As in July's update, K3 has been coming once a week to 'help' me with training the LBM. This is good for the Little Black Mare, as it reminds her that she has to listen to humans of any size, not just adults and not just me (as a rather strict human when it comes to minding personal space or who's the boss in the horse-human relationship).
It is also good for K3 as it gives her something she can be responsible for (keeping her 'job' schedule of working the horse once a week), something of her own interest to learn and work at, and it gets her into the mentally calming atmosphere of being around a horse.
Each week, when it's her day, K3 and I talk about our game plan for that training session. And then I put her in charge as much as possible. She has to get the horse. She has to groom the horse. I do the saddling as she's not strong enough and the saddle is too heavy for her to lift over the LBM's back and set down nicely. The LBM came to this little place here being rather nervous about the whole saddling thing and it took months for her to learn to stand still, that I wasn't going to fling this saddle at her and whack her in the back and sides with it's parts and pieces. So, for now, I do the placing of the saddle and K3 does the girthing. We are working on K3 getting coordinated enough to do the bridling. That's coming along, but I still stand behind K3 and help hold the LBM's head still and in the right position while K3 fumbles with holding the bit in one hand and the crownpiece in the other and keeping everything from twisting.
Poetess just had her very own long post, which pretty much brought you up to date with how she's doing. I will add that this morning I rode her for the first time without anyone else being on the property. DH had to go in to work in person today, and I really didn't want to lose out on a training session with the Poetess in his absence, so I figured I'd work her like I normally do and see what happens. She was very good and it was no big deal. In retrospect she had no idea if he was home or not, so his absence only matters to me (as a safety measure in case the horse manure hits the fan--causing me to hit the ground--which so far she's shown no inclination to initiate.)
Barn-wise, there hasn't been any new construction done. I've disappointingly had to replace dozens of the T-post insulator caps in the past three weeks. I will have to get in contact with where I purchased them from last fall, as they are supposed to have a 5 year warranty and we haven't even gotten through twelve months of use yet. It's not the horses pushing on the fence that's breaking them where the fence tape runs through them, either, as it's always in the mornings that I find the top 'rail' of the fence sagging with another broken insulator and the horses are always in the barn overnight. If anything is putting excessive force on the insulators, must be deer hitting them. Which, if they are designed for a horse to push on/bounce off of the fence without breaking, a little 100-some pound deer shouldn't be beyond the integrity of the caps.
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