Re: Various happenings at Beaver Dam Farm this summer --

2006-02-07 Thread Beaver Dam Farm
This message is from: Beaver Dam Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hello Everybody from Carol Rivoire at Beaver Dam Farm --

I need to get off my soapbox for a bit re the DVD Evaluations, and tell you
about what's happening at the farm.

INTERNSHIP PROGRAM --  We're very pleased this year to have applications from
quite a few American and Canadian girls.  It makes our summers just that much
more international to have a good mixture of European and North American
interns.  --  This year is shaping up very nicely.  We have girls coming from
Germany and Holland, and also have a girl coming from England this season.
She'll be the first British girl we've had.  --  Because of the fact that the
girls come and go throughout the season, we still have places for a few more
interns.  Our minimum stay is 6 weeks, but I have to tell you that in all the
years we've been offering the Internship Program, the girls who stay the
longest get the most out of the program.  --  It always takes them a certain
period of time to settle in, and that can be two weeks, so they really need
more time to make friends and to really understand the culture and people of
Nova Scotia.  -- So, for those of you who have daughters or granddaughters you
think would be suitable, please have them email us. -  In order to qualify for
this program, the girls need a good level of riding and horsemanship.


NEW!  HIP  - Horse Immersion Program -  This program is for girls between 14
- 17 . . .  girls whose horsemanship isn't yet at the level for the Internship
Program.  This is a learning program, and the cost is $650 U.S. per week, and
it includes room, board, riding lessons, horsemanship lessons, plus all the
horse activities.  -- The girls stay in our home, in a nice bedroom with one
other girl, and we always try to mix up the nationalities which allows the
girls to make the most of the cultural exchange.  --Along with riding and
other horse activities, the days are filled with shared barn work, cooking,
hiking, lawn games, and time at the beach.

As so many of our guests say each summer . . . .What a wonderful opportunity
these girls have to be here at the farm?


NOVA SCOTIA RIDING VACATION -  Beginner to Intermediate Level -  Our teaching
is based on dressage, and almost all our saddles are dressage saddles.  Very
small classes.  One on one lessons if needed.  --  For beginners, we start
them out on the lungeline in the Round Pen.  --  It's a great way to gain
confidence.  We have two sand rings, plus our grass driving dressage arena.
Lessons take place in all three areas, plus on the trail.  --  The vacation is
four days and includes a gourmet lunch each day (at least one on the trail), a
Wine  Cheese Welcome Party on Sunday night -  A Wine  Cheese Beach Party
with Horses,  a gift certificate from Carol  Arthur to Gabrieu's Bistrot (#1
restaurant in Nova Scotia).  --  Our program has always been based on our
serious desire to teach riding and driving, along with an equal desire to give
our guests a fun vacation they won't forget.


NOVA SCOTIA DRIVING VACATIONS -  Beginners  Beyond -  a 4-DAY program packed
full of instruction, fellowship, and fun.  Those doing the Riding Vacation and
those doing Driving Vacation are joined together for many social occasions,
including the gourmet lunches on the deck overlooking the ocean.  -- We're
also all together for the two Wine  Cheese Parties --  At Hill House, and on
the beach.  --  The Driving Vacation is geared toward beginners, but we have
sufficient staff and we're small enough so that drivers with experience can
also benefit and enjoy themselves with our quality driving horses.  --  As
always, our goal is serious instruction coupled with lots of fun and laughs.


CONSIGNMENT HORSE PROGRAM -  We're looking for a few more extra nice horses to
sell under our name in this year's Consignment Program.  --  If you have such
a horse that you need to sell, give us a call.   -  We only sell horses that
are here at Beaver Dam Farm, and in our training program.  --  People
sometimes ask us to sell their horse while it remains on their property.  This
we can't do, and we don't see how anybody else could either.  -  The only way
we can sell a horse is if we know the animal extremely well.  That means
working with him daily, and truly getting to know all his good, great, and not
so great aspects.  --  With this knowledge under our belt, we can honestly and
enthusiastically talk about him to buyers.  --  We're really concerned, for
all three parties (the horse, the seller, and the buyer) that the match we
make is as good as can be.  --  Our consigning owners love their horses, and
want them to go to a good and proper home.  We respect this, and try our best
--  try our darndest to make it happen.  --  The fact that the consigned
horses we sell are sold under the Beaver Dam Farm name means a lot to the
buyers, and means everything to us.  That's why we stress that we'll only take
qualilty horses.



