Yesterday was the warmest day we've had so far this year. The thermometer on the deck at this little place here hit 64 degrees in the mid-afternoon. I actually went out and did chores in just a sweatshirt, no coat, not even a jacket! A novelty for February in Michigan.
The vast majority of our snow has melted away and the ground is, for the most part, thawed. The heavy traffic areas around the barn and pastures feature inches deep mud--oh joy!
The Poetess had the urge to run and play when I turned the horses out in the morning; she ran laps, trying and trying her best to get the other horses to race with her to no luck. The LBM and Tubbs were both more interested in checking to see if any tiny blades of grass might be growing where snow was the day before than in running. Crockett would oblige Poetess by rearing up every time she came running up to the fence line where he stood but he wouldn't do more than trot a few steps before coming to a halt again. He's in his mid-20s, which is rather elderly for a horse, so I don't blame him for not feeling like zooming around.
Of course they all had to have a good roll in the mud during the course of the day and came in that night varying shades of dun rather than three blacks and a bay.
I took advantage of the sunshine and warmth of the afternoon to give water buckets a good scrubbing. It was nice to be cleaning them outside without freezing my bare hands in the water while doing so. All winter bucket scrubbing has either happened in the tack room sink where rinsing is difficult without spraying water around the room, or outside with absolutely freezing hands and still trying not to let water go wild; especially where it might freeze and create ice in a walkway.
By the horses' dinner time the 'high' heat of the day had brewed up a thunderstorm and they were more than happy to meet me at the pasture gates to come in before the rumbling thunder actually brought rain to us.
Shortly after I had them all tucked into their stalls for the night, the rain did get to this little place here. I made it into the house before it got heavy and the hail started pelting down. We had pea- to dime-sized hail for about 10 minutes straight.








































