Oh groannnnnnnnnnnnnn -- I read that four times before I *got* it!!!  :-/
MA (lol)




________________________________
From: Day Sutton <day.sut...@gmail.com>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sun, February 5, 2012 7:16:12 PM
Subject: Re: CS>CS Old horseman's cure for boils

She was an equistrian; and all the "Horsemenknew'er"


On Sun, Feb 5, 2012 at 7:05 PM, MaryAnn Helland <marmar...@bellsouth.net> wrote:

Wow -- we've got more horse-(wo)men on this list than we knew!!!  :-D
>MA
>
>
>
>
________________________________
From: Marshalee Hallett <utahpug...@gmail.com>
>To: silver-list@eskimo.com
>Sent: Sun, February 5, 2012 2:24:24 PM
>Subject: Re: CS>CS Old horseman's cure for boils
>
>Um, Gayla, I think you mean "callus". Callous is an adjective. (Sorry, like 
>Hermione Granger, I`m an insufferable know-it-all...) 
>
>When I was a kid and we had horses, back in the 1960s and 70`s, we also called 
>them chestnuts, 
>for what it`s worth.
>Gosh, I miss my Arabian, Markuba. Although it was because of him, I had to be 
>knocked out with general anesthesia for my c-section in 1979. Seems that, when 
>he threw me off and I landed on my back with a rock under my spine, I`d come 
>really close to a broken back! Enough so that the epidural whouldn`t go 
>through 
>my spinal column. Yikes!
>Be well!!!
>Marshalee
>
>
>On Sun, Feb 5, 2012 at 8:33 AM, Gayla Roberts <aera...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>The cork is the callous inside the horse's front leg.
>>Gayla
>>
>>>


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Day Sutton

day.sut...@gmail.com