Chamberlain Creek 50 2013: Not Quite According to Plan

I’d love to cheerfully recount our 50 miles of steady completed glory, but instead let me regale you with our approximately 15 miles of glee coupled with 5 miles of Well Shit, topped off with some admittedly still lovely ride photos that reflect my dubious mindset at the time of photo capture.
To embrace my obsession with timelines, I arrived Friday afternoon, found a snug spot under a Redwood tree in the tight campground and got set up. 
Almost there
Cozy and waterproof, luckily! 
Scrap tests the groceries and baptizes his water with his hay
Not long after, my mom arrived to visit armed with snacks. We chatted and took Scrappy and Georgia for a couple mile walk and my mom tried to wait long enough to get vetting in photos but the vet line was epic and she had to go.
Out for a stroll
A sea of bay and gray waiting to Vet in
We waited so long Scrappy almost had to eat his Vet card from starvation 😉 
Friday evening I ended up socializing so much I missed the ride meeting but gleaned most of the essential information from more attentive friends. 7 am ride start, 3 vet checks out of camp @ 30, 60, and 15 minutes respectively, 60 bpm critera, 12 hours to complete.
Dinner time for Scrappy
Second dinner time for Scrappy…
I was quite cozy in my tent as usual, slept fairly well, and re-stuffed Scrap’s hay bag around 3 am. About 6 I wandered over to my awesome camping buddy J’s set up for breakfast , then back to tack up by 6:30:
The start was at 7 am with a 10 minute walk to the start so we left camp about 6:58 by ourselves and were indeed approaching the line in a nice quiet niche, a few minutes after the trails were open. “Your ride photo is your completion award!” I was cheerfully told as I gave my number and officially started the Chamberlain Creek 50 for the first time. I certainly wasn’t bothered at the time but now those words ring sort of ominous and ironic in my mind.
Allow me to digress here and share the significance of this ride; I grew up in the Mendocino area and Chamberlain Creek was the first AERC ride I ever attended, as a sponsored junior aboard my stunning (no really) buckskin Appendix mare. The mare, Misty, had never finished a ride before I bought her because she was pretty high strung and had buddy and calming down to pulse down issues. Mary, the lovely woman who sold Misty to me later allowed me to board with her and one day told me that she rode endurance–and that meant riding all day! I quickly signed up for that and joined her and her endurance friends on 20 mile weekend rides, and rode the bus to Mary’s house a few times a week to blast around the woods on my mare too. We completed our first Chamberlain Creek LD foray in good style and again, an hour faster and in the top 10, the next year. I had to sell Misty to go to college but I have returned to Chamberlain Creek ride a number of times since over the last 12 years on a handful of horses and somehow have always ended up doing the LD! Last year I finished the LD on a friend’s Pinto for his first ride, etc, anyway this ride has been central to my endurance life and I still haven’t done the 50. This year, I was pretty damn certain that barring a fluke, a rock with my name on it, etc, Scrappy and I would be finishing the 50 together for both of our first time.
Enjoying the quiet, dark morning in the forest
We were prepared physically, armed with extras and spares of everything, had an ass kickingly stocked crew bag waiting at the Vet checks, were on relatively known turf with great footing..and yet. And yet. 
So optomistic in those first miles, sigh
We were jogging along happily in our own pocket for pretty much the first 14 miles, both snacking, plenty warm, enjoying the morning. Scrappy drank really well as usual and was moving great under me, stopping occasionally to turn his head back for a bite of carrot. He made it all of 7 miles before starting to snatch at passing grass. I call him Superguts.
First glimmerings of daylight in the quiet forest
Getting brighter! I ❤ trees…
First water stop, slurppp!
Contemplating a.m. ribbons 
Here’s that part where skipping the ride meeting and not giving a shit about map reading comes in. After the water and assisted road crossing, there were clear dolomite markings on the ground denoting 30 to the Left and 50 Pink to the right. Duh, go on 50 Pink, right? For whatever reason I was convinced we did the Blue/Pink loop FIRST, and the Pink loop later, while in fact the Pink was an additive loop for the 50, and yeah, go figure, FOLLOW THE SHIT THAT SAYS IT’S FOR THE DISTANCE YOU ARE RIDING. I only went an easy mile out of my way before my camping neighbor passed and explained it to me when I queried seeing other riders coming back onto the Pink/Blue loop from somewhere I hadn’t been. A quick fun back track at a swinging trot and then we were on the proper trail which was really lovely, with a couple of steep short hills.
We made it back down to the Blue/Pink loop  properly, still alone, and Scrap slurped more water at the next trough but really just wanted to itchhhh
