It's been a bit of a hectic few weeks. Along with volunteering for the WE show and all the work that followed that, it's hay season and of course the yard and property maintenance is also in full swing. Plus I have an office job as well. G had a surgery that means no lifting for a while yet, so the stacking and moving of hay and a lot of the more labour intensive jobs around the place are on me this year. I've been having fun with those gym apps that tell you how many steps you took and how much you lifted in units of animals - a day last weekend was a black rhino, the weekend before one day was a hippo. G's favorite was the time I moved the equivalent of 3 manatees in an hour. I should hire a strong kid, and the temptation to hire a landscaping service was strong for a few days there, but that feels like losing :D One more hay load is incoming in 2 weeks and the vegetation is slowing down so soon I can feel like I won (and be set up until 2026.)
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Sophie on mowing duty |
I caved to exhaustion and pushed out my work travel day to this week, then took Thursday/Friday off to make a super long weekend.
I had a lot of things to do, but I bookmarked Saturday as MY day, and made sure to avoid any outside plans. I basically hung out with the horses in the morning, then I ended up auditing a clinic in the afternoon centered around how to ride the WE obstacles correctly and a recap of all the rules. If I was better prepared and more motivated I could have participated properly, but I really needed a day off. Walking through the course on foot with an obstacle by obstacle recap of how to ride them and the rules around them was surprisingly useful. An entire new discipline as a whole seems a bit daunting, particularly one that seems like it has a million ways to be DQ'd in competition, but if you break it into little pieces it starts to feel like something that could be doable.
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Can see this guy maybe wanting to be a WE horse. He's deceptively quick and maneuverable and really able to sit back and use his hind end. |
After a quick social hour with horsey friends camping there, I did a walk/run home through the trails and that in itself made my day...it's been literal years since that was a pain free possibility. While I look forward to being able to jog/run the whole thing again one day, it just felt so nice to be out there and not feel like I needed G on speed dial 'just in case'.
In the evening I again just spent my time outdoors with the horses, doing a minimal amount of things. Everyone got a tidy up at some point last weekend which felt nice. It's been a shamefully long time since anyone got more than a quick dust off and some fly spray.
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They care not for my attempts at cleanliness though |
All in all, a perfect day. I'm still me and have far too much on the go and way too many projects pending, but all of those things aren't worth doing if I can't have a day to just enjoy life :)
Love the video of the boys with the mounting block! Smart little cookies!
ReplyDeleteThey love having 'jobs' :D
DeleteAwww that last video is the cutest thing!!! How happy and curious they are <3
ReplyDeleteThey're SO involved and just generally happy about everything. Such a change from my mares lol
DeleteThat sounds like a lovely way to spend the day. I'm glad you got to take that time for yourself, and that your walk/run was pain free!! The boys are looking awesome, and I love how curious and people-oriented they are. WE sounds like a fun sport. Maybe someday I'll try it in between the dressage, jumping, trail, driving, cow work, endurance, reining... 😜
ReplyDeleteThree manatees in an hour still has me giggling.
ReplyDeleteThe boys are just so gorgeous!
Sophie looks to be doing an excellent job while mowing. And your boys look wonderfully curious and enthusiastic in the video. What fun!
ReplyDelete