Sunday, March 21, 2021

Talkin' 'bout Camaro

 Camaro, the blog name I chose for my current horse, has not been talked about much on here, considering I've owned him for nearly a year and a half now.  Last year, I intended that I'd post about him pretty regularly, documenting our progress as a team and his career change from an English Pleasure horse (which he was 'too sensitive' for, one of the points that drew me to consider buying him) to a dressage horse.  

Ironically, the sensitivity that sealed the deal for me when purchasing him, was part of my main focus in our early months.  Not making him less sensitive to my leg and seat, no, I love that part of his sensitivity; but to getting him to accept contact with my hands/reins through the bit without freaking out about being touched in the mouth and immediately throwing his head up and dropping his back, very effectively inverting himself.  

Last Spring, just when I was achieving a nice steady contact with his mouth and he was learning to use his back instead of dropping it, we hit a major roadblock.  Laminitis.

I can't tell you the amount of metaphorical weeping and gnashing of teeth (all mine) that ensued over the next 6 months.  In the big picture of things, it was a relatively minor bout of laminitis as far as laminitis goes.  I mean, after weeks of stall rest, a low-sugar pelleted feed and grass hay (absolutely not one trace of alfalfa) diet change, and a set of fancy shoes with gel pads, he worked his way back up to being sound and on 8 hours of turnout (with a grazing muzzle) in only three months!

He did hate the muzzle.  But he learned how to eat through it, by late summer he'd become very adept at sucking up lunchtime hay like spaghetti.



So I got to gingerly get back in the saddle in late August.  Where we started at square one on the contact issue. *Sigh* For exactly five rides spaced out over 3 weeks when he started very obviously displaying signs of an abcess in his right front.  *Double sigh*

Another emergency vet call.  The abcess was located, cut out, and drained.  I got to practice my foot poulticing skills for about 10 days while it all drained out and healed over.  Yay.  Fun.  More weeks of not riding a lame horse.  

poulticed

This was followed up by a thrown shoe just as we were once again sound and resuming light riding.  And, same shoe, thrown again three weeks later. From there proceeded some farrier issues, the very tough decision to part ways with the farrier I'd used since 2007, and to trust my horse's foot care to the farrier that the barn owner used.

Can I say I haven't once, in the nearly six months since then, regretted that decision?  Camaro has been joyously sound.  I've been back in the saddle somewhat regularly--barring two weeks of heavy equipment ripping through the farm doing drain repair for the county, the holidays, bouts of frigid weather, and adjusting to becoming Faline's afternoon babysitter--and we are again making progress.

Am I afraid of a repeat laminitis episode this spring and the grass comes back to life and there's actually something to graze on outside during his hours of turnout?  You betcha!  But, he's lost about all the weight we wanted him to lose (his bloodwork last spring put him at borderline metabolic syndrome), we've kept the changed diet, and he again will be wearing a grazing muzzle all through his daily turnout as soon as the grass starts growing.

Happy horse, happy owner



Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Sewing Update, March

 All my sewing was done before the end of February.  So far in March, I haven't even touched fabric.  I will, as I still intend to participate in the UFO challenge I mentioned last month.  It's just that this month's number corresponds with a 'I want to make this, but haven't actually started yet or even have a specific design to use' entry on my list of UFO's to work from this year.

Combine that with a sudden and tragic death in the extended family (one of DH's nephews) at the end of February, and I've just kind of lost my enthusiasm temporarily.  I did do some fabric shopping in recent days, so hopefully that will kick start my sewing mojo back into gear.

For February, though, I feel like I accomplished a good thing: I finished my UFO for that month!  It's not just a bunch of blocks from an 8 year old swap anymore.  It's a totally completed quilt.  Yay, me!

I wanted to use those blocks to make a throw sized quilt that would be functional as a picnic blanket, beach blanket, play blanket for using with the grandkids.  I decided not to be super picky about color coordination, or evenness of the quilting.  For the quilting, I went totally freehand but kept a somewhat diamond design as that is what the very center of the quilt told me the quilting should be.  In the border, however, I just echoed the seamline at roughly 1" intervals. As a result of being freehand and me being fairly new at anything other than stitching in the ditch, the quilting isn't totally symmetrical, or even parallel, but that's okay.  This is a quilt to be used more than a quilt to be admired for it's craftsmanship.

Keeping in mind the contact with the ground that this quilt will definitely see during it's lifetime, I used a grunge style fabric for the backing. It looks like it all ready has dirt and grease stains on it.  Not at all my typical type of design, but it's what this quilt told me it needed.


photo op in the sun



grungy backing




this pic is more representative of the true greenish color of the backing


A few days after the quilt was finished, Faline ended up at this little place here during the day while her parents were at work.  Her other grandma (the morning babysitting shift) had come down with a cold and was unavailable to babysit.  Since DH is still working from home and had a couple gaps between scheduled teleconferences that were big enough for me to run off to work and get my own job done, Faline came to us so DH could do the tag-team babysitting with me around his meeting schedule instead of me going to her house to babysit in the afternoons.  

She got to be the first grandchild to use the new quilt, as both a playmat--she loved looking at all the colors--and as a sleep mat for naps.  It has now been officially broken in, baby spit-up and all.





Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Knitting Update, March

 Happy March!  So far, we're 3 for 3 on sunny days this month.  Almost all the snow melted last weekend, and things look a whole lot browner than they did in the pictures from my Feb. 25th blog post.

There's been a decent amount of knitting going on. Last month, I started taking care of Faline in the afternoons, sharing time with her other grandma now that both of her parents have exhausted their family leave time.  That has cut into my knitting time somewhat, although I do take my Vertex socks to work on while I'm with Faline. Sometimes I get a chance to knit a few rows while she's napping, sometimes I don't.

This is the current state of those:


One sock is completely done, the other is nearing the halfway point on the leg.

I have been spending alot of my at-home knitting time in the evenings on a new project.  Last Fall, I was asked to knit matching Christmas stockings for DD1, Honorary Son and Faline in time to be used for Christmas 2021.  After showing them a variety of patterns, DD1 chose one and I ordered yarn. Once the yarn came in, in early February, I got started on the first one.

Christmas stockings, some assembly required.


As of today, I am probably within a couple inches of dividing off for the heel. I am really liking the challenge of both all the Fair Isle knitting, and the having to draft my own charts for several sections of the pattern.   The general direction and provided charts come from the Trees and Candles pattern found on Ravelry.


I read three fiction books in the past month, and about half of the Dressage Riding book I talked about last month (which I'm still reading when I have thinking time).  The fiction books were

  • Happiness For Beginners by Katherine Center, which I enjoyed much more than the previous novel I'd read by her.
  • Betty by Tiffany McDaniel. This is a very gritty book, with tough life situations, yet I found it nearly impossible to put down.  I highly recommend it.
  • Prairie Evers by Ellen Airgood, is a children's novel that I read to see if K3 might enjoy the subject matter. While I think she would like the story, I don't think her reading level is quite up to chapter books without pictures.  Maybe in another six months or so.
Currently I am reading Down a Dark Road, another Kate Burkholder mystery by Linda Castillo.  Captivating!