After taking off from the water trough we were swinging along through the forest on more great footing when I suddenly queued into a change in his rhythm and wait, WAIT, was he suddenly, subtly, short striding on the right front??! I second guessed myself, thought I felt a few more short strides and stopped to strip boots and check feet. There was nothing conclusive in the hooves or boots but after rebooting and remounting only to feel that slight short stride again, I took off the boots and left him bare to try another jog without the boots. I couldn’t detect the short striding when he was barefoot and resumed riding, albeit slowly, now bare on all fours. It may sound crazy but the footing was fabulous and I thought I was probably RO’ing anyway so if he was going better bare I would walk him in bare.
The reason for the seemingly quick decision to RO after a handful of unconfirmed inconsistent steps? In my mind, if all is right in my healthy, fit 8 year old horse’s world, there are no reasons for that many concerning steps in the first 15 miles that an 30 increasingly hard miles will improve. To me those steps early on means there is a good possibility that something is starting to slightly bother him and 30 more miles equal Risk at that point. Even if it was something in the boot and he was right as rain without them I wasn’t liking the idea of him doing it barefoot all the way.
At this point I was really hoping someone would catch up to me, and knowing I had friends behind me, help me confirm or deny any weird steps. Of course that didn’t happen so I resigned myself to riding Scrappy in barefoot at the walk and surrendering myself to the vets.
 If you were concerned about your horse why didn’t you hand walk him in? You ask. Here’s the state of my heels (pic from later in the day), and the other reason RO was on my brain:
All I did was wear different socks on Friday. Not on the ride, just on Friday on the drive to camp and the walk with Scrappy and my mom. Halfway out on that walk Friday afternoon I felt Ouch start and by the time we got back to camp this was what my heels looked like. I knew that if we continued riding the 50 and an issue did arise, my much bandaged heels would not tolerate much hiking. Unless I did it barefoot myself, and yes I did consider it. I’m barefoot all the time at home and there’s no thistles here! the insane little voice in my head whispered as we plodded along the cool dark forest trail. It’s truly a unique and sweet torture to be at that place in a ride where you are alone, questioning everything, and it really is an especial twist when it comes so early with all seeming to be going so well.
So was Scrappy lame? You ask. As usual, a complicated answer there. We grimaced our way through ride photos, the last photographer kindly dragging out of me why I was plodding along past him unphotogenically. Scrappy pulsed in at 42, we both drank a bunch, and with snacks for both of us in hand, we trudged to the vets.
Baylor/Gore photography
All of the vets and volunteers were free at that moment so I explained what happened to a bit of an audience, explained that I thought I wanted to RO, and they all watched as Scrap vetted with all As and still 42. We then proceeded to do a terribly unenthusiastic trot out, barely a jog, which we all agreed was useless for diagnostics, so someone waved their arms and away we went again. 2 vets didn’t see anything and 1 vet saw a very slight short stride in the left hind on the way out. I felt totally nonplussed and stared at them blankly for a moment so the vet that had seen something suggested we go rest and eat for 20 minutes and come back to check it again. I was 98% RO at that point but really wanted experts to watch him again so I left my vet card with them and wandered off to drink a giant coconut water from my crew bag while Scrappy nommed alfalfa.
20 minutes later the 2 still didn’t see anything and the 1 said whatever he saw already looked better  and it was up to me whether I continued or not. I said thank you kindly, fed Scrappy his snacks, and headed back for camp with my first RO on the books (well soon anyway). It was a very familiar mile back to camp, I used to ride that trail with Mary all those years ago.
Baylor/Gore caught this surprise photo of me stopping to chat with a friend on our way back to camp
Camp was silent and beautiful and depressing, if I allowed it to be. Sure I would have liked to be back hours later, dirty and exhausted and triumphant, but strolling back in on our own hooves sure beat risking a much worse ending to the ride. I have no idea why he took those strides and he was already moving fine that afternoon in camp but I am honestly glad that I called it when I did. 
Scrappy wondering where all the horsies are, camp is quiet! 
Not too disappointed that he just has to hang out and eat more, I think! 
Cheerios and horse contemplation…also maybe timing how long he rested each hind leg..
I thought I had fixed it out on the trail but I noticed when I untacked in camp that my saddle cover velcro down by my stirrup was continually catching my woolback girth and pulling the fleecy Part out from under the buckle, leaving the buckle against his skin. There wasn’t a sore and I could have fixed it at the Vet check by taping that damn velcro closed but there was a little puffiness on Scrappy’s side where the buckle had been on his skin for those few slow miles, so that may have worked up to a nasty issue had I continued in the ride. Who knows. 
Nice to have a camp buddy when everyone else is out on the trail and you forgot your book..

