i feel clueless too, but then I will be around people more clueless
than me and think wow, I have grown. Today was a big step for me. I
went with a friend to take his new horse home for him, a totally green
freaked out nervous GIANT 4 year old mare. Had never been in a
trailer before. But my fr
--- Virginia Tupper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>I still feel clueless most of the time!! :D <<
Yea, Virginia, you and me both! It seems like one
step forward, 2 steps back. However, when I take
those 2 steps back, it makes me examine things more
closely and try to find a solution me and my ho
On 12/04/2008, Virginia Tupper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've been a clueless horse lover all my life! Thankfully I did take
> lessons, and I read everything I can, but I still feel clueless most
> of the time!! :D
> V
Join the club!
I think horse owners that don't ask questions are clueless,
I've been a clueless horse lover all my life! Thankfully I did take
lessons, and I read everything I can, but I still feel clueless most of
the
time!! :D
I think we all have those moments, Virginia, no matter how long we have horses,
so join the club. :) Gosh, I thought
i was so clueless when I got Jaspar, and honestly I wouldnt listen to
anyone either... but wow, to think of getting a HORSE with even less
forethought than bringing home a new pomeranian...
Janice
--
even good horses have bad days sometimes.
On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 8:28 PM, Wanda Lauscher
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 11/04/2008, Janice McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> I think in a case like that, she should sign herself up for lessons
> and see how those go before she inflicts herself on a horse of her
> own.
>
I've been a
On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 5:18 PM, Janice McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >and if you do decide to go ahead with it and get a horse,
> tell your wife to pick one like she would pick a man, dont go for the
> flashy spirited young handsome one, go for the old been there done
> that one that is qu
On 11/04/2008, Janice McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> decision, and if you do decide to go ahead with it and get a horse,
> tell your wife to pick one like she would pick a man, dont go for the
> flashy spirited young handsome one, go for the old been there done
> that one that is quiet and s
a guy at work came up to me yesterday and said "my wife is looking for
a horse, can you give me any advice?" I asked what kind, he said he
didnt know, just wanted "a pretty one". I said what horses have you
had before. none. Do you have a nice place for keeping horses? no.
they live in a beach