FITNESS FOR FEMMES -  

Re: various and embryo transplant

2003-09-02 Thread Jean Ernest
This message is from: Jean Ernest [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi KAthy,

Wouldn't it be Much MUCH less expensive to simply buy a good Fjord weanling
or yearling rather than go through all the expense and trouble of doing an
embryo transplant?  of course it would be interesting to see how the
temperment of the recipient mare, thoroougbred, or
Thoroughbred/quarterhorse,  would affect the baby fjord, who would be
raised by this mare.  Very interesting!

Jean in rainy, foggy, gloomy Fairbanks, ALaska, with nothing better to
do why are we getting all this rain, monsoons?

 I Am seriously thinking of using my
thoroughbred/Qh and thoroughbred mares as recip mares for embryo
transplant - from a fjord of course. 

Jean Ernest
Fairbanks, Alaska
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Various

2003-03-22 Thread ruth bushnell
This message is from: ruth bushnell [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 We send our heartfelt support to our troops and their families. We do not
 support the war... Peg


Anyone who pays their taxes does Peg,  =))) like it or not, but I believe I
understand what you're belatedly and unnecessarily inferring at this heated
point in time...  'though in reality I can't imagine it could be said that
there is actually anyone in the US in 'favor' of war; who would not have
preferred the obvious alternative. We support our nation's leaders and pray
for our troops also. God have Mercy on America and all countries involved..

But I imagine that individual political perceptions is something to be
avoided on a general List that is made for Fjords. Ours seem to be
blissfully oblivious to world affairs and antipathies... they are wistfully
listening for the sound of green grass growing in the pastures. Sgh.

Ruthie, nw mt



Re: Various

2002-10-10 Thread HorseLotti
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Peg - well, I couldn't see your face so I missed that smirk :)  

Linda



Re: Various - not as long as usual

2002-06-17 Thread Jean Gayle
This message is from: Jean Gayle [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Lots of luck Peg in the show.  It takes a lot of effort to put that group
together.  Hope you are well rewarded for it all.  Jean





Jean Walters Gayle
[Authoress of The Colonel's Daughter
Occupied Germany 1946 To 1949 ]
http://users.techline.com/jgayle
Send $20
Three Horses Press
PO Box 104
Montesano, WA 98563






Re: Various and working student needed.....

2001-06-08 Thread whitedvm
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Vivian,

 I can now tell you that we are at least going straight on our stiff 
 side and
 both are actually becoming more supple every day. 

What type of exercises are you doing to accomplish this?

Congratulations on the new (and final) foal!  I'm glad it was an
uneventful foaling season for you.

Steve

Steve and Amy White
Prairieholm Farm
Waterloo, Nebraska





Re: various

2001-02-27 Thread GAIL RUSSELL
This message is from: GAIL RUSSELL [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Peg,

There is one for sale in my local paper in SAnta Rosa CA.  Want me to send
you the phone # if it is still there?  It appeared in the last day or so.
Well, time to finish ordering my new Bob Marshall treeless saddle.

Bye,

Peg Knutsen - Ellensburg, WA
http://www.eburg.com/~kffjord/



Gail Russell
Forestville CA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Various

2001-02-16 Thread linda hickam
This message is from: linda hickam [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Julie really is a real treasure...keep her in our
thoughts..
--
From: Knutsen Fjord Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: fjordhorse@angus.mystery.com
Subject: Various
Date: Fri, Feb 16, 2001, 6:52 PM


This message is from: Knutsen Fjord Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi all -

Here we sit with our occasional snow furies, and I keep thinking of Julie
Will, who is baking in South Africa's sun right now with her personal guide,
Cheryl Beillard. Please continue to send Julie your kindest and most
supportive thoughts as she continues her struggle with cancer. She is one of
the strongest women I have ever met, and I've met a bunch! And after [out
of?] Africa, she and Darryl will head for Norway. Wow!