 My step-dad visited that afternoon which was a nice surprise, and the camp got some eye candy with his sweet ride, the family 1964 Chrysler New Yorker.

People began trickling in from both distances over the afternoon and evening and at 6:30 there was a delicious ride dinner with lots of lovely and generous awards doled out afterwards for the LD and the 50 alike. Ride management was wonderful in recognizing not just the winners and Top 10’ers but the Turtles, juniors, junior sponsors, Senior Equine, and more. At least one of the vets stayed overnight to be available if any horses need help. I must say that having now not finished, but having finished many times previously, no matter the result Chamberlain is a very well marked, well run, and fun ride experience!

 It rained all of Saturday night and I was grateful for both my waterproof tent and the giant Redwood we were camped under. I was snug and cozy but Scrappy was looking rather like a drowned rat even in his fleece and raincoat at 5 am when I gave him more dry food. I had put most of the important stuff away the night before in case the rain was early, so I  was packed up in no time and after waiting for some people to, ahem, stop blocking the road, we were out of camp by 7 for a wet and windy drive home.

No storm yet at our house when we arrived early afternoon, which was a nice relief after that soggy morning. Upon turnout Scrappy flew across the field with his tail in the sky and proceeded to run the hill with Sheza filly, so I’d say he is feeling just fine. It certainly didn’t go according to plan but it was still a beautiful weekend in the redwoods with family and friends that I returned from with a sound horse, so I really can’t complain!

Ride Prep and a Neighborhood Tour

Autumn has officially arrived and the weather has embraced the new season seemingly without hesitation. After a Saturday storm dropped a couple of inches of rain on us, we are now enjoying mornings in the high 40s, glorious sunlight sparkling on a world washed clean, and that stirring fall breeze that whispers of apples and wood stoves and christmas lights twinkling somewhere far down the horizon. If you can’t tell, Fall is my absolute favorite time of year, especially to  be on horseback! 
After being out of town last weekend, we had family visiting here over this weekend and are now due to leave this Friday for Chamberlain Creek 50! Today was crunch time on getting Scrappy out for a few miles, making sure he was moving and feeling good, tack and boots were working well, and his hooves were just how I wanted them. Scrappy has been here for 2 1/2 months now and I still hadn’t ridden him out from home, so on went the gear and out the front gate we went!
D’aww he is just so cute you’ll forgive the lollipop head photo angle, right!

 Scrappy’s inaugural Holy Shit neighborhood moment

 To be followed by the Donkey of Doom..cue Jaws music..DunahDUNAHDUNAH!!

 Donkeys of Doom are really great for getting a pretty pose out of your horse, just sayin

 That knowing Donkey look that says, “I just scared your horse. AGAIN.” 

 Perhaps part of the terrifying aura the Donkey projects is that it has a creepy Ram boyfriend. Maybe Scrappy detects the faint Banjo music in the distance..

 Scrappy would like to submit to the County that their pavement is Highly Suspicious and Multi Colored, Not To Be Trusted

Time to cross the dam for some more mind boggling and then water and snacks! 

 “hmph, if you say so..”

 Dam survived, now a wade in the stream and a bite of apple

 HAPPY EARS heading up the hill for home! 

 Blaze and Desire say, “wow, you survived The Donkey?!”

 Scrappy didn’t miss the turn into the driveway, and suspiciously cruised through the auto gate 🙂

 “I know man, I know. I’ve had to go past the Donkey too.”

We had a great ride through the ‘hood, I’m proud of my bold, clever Scrappy boy as usual, and quite happy with how he and his feet are looking going into Chamberlain. Neither of us have done a 50 since last year, with different partners, but I think we are pretty prepared and will give it our best go! I can’t wait to be back out enjoying the trail all day again, and on my favorite home ride too. Hope to see you local readers at Chamberlain Creek this weekend, and  non-locals, tune in Monday for the Ride Story. Happy Trails!

