Shooting for the Stars
Friday, September 3rd, 2010Today was a lovely Friday. Home school fun day :~) Music and art, projects and good times. We finished the day early and headed to a tack consignment shop to do a little browsing and drop off some items we haven’t used in ages.
We (the little cowboy- 8yrs., the little rancher- 3yrs. and I) made it back into town with time to spare so of course we headed to the barn. Time enough to swap out freshly cleaned fly masks for the ones the red horses were wearing and scoop poop.
I only had one Bowen appointment today and it happens to be a client/friend that my boys are great friends with so I took them along to play while I worked.
The mare from today is an arab in ther 20’s. She was an endurance horse in her “previous life” and has been a trusted family member since she’s been with this family. She’s carted the mom around on countless trail rides, ride & ties and some trail trials. She’s certified to work with the mounted patrol. Been in Christmas parades. She’s been a little girl’s 4-H horse. Carried little boys to “Ride Your Horse to School” day. (Yes, we live in a small town, lol).
A little over 2 months ago the family thought they were losing her. They’d had her pastured at a friend’s place and showed up to check on her, finding her in a horrible mess. She couldn’t put any weight on one of her hinds. At all. Blood everywhere. Horribly torn flesh. Just standing in the field, no signs of what she’d caught herself on…. waiting for her people to come help her.
The vet came out and recommended that she be put down. He couldn’t do it at the time and there was a long weekend for July 4th, but he could come back the following week. A horribly long time in my mind for a vet to make her wait. But thank God he did.
He said the tendon was severed and that even if they could get her to U.C. Davis for a $5,000 surgery, her outcome was not likely a good one. So for 4 long days my friend cleaned, medicated and bandaged her “dead mare”, crying all the while. The children cried. And cried. The diagnosis didn’t sit right with them, so they called another vet for a second opinion when they went out to clean and rebandage a leg that the mare was miraculously putting some weight on.
This vet said, give her some time. Don’t stop hoping. You don’t know what the outcome will be, but give her enough time to fight for it and see what happens. And that’s what they did.
It has been a long road full of long days, but I would never believe how well this old mare would heal. She’s walking on it just fine these days, and throws in some trotting and cantering every once in a while. She is short strided and who knows if she’ll ever be riding sound again. But there is one happy family that is thankful that she’s still around!
I go out and do my best to help her to rebalance and make her as comfortable as I can. We stay away from any tendons or conective tissue that runs down her legs (which I’m hoping to be able to work on soon)… it’s her right hind that is injurred, and you can really see the richochet through her body as it seeks balance. Her poor left shoulder is a mess. And I still can’t get her to rebalance her pelvis. But heck, it’s only been a little over a month that I’ve been seeing her.
The appreciation that she shows with her huge sigh of relief and licking/chewing when I get to the spots that have been killing her are amazing for me. She is a very stoic mare and isn’t one to enjoy a pet or scratch… she is very business-like. But boy when I get to what is bothering her does she show it. And in a nice way
Today I commented, when I got to her jaw, that I thought she might have a headache. To which her owner’s husband replied “oh, she got kicked in the head last week by our gelding when they fought through the fence”. Oh my… this mare is one tough cookie, but I’m telling you, she’s looking for trouble.
I don’t know if I can help her to be more than pasture sound, but I’ll tell you right now- I’m shooting for the stars. She has a million cards in the deck stacked against her, but she’s shown us before, not to count her out til she says so.
I’m hoping she gets to pack her kids around for another couple of years. Shooting for the stars. I’m betting we catch one this time.
And it reminds me to perservere in my own life- even when the cards are stacked against me. Even when logic tells me to quit. Even when the challenge that lies ahead seems too big, too bloody and too painful. Don’t quit, just don’t quit.
A while ago I wrote about waiting. It was while I had Nez and he was lame. Constantly in pain, I waited for the signs that he was ready to be laid to rest. Having no horse to ride, I waited for the opportunity to be saddle bound. Looking for another horse, I waited until I find The One.
Homeschooling has officially begun for the year. It’s a whole new ball game now that I am adding Equine Bowen Therapy appointments to my life