We've been tearing our hair out here trying to get our latest Herald ad put
together on Pagemaker and Photoshop, and then I think of Julie and I feel a
whole lot less hassled. Sort of puts the right perspective on life.

Today I got to canter again in my lesson on His Majesty, er, that is, I mean
Erlend. I just want to go forever! He, on the other hand, just wants to go
as far as the next pretty girl with a fetching pastern.

Sadie is not quite great, but certainly good, with child, and is also
getting into fine shape. Think filly, audience! Let's see, Flotrella?
Flotrenna? I hate the waiting part!

How 'bout those Viking's horses! Sorry Steve, I can't seem to let go of
it.

bye for now -

Peg Knutsen - Ellensburg, WA
http://www.eburg.com/~kffjord/







Re: Various

2001-02-13 Thread whitedvm
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Jon  Mary Ofjord wrote:
  I can only ask for mercy or duck quickly.
  Jon
 
 Just like the Vikings!
 
 Mark
 

Ugh!  I'm doubled over and gasping for air on that one Mark.  That was
hitting below the belt.

The forever faithful Viking fan,

Steve


Steve and Amy White
Prairieholm Farm
Waterloo, Nebraska




Re: Various

2001-02-12 Thread Mariposa Farm
This message is from: Mariposa Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Jon  Mary Ofjord wrote:

 I can only ask for mercy or duck quickly.

 Jon

Just like the Vikings!

Mark





Re: Various

2001-02-12 Thread Jon Mary Ofjord
This message is from: Jon  Mary Ofjord [EMAIL PROTECTED]



 Oh, and Steve White, How 'bout them Vikings?

You haven't been talking with the Ofjords now have you?  I'll get them
for that.

Steve,
Your powers of deduction are amazing! I was going to confess my sin to you
at Galena, but now that you know, I guess I should get ready for
retribution. I can only ask for mercy or duck quickly.

Jon






Re: Various

2001-02-11 Thread whitedvm
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Peg,

 Oh, and Steve White, How 'bout them Vikings? [private joke, 
 guaranteed
 to elicit a response, I hear] I can hardly wait.
 

You haven't been talking with the Ofjords now have you?  I'll get them
for that.

The Viking motto:  Well, there's always next year.

Steve

Steve and Amy White
Prairieholm Farm
Waterloo, Nebraska




Re: Various - long

2001-02-07 Thread Mary Thurman
This message is from: Mary Thurman [EMAIL PROTECTED]


--- Knutsen Fjord Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 This message is from: Knutsen Fjord Farm
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Hi all -
 
 Another good use for hair is a hair saddle. The
 young woman who works with
 my trainer is making one from all the shedding at
 their place  Evidently what you do is collect mass
 amounts of horse hair, stuff
 it in a burlap bag, and ride the bag all summer as
 if it were a saddle. By
 fall, it will be a saddle, perfectly fitted to you
 and your horse. The hair
 turns to felt. Haven't tried it myself, but it
 sounds good.

H.  Sounds pretty SCRATCHY to me!!  We used to
have horsehair blankets to use in the wagon/sleigh in
the winter(the only way to town in the winter when I
was a small child was by horsedrawn wagon or sleigh). 
They were REALLY made of horsehair!!  Warm, but VERY
scratchy!

Mary
 

=
Mary Thurman
Raintree Farms
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Re: Various, secret purchases

2001-02-07 Thread Starfire Farm, LLC
This message is from: Starfire Farm, LLC [EMAIL PROTECTED]



carol j makosky wrote:

  He thinks all I need is a two horse one,
 but little does he know I am going for something bigger to hold my cart too.  
 By
 the way, I picked out my new truck 1st and then let him think that he gave the
 final approval.

You go girl!