Sheza Big Girl Now

Sheza had a hoof trim and photo shoot this morning, and she was quite exemplary for the hoof trim, while slightly less cooperative for said photo shoot. Minimal spazzing in the hoof trim portion of the programming, though I do notice she stands like a rock for her left side to be trimmed and is much more shuffley while working on the right side hooves. Probably I handle her more on that left side? Anyway, she definitely seemed to fill the cross tie stall more than usual this morning and sure enough the height tape read just a smidge under 14.3 at the wither. She had hung at 14.2 for the summer but I had noticed her looking butt high lately. All 4 hooves were shedding epic sole as the others have been and looked much better after some thorough attention. 
Interesting side note, today was the first time ever that when Sheza did her baby mouth greeting to Desire over the fence Desire pinned her ears, squealed, and stomped as if to another mare, instead of greeting her baby as a momma like she used to. Looks like babycakes Sheza is considered competition now! 
And then–the photo shoot!
“Pose? Where’s the camera? I have a giraffe back in my ancestry somewhere.”

 “What’s pressure? Why are you making clicking noises? I’m a stationary object and don’t reply to such nonsense.”

“I don’t want to kiss you, and that giraffe was my grandmother”

 “I’m standing almost normally, I do what I want with my ears. You can’t have it all lady.”

Look, something odd, TaDAH, I’m pretty!”

 Then we sweetly wandered off in opposite directions to practice our trot out..

 Not much of a photo but I like that big stride she’s showing!

 Stepping on out! My big girl is so grown up

 We are a good pair because we match and we get distracted and stare at stuff together

 Aww soft baby eye 🙂

 I like trotting, let’s go do more of THAT! 

Dreaming of Autumn..and 50 milers..

After 2 weeks off from riding due to life and vet work needed and accomplished, Scrappy and I got 25 steady miles and a few hills in this week, riding 2 mornings with N and Willow. Scrappy never showed how bad his teeth really were before his dental–he isn’t bitted, was in good weight and eating well, etc–so there isn’t a ton of difference in him after the much needed teeth work, however he *must* be imminently more comfortable so that’s a win. He was peppy and ready on the first ride back, Monday, when it was hotter than sin, and slightly less enthused but still quite willing yesterday, when the temperatures were much friendlier.

“This is mah peppy face”       Actually his sleeping-while-waiting-for-AAA face…oops, keys retrieved.

I’m totally in love with Scrappy’s calm, quiet self but am still adjusting to it mentally, since even sweet little Blaze is prancey and spooky compared to Scrappy. What, you can’t get over your horse being quiet and reasonable? you query dubiously. Yeah, pretty much, I reply. If Desire were ever to stand, or move, as relaxed and steadily as Scrappy does when fresh, I would be concerned. If she were to adopt Scrappy’s “I’ve done 10 miles and need a nap and a bale of hay” act, I would be sure she was on her last legs. They are, of course, completely different horses, and I’d say my brain is about 70% there on just believing that Scrappy is a totally fine and very relaxed horse. The three LDs we’ve finished in the last few months with ridiculously low pulses and great grades show me that I’m not overriding him and managing him well, but my prancey dancey Arab brain still watches him ambling behind me at the very end of the unclipped reins and goes, “is he okay?!”

I’m okay, just energy efficient. And look at mah pretty head!

 Yesterday we meandered up Sycamore Hill and I snapped this picture of Scrappy chilling at the top. This is the first photo of him I’ve taken that I think he is starting to look muscled up.

N  and Willow signing the trail log 

We’re embracing the Long Slow Distance in a major way before this 50 miler coming up in 2 weeks, as I’ll probably only get 2 or 3 more rides in before it and have now only ridden twice since our back to back LDS end of August. Still I know that he and I are ready, so as long as bad luck stays away, see you at Chamberlain Creek 50 miler in 2 weeks!

P.s. this is my puppy Rip, saving Asian Pears from drowning. He really likes pears, okay.

P.P.S. Looks like fall in that photo above, doesn’t it? I’m off to the Mendocino County Fair and Apple Show in my home county with my family this weekend. Happy Trails and Dreaming of Autumn….

