
for these affected horses. Performing these surgeries is severely
disruptive to the horse’s lower leg anatomy, physiology and energy
patterns, and commonly leads to irreparable damage.

“Navicular” problems, often referred to as “heel pain” or “caudal
heel syndrome” start presenting symptoms in horses as young as two
and three years old when their hooves are either allowed to overgrow
into a deformed shape, and/or their feet are shod at this young age. The
still-developing coffin bones and sensitive inner hoof structures are
surrounded, constricted and over-pressurized by the progressively-
deforming hoof capsules, starving them of vital movement and
circulation, yet forcing them to attempt to function and survive in a
physiologically stagnant state.

Older horses are also plagued by what is termed navicular disease
and innumerable other hoof problems when their hooves
also succumb to deformities in structure and stagnation
of function. These lamenesses occur after longer periods of what is
traditionally thought to be the “best hoof care possible”. When
this “best hoof care possible” consists of infrequent trimming and/or
shoeing, it is no mystery, but rather a highly predictable and
physiologic certainty, that these horses will suffer from hoof
deformities and possibly debilitating lamenesses. “Killing me softly”
takes on new meanings when it comes to the effects of the steel
horseshoe on our equine companions.

Given that all of these “navicular” horses can be shown to have
deformities in the outward appearance of their hooves, it would seem
logical to direct our efforts towards improving their abnormal hoof
form, reversing the trends that are causing these deformities and
provide for the horse a situation that promotes good hoof form.
Cutting the digital nerves in these horses provides absolutely
nothing that is honestly therapeutic for them. It is a medically
unsound procedure, but it is prevalent in our modern day “use and
abuse” philosophy of keeping horses going– doing this in a day and
age where we now have an excellent understanding of why these horses
end up with “navicular” pain is totally unnecessary and irresponsible–
there are no sound medical reasons to perform these nerve surgeries
with the reckless abandon they are.

These procedures are an excellent example of how simple
ignorance of proper hoof form and function allows horse owners
and their veterinarians to perform them. Terms like
“salvage procedure” have become widely used to describe such
procedures that prolong the useful life of the animal strictly for
the human’s monetary benefit. Addressing the real problems of the
deformities in the feet and how to reverse them with proper trimming
and lifestyle will win out as the only acceptable alternative for
these animals and their human stewards, and the true salvage in terms
of the lives of horses will be realized.

Performing digital neurectomies on heel-sore or foot-sore horses
promotes further degeneration of the entire lower leg and hooves in
these animals, because it disrespects and disallows what the entire
animal needs to achieve a more proper hoof form and normal function.
Instead of cutting the nerves to a part of the horse’s anatomy and
achieving a completely false sense of “soundness”, we are
alternatively able to nurture these unsound horses and their deformed
feet to attain correct hoof form and thus proper and vital
physiologic function. Natural exfoliation, vital mechanical hoof
movements, energizing sensation and exquisite protection are just a
few of the important functions horses’ hooves need to have, and this
is precisely what they achieve with proper hoof care. This leads us
and our horses on a direct path to an honest soundness, far outpacing
conventional western veterinary medical techniques and promoting the
physical and psychological health of the entire horse, rather than
disrupting a part of the horse’s vital anatomy, which only leads to
further deterioration, loss of use and early death.

As it is improperly trimmed and/or shod horses that are the ones
affected by “navicular syndrome”, we know that promoting sound,
naturally shaped hooves along with adequate movement on firm terrain
is essentially a life-promoting and life-saving, honestly therapeutic
form of treatment–it is this type of treatment I will prescribe for
horses that I tend to, as it is the only treatment that respects the
nature of the horse. Drugs such as isoxsuprine, nitrous oxide,
nitroglycerin, phenylbutazone and flunixin meglumine do nothing to
improve the deformed feet in these affected horses. Eggbar shoes,
reversed shoes, special pads, natural balance shoes, wedge pads,
impression material, shoes with rails and/or frog inserts, or any
other artificial appliance attached to the bottom of the horse,
cannot possibly be honestly therapeutic for horses with navicular
problems or other hoof ailments. It is a physiologic impossibility;
they can only serve to further the deformities and damage to the
horses to which they are nailed, perhaps prolonging the development
of further, inevitable symptoms until years down the road, but still
furthering the damage all the while.

There is not a single case of a horse with severe “navicular
disease” that has been cured by the application of an appliance
to the foot. Cured, and/or sound, would be defined as a
horse that is able to walk, trot and run at liberty on their
own feet in a soft environment with animation, impulsion and
without lameness. It is the promotion of natural hoof form and thus
proper hoof function which allows horses to heal from the insults
previously afforded them by improper trimming, shoeing and/or
lifestyle, and they heal remarkably well if we respect their
fascinating anatomy and its wonderfully simple physiology. Providing
this option to horse owners when they are faced with whether to pay
for a “salvage procedure” or provide for what their horse honestly
needs is what the natural hoof care movement is about. These are life
and death situations for our horses and it saves horses’ lives every
day.

It is ironic that honest, well-intentioned people across the land are
spending their hard-earned money on treatments that are making their
horses more unsound and more unusable in the long run. Terms such
as “therapeutic shoeing” or “corrective shoeing” will soon be exposed
for the oxymorons they are, and interested parties such as insurance
companies and horse-leasing operations will soon question such
practices, and will not stand idly by while shelling out millions of
dollars to pay for such appliances and other “treatments” such as
neurectomies that only serve to worsen the conditions of the animals
to which they are responsible. Alas, this is the age we now live
in… an age of transition for ourselves as well as our horses. Our
responsibilities are great, the knowledge is there, and it is coming
to an area near you.

Tomas Teskey D.V.M.

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