Beth


--
Beth Beymer  Sandy North
Starfire Farm, Berthoud CO
http://www.starfirefarm.com






Re: Various:

2001-01-28 Thread Steve McIlree
This message is from: Steve McIlree [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Cynthia--

Sunday, January 28, 2001, you wrote:

 Tank has been a solo horse since I bought him at 2 1/2. He doesn't
 seem to mind.

  Tank is not really a solo horse, just a solo Fjord. He has always
  had no fewer than four and as many as twenty other horse to interact
  with.

--
Steve McIlree -- Pferd  Skipper -- Omaha, Nebraska, USA
  People may talk of first love--but give me the flush, and triumph,
  and glorious sweat of a first ride. --George Borrow(1803-1881)






Re: Various

2000-12-21 Thread Lori Albrough
This message is from: Lori Albrough [EMAIL PROTECTED]

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Wesley and I have been trying to think up a suitable bimboish name
 for the phantom. Anyone on the list have any good ideas?

How about Fanny? 
or perhaps Fanny Mae?

Lori A.



Re: Various

2000-12-21 Thread Jean Gayle
This message is from: Jean Gayle [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Phantom name  Minnie Rouse




Jean Gayle
Aberdeen, WA
[Authoress of The Colonel's Daughter
Occupied Germany 1946 TO 1949 ]
http://www.techline.com/~jgayle
Barnes  Noble Book Stores





Re: Various

2000-12-21 Thread Starfire Farm, LLC
This message is from: Starfire Farm, LLC [EMAIL PROTECTED]



[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  Wesley and I have been trying to think up a suitable bimboish name
 for the phantom. Anyone on the list have any good ideas?

;-)   My vet named his after his mother-in-lawcan't remember her name,
tho.


--
Beth Beymer  Sandy North
Starfire Farm, Berthoud CO
http://www.starfirefarm.com






Re: Various

2000-12-19 Thread Reinbowend
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


In a message dated 12/19/00 2:16:58 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Definitely have to train Erlend to a dummy

now that his favorite surrogate, Pepper, has left. Also have to put some

thought into the appearance of the dummy. One breeder told me that she has

to caution people who wear a certain color around her stallion 

Peg,

The first year I owned Marnix He attempted to mount the hood of our lawn 
tractor after deciding that it was the right shape. I was standing there 
holding him, talking to my daughter who was sitting on the seat of the 
tractor when I realized he was getting a little puffed up and starting to 
gently elavate his front end trying decide just how to approach this new 
phantom. Then in the winter I was standing in the barn next to my sleigh 
which was covered with an old cooler when he tried to mount the back of the 
sleigh from the side. I'm sure the aroma of the cooler was the guiding force 
behind his lust.

 Now he has his very own phantom and is very happy with her. She is always 
exactly where he left her last, doesn't kick or move and is always receptive. 
We covered all the mares AI in 2000 and both Marnix and I are much happier 
with this arrangement. I don't even put a mare in the tease chute anymore as 
by the time he's been washed he knows the drill and was always going to the 
mount anyway and ignoring the mare in the chute, ususlly much to the mares 
dismay. The Colorado Mount is the best because I can collect all by myself. I 
attended a repro clinic in Middlebury VT several years ago. They even let us 
inseminate mares with water to practice. I found the whole thing incredibly 
interesting as it appealed to the latent scientist lurking within.

Marnix's whole demeanor at shows last year was incredibly layed back because 
he knew his real true love was in the paddock at the back of the barn waiting 
for him. Wesley and I have been trying to think up a suitable bimboish name 
for the phantom. Anyone on the list have any good ideas?

We are expecting 8 inches of snow tonight which is great because I need a 
Christmas card picture immediately and also some snow to cover the sheet ice 
covering all my pastures and paddocks. Both my littles are out of school so 
now the season has begun in earnest..Merry Christmas to AllVivian 
Creigh



Re: Various Stuff

2000-09-04 Thread Jean Gayle
This message is from: Jean Gayle [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Steve I was wondering if you were still in charge of this thundering herd.
Good luck in Libby.  Jean





Jean Gayle
Aberdeen, WA
[Authoress of The Colonel's Daughter
Occupied Germany 1946 TO 1949 ]
http://www.techline.com/~jgayle
Barnes  Noble Book Stores





Re: Various Stuff

2000-09-04 Thread whitedvm
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

. 
 Did
   Tordin get a big kiss, Steve?
 