For Love of a Good Vet

If you have horses for any length of time you eventually realize that there are a couple of things that you NEED. The horse itself can be of any age, color, size, athletic ability or lack thereof. The tack you choose could be English, Western, Endurance, or bareback with a halter, for that matter. Still, regardless of breed or discipline these 3 things will be essential:

1) a good hay source
2)a good hoof care practitioner
3) A Good Vet

You may notice that I listed the Vet third, but capitalized it. That’s because while you may go literal years without needing a vet, as I have in the past, you can sling your horses hay and muddle through hoof care religiously but eventually, when the chips are down, we all need A Good Vet.

I’m now after another hay source, with the imminent closure of Lizzy’s, and after years of bad farriers I took my horses barefoot and not long after learned to trim them myself. But the Vet. Ah, the Good Vet. Here I reach the crux of it, and I must rhapsodize a little about my own favorite vet, Dr. Ellie Tortosa, DVM. She is in fact, the only vet I’ve seen the need to use since moving to this area 5 years ago, aside from one awful night a few years ago spent with a colicking boarder horse and unknown vet. Dr. Ellie’s practice is based over 30 miles away but was highly recommended by the trainer that owned our place before us and I was happy to sort of “inherit” Dr. Ellie when we moved in with our horses. That plus seeing her work with some rescue horses that I was helping a friend with around the same time cemented my desire to have this tough, hard working young vet on my side.

For the most part, my interactions with Dr. Ellie have been non emergent, basic horse maintenance: vaccines (did my own for years but would really rather not), dentals, and the like. Things got more exciting in January 2011 with the arrival of then-pregnant Desire, who needed her last shots and exam before her April due date. Desire told Dr. Ellie to go fly a kite about getting near her rear end and was overall an aloof and uptight patient, but all was accomplished and we forgave Desire because look, she was such a gorgeous momma:

1 month before Sheza’s birth, March 2011

 The night of April 14th, 2011, my intense mare watch–think cameras rigged in the stall and broadcasting in the house in case I couldn’t stare in person– lapsed for a couple of hours and of course, with my absence, it was foal time! We got home and rushed to check her around 9 pm and viola, there were FEET sticking out of her private bits! The rest of the night was me panicking, being soothed on the phone by Dr. Ellie, and my husband calmly helping to deliver a big, gorgeous, chrome-y chestnut filly, the now 14.2 hand ball of fire known as Sheza Blaznhaat Xpres:

Sheza, 2 days old

It was a pretty smooth birth but then Desire retained the placenta and faithful Dr. Ellie was out first thing in the morning to niftily remove it while I gagged in the corner. Everything was checked out and Dr. Ellie gave me the thumbs up on my lovely new red filly!

Sheza, 2 months old

Since then I’ve only needed Dr. Ellie out the standard once or twice a year at most, and really that’s how I prefer it. Sometimes our appointments are put off due to emergencies but that is the life of a busy country vet. Each visit with her is efficient and enjoyable, she is happy to be peppered with questions and I almost always learn something. I am one of her only clients with Arabians (others are mostly QH/paint types) and she always remarks on their good looks and upkeep, while harboring a particular affinity for dear little Blaze. Her work is always quiet and mindful of the horse, and she and I have both noticed how much friendlier and softer Desire is at each of Dr. Ellie’s visits.

Sheza, 2 years old

Vaccines were taken care of for the year this spring and I didn’t anticipate calling Dr. Ellie for a while. Then at the Mendocino Magic ride a few weeks ago new guy Scrappy began nodding his head while eating and an obliging ride vet checked his mouth and discovered points and hooks; meanwhile back at home Blaze was having a 2 day stomach upset of some sort while my husband called Dr. Ellie and every other vet in the area to see what he should do. Whatever it was resolved itself and Blaze was in fine fettle by the time I got home from the ride, but I wanted Dr. Ellie out as soon as possible to take care of Scrappy’s teeth and see if we could discover the origin of Blaze’s episode.