You betcha!  A big sloppy one right on the nose as well as some extra
carrot treats.

Thanks for the plug Steve.  We had a blast.  Amy and I are hooked on this
CDE stuff now.  I hope the horses are too.

Have a good and safe trip to Libby.  Take lots of pictures for us to see.

Steve White
Waterloo, NE



Re: Various

1999-12-13 Thread Mary Thurman
This message is from: Mary Thurman [EMAIL PROTECTED]



--- Knutsen Fjord Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 This message is from: Knutsen Fjord Farm
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 When Bob Van Bon visited last year, he demonstrated,
 at Anne Appleby's, a
 different way to finish out the mane at the poll. 
 The mane was cut with no
 notch or bridle path, but rather tapered down to
 nothing where the bridle
 bath would be.  The bridle strap rests on the
 beginning of the forelock.

This is the way I cut our Fjords' manes.  It was the
way I saw the manes cut when we first had Fjords.  It
also eliminates having to guess how wide to make the
bridle notch, plus they do not look like part of their
mane is sticking up wrong when they don't have a
halter or bridle on.  The mane just flows right into
the forelock.  You let the forelock grown from behind
the ears, instead of from between them.  This gives
you a bit more forelock, but that shouldn't be a
problem.  On those few Fjords that seem to have a
scrimpy forlock which won't grow out it seems that
the hair further back - behind the ears - grows
better, and longer, than the hair right above their
eyes.  In the case of my husband's gelding, I think
it's because he has a whorl right in the center of his
forelock which makes the hair grow every which way. 
It always looks like he has a knot in the center of
his forelock, which he does not.

Mary


 

=
Mary Thurman
Raintree Farms
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Various

1999-07-08 Thread Jean Gayle
This message is from: Jean Gayle [EMAIL PROTECTED]

As long as you are gooing to the coast Peg you should also try our
gooeyducks.  Thats a clam you know.  Jean
Jean Gayle
Aberdeen, WA
[Authoress of The Colonel's Daughter ]
http://www.techline.com/~jgayle
-Original Message-
From: Knutsen Fjord Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thursday, July 08, 1999 5:17 AM
Subject: Various


This message is from: Knutsen Fjord Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi list -

I've been enjoying the discussion about halters.  Monday Betsy Billeter
and I are gooing to the coast [that's what they call Western
Washington over here] to shop for used tack and such.  Sonny has



Re: Various things

1998-11-29 Thread jean gayle
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (jean gayle)

This message is from: Starfire Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]



I also think that it is important keep in touch with what is current
within the European market. If looking at the US warmblood market is any
indication, there is future potential for a sales market for our horses
in Europe.  Therefore, I think that it would be important to maintain
our European connection with the experts from Holland, Norway, etc. 

I quite agree, but my information re the demand for US warmbloods market in
Europe is because of the use of our thoroughbreds in cross breeding to take
the heaviness out of the big beasties.  That was how my thoroughbred mare,
at 15.2 hands won over ponderous ladies of the Holstein breed in front of
three European judge/evaluators.  Are we going to add thoroughbred blood to
our fjörds or just have such great lineage Europeans will want them?  Jean Gayle
Jean Gayle  --- A Subscriber at Techline 



Re: Various things

1998-11-29 Thread Mike May
This message is from: Mike May [EMAIL PROTECTED]

At 08:42 AM 11/28/98 -0700, you wrote:
This message is from: Starfire Farm [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  I understand that there is an
NFHR Versatility Award (the details were published in the Summer 1996
Fjord Herald.)  We need to make more of this. Perhaps one issue of the

Yes there is a Versatility Award as well as an Award of Excellence

I have been trying to get the info for each of them posted on the web site.
 Unfortunately all of the information isn't in an electronic format (yet).
If any of you would like information on these programs the people to
contact about them are:

Excellence award - Karen Cabic  - email - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Versatility Award - Becky Mayer  - Check your roster for her phone number
or email me privately.  She doesn't have a listed email address yet.

Mike



Re: Various

1998-05-27 Thread Starfire Farm



Cynthia_Madden/OAA/UNO/[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Question: Getting Fjords to cross water. Tank will
follow another horse
through water and cross the same puddle once he has been through
it, but
will not cross the next one he sees by himself! I'm afraid I was losing
my
temper with him yesterday and we got into fights. I lost. Now I need
to
recover my dignity. Give me some advice on getting them to cross water.

First, be very aware of what you are teaching your horse. If you
get mad and lose your temper, your horse is learning that, in the presence
of puddles, you will get mad and punish him. He does not know that
you are mad because he isn't crossing the puddle! Several good methods
have been suggested already. I would suggest that you start with
ground work with your horse, using the horsemanship method that suits you,
whether it be Buck Brannaman (Ray Hunt, Tom Dorrance, etc.), Parelli, Linda
Tellington Jones, whatever. You must be comfortable with the method
enough not to send mixed messages to your horse. Then work on having
your horse approach the puddle and reward every little try.
This means that, if the horse simply shifts his weight towards the direction
you want him to go, stop and reward him lavishly! You are working
on establishing trust between you and your horse, which is something
you need to reestablish after your last "lesson" with the puddle.
You don't need to get across the puddle to win. Simply walking up
to it without the horse worrying about it would be success enough
for one day. You can continue on the next day. Listen to what
your horse is telling you. Some of us read our Fjords' "stubborness"
as obstinance. What the horse is really telling you is that he is
very worried about the bottom of that puddle, and he doesn't, yet, trust
you enough to believe that it's okay to walk into it. So your mission,
should you choose to accept it, is to develop that trust.
It's not just about crossing the water! A neighbor of mine, while
on a trail ride, ignored his horse's worry about crossing a puddle.
He forced her into the water and ended up spending half a day digging her
out of a bog. She had gone in up to her belly. She was
never the same, trusty, trail horse after that, and permanently injured
her back. Horses have good, instinctive, reasons to mistrust any
kind of footing. We need to respect that! Once you have
gained your horse's trust from the ground, you can transfer it to the saddle,
but be prepared to go through the same "baby steps" again, because it will
change the picture for your horse. Let your horse tell you how far
he can go for the day, don't push it! Then enjoy the rest of your
ride, so everything ends on a happy note! This may take some time
in the beginning, but will reap great time saving rewards in the years
to come!

From Beth, Sandy and the gang at Starfire Farm in Colorado.
BDF Magnum, BDF John Arthur, Maerta and all of the non-Fjords.
Happy Trails!

P.S. - I've never had a potatoe come running when I called it!






Re: Various

1998-05-26 Thread Steve McIlree
This message is from: Steve McIlree [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Tuesday, 26 May 98, Cynthia wrote:

 Question: Getting Fjords to cross water. Tank will follow another horse
 through water and cross the same puddle once  he has been through it, but
 will not cross the next one he sees by himself!

  What Cynthia fails to mention here, is that Tank may have been
  correct about crossing the puddles. My Morgan Pferd and I were
  providing the example that there was nothing dangerous about
  crossing the puddle, (these are bodies of water up to thirty feet
  long by twenty wide), when we discovered a hole belly deep on a
  Morgan in the middle. Cynthia says Pferd stumbled, but she wasn't on
  his back to feel him drop into the hole. After that we provided a
  more cautious example for Tank, staying much closer to the edge of
  these horse-eating puddles. They certainly are deep enough to harbor
  a crocodile or two but we won't tell Tank.

--
Steve McIlree  Cynthia Madden -- Pferd, Keyah, Skipper, Tank -- Omaha, 
Nebraska, USA
  Have you driven a Fjord, lately?



Re: Various

1998-05-26 Thread Northhorse
This message is from: Northhorse [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In a message dated 98-05-26 18:03:20 EDT,
Cynthia_Madden/OAA/UNO/[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 I'm afraid I was losing my
 temper with him yesterday and we got into fights. I lost. Now I need to
 recover my dignity. Give me some advice on getting them to cross water.  

Did this with my Arab, 20 years ago.  Got him used to crossing streams,
waterfalls, and into the ocean in Malibu!  It was a blast.  Start off small.
Create little puddles that he MUST cross to get to his feed.  Lots of times
they don't like to go in puddles if they can't see the bottom.  It's a good
self-preservation instinct.  They don't know how deep the whole is.  Do a LOT
of groundwork on this, making more frequent puddles, larger ones, creating
little streams in your yard (a pain, but it is effective).  Praise each baby
step, and someday you may cross  large streams, etc.  Good luck.  Each horse
is different, so this is only one approach, it may or may not work with your
horse.

Pamela



Re: Various

1998-05-26 Thread BKFJORDS
This message is from: BKFJORDS [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Cinthia,
Fjords and water-wow, they either like it or they DON'T.
Anyway, after my recent mishap, we donned our barn boots and proceeded to go
into the water and with some TTEAM  (Linda Tellington Jones) work and
convincing, they finially went in.  Now they go in and stand, and even cross a
creek.  It is just mind over matter or water, in this case-in other words, its
stupid that they act that way!! They will run all around in the mud and
puddles, but ask them to be ridden or driven in it and its different.
Have patience and good luck!
Bernadine Karns



Re: Various

1998-05-06 Thread Marsha Jo Hannah
This message is from: Marsha Jo Hannah [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Alison Barr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I find that geldings are much more placid than mares [...]  I find
 that they bond better with you than mares.

Interesting---my experience has been exactly the opposite!  My old
Nansy mare is the one who whinneys a greeting when I go out to the
barn, and the one who comes first when I call them back in from
pasture.  I've never seen any behaviors from her that I would consider
hormone related.  She's always there, steady and dependable---doing
her job.

Our two geldings, on the other hand, are always bickering.  They take
each others' fly masks off (often shredding them in the process),
play-fighting.  They bite big tufts of hair out of each other.  Twice,
Sleepy has actually bitten chunks out of Rom's ears!  And, if another
horse that we meet out on the trail looks crossways at Sleepy, he
jumps out from under me---trying to avoid what he thinks is going to
be an attack.

I suspect it's an individual thing.  But, I know that a sample size
of 3 doesn't give me very reliable statistics

Marsha Jo HannahMurphy must have been a horseman--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   anything that can go wrong, will!
30 mi SSE of San Francisco, Calif.
---



Re: Various

1998-05-05 Thread Alison Barr
This message is from: Alison Barr [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 I was hoping to get some praise of geldings from my last posting, but did
 not get a rise out of anyone. Let's hear it for the geldings!

I have to admit that it's nice not to have to worry about hormones.  I find
that geldings are much more placid than mares (I have no experience with
stallions)  but sometimes it's too bad thast you can't breed tham.  My old
pony is beyond work, and I wish I could have a foal of his, but he's a
gelding.  Other than that, I think that geldings are best.  They usually keep
their minds on work, and you don't have to think about breeding.  also, in my
experience, they are cheaper, even though they are about the same
conformationally, because they can't be used for breeding.  Lastly, I find
that they bond better with you than mares.  Both Fj and Sunny think they are
puppies and belong with you 24 hours a day.



Re: various

1998-04-09 Thread Philip Petty
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Philip Petty)

I told her about the list last weekend at our PNFPG meeting. I do not know
if she chose to get on the list.
It would probably be best to gather the information you think should be in
the Herald, format it, and send it to her.
Philip Petty
Lochsa Fjords
Mica, WA

--
 From: Julie Will [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: various
 Date: Thursday, April 09, 1998 4:56 AM
 
 This message is from: Julie Will [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 I am really enjoying the active discussions, and wish a lot of them could
 be re-produced for the Herald!  This is the kind of info that new Fjord
 owners are longing for!  Is Sally Webber on the list?  Julie @ Old
Hickory Farm