I know, I know, “pics or it didn’t happen.” Somehow I didn’t get a single photo of yesterday’s Vet Day, but my defense is, and it’s hilarious how close to true this is, a doped up Scrappy looks a lot like an un-doped up Scrappy!!  So anyway, Dr. Ellie arrived promptly at the agreed hour and had Scrappy doped up and in the speculum in no time. Right away she asked why Scrappy’s mouth was dyed red, and I, upon seeing the vivid hue to gums and tongue, prepared  to hyperventilate and drop dead if another horse had a random surprise problem. There was some sort of mushed up organic material in his mouth as well but, unable to distinguish what it was, we resolved to walk the pasture together after the dental. The rest went smoothly and we guided  a wobbly Scrappy back to his digs, where he continued to chill with a quiet eye and relaxed dangly boy bits, much as he would without the drugs! Dr. Ellie and I walked around until we found an orange-y barked pine tree down by the pond that clearly had fresh teeth marks in it. Okay then! Mystery solved, the bark isn’t toxic, but hopefully the tree eating will resolve with his newly tended teeth anyway. PHEW!

Next Blaze was diagnosed with “mild points” to his teeth but before doing a dental Dr. Ellie checked him all over and when listening to some portion of his guts–yep, forgot the proper term, but the one listened to up under their bellies near the groin–she froze and passed me the earbuds to listen to the stethoscope. I heard a soft swishing sound and she told me that Blaze had a bellyful of dirt/sand! No doubt the cause of his mild colic and if she had sedated him to do a dental, it quite likely would have caused another. She said No dental, recommended 2 weeks of Sand Clear and a maintenance dose for the rest of the gang just to be careful and went on her way to her next patients–and I was struck nearly breathless at the thought that, had she just blithely done the dental, I may well have had had a serious and potentially deadly sand colic episode with Blaze.

This face is very dear to me, and so I say again and again, Thank you Dr. Ellie Tortosa, for caring. You are truly a Good Vet.

Horse Life in the Foothills

After reassuring myself that Scrappy was ready for an end-of-September 50 with the completion of 2 hilly LDs at Mendo, it’s been a week and a half of everything but riding. Some good has been accomplished and some vehicles have taken a shit. Fortunately my old orange hauling Ford is as throaty and reliable as ever but my husband’s Dodge is currently taking a nap at the mechanics. Still, after a surprise thunderstorm late last week that brought us at least an inch of rain overnight, many hooves were trimmed–and glorious sky photos taken.

But were starving horses given snacks afterward, Blaze wonders..

The rain softened hooves and loosened up a bunch of old sole in everyone’s hooves and I got a great trim put on Desire and cleaned up Scrappy’s hooves but by the time I got to Blaze yesterday his feet had hardened up pretty solidly. Still doable, but I had an idea. The other day Renegade boot expert Ashley over at Go Pony! blog posted about using a Renegade boot as a soaker boot, by lining the shell with duct tape to make it actually hold water. I thought that was a genius idea, couldn’t find my duct tape, got irritated, and just put 3 un-taped Renegades on Blaze’s hooves to trim him. My idea was to “fill” the boots at the start,  and, leaving the hose on low in the dog water bucket next to my trimming area, snag it and re-hose the boots any time I gave/took a break. So, sort of more labor intensive than just lining the boots but still pretty easy. And, believe it or not, it worked! I go pretty slowly on my two 17 year olds, letting them set their foot down periodically and move around, trying to keep it a pleasant experience, and with all the old sole to shed out and some wall height to take down, the trim took a good hour and a half. His hooves got a pretty good “set and soak” in the boots. It was easy as pie to hook the nippers under the loosening sole and just peel off what wanted to go. I really remember why I enjoy trimming when the hooves are a little softer!

Blaze hinds 

I had all that leisure time to trim Blaze slowly because I was stuck at home anyway, waiting for my vet to show to give Scrappy his much needed dental. Unfortunately, as ever, she got stuck in an emergency colic and will now hopefully, fingers crossed, be out tomorrow afternoon to take care of him.
Blaze isn’t bummed the vet didn’t show, he’s just hoping I brought snacks
No snacks, just freshly rolled toes to kick goat butt with! 
 Meanwhile, hay was retrieved and stacked in the barn a couple of times. Here I hope you will indulge me in an nostalgic aside. I’ve been buying hay and all sort of other goodies at Lizzy’s Feed and Tack off and on for the last couple of years. It’s one of the local feed stores that has been around for 15+ years and unfortunately it is closing at the end of this year. It is a 2 story feed store with an impressive inventory that covers large animals and small, with everything from western saddles to English bridles to cow halters to dog sweaters. The staff has been virtually the same for 15 years and are very friendly, polite, and fairly knowledgeable, often sending me out to the Bulk barn not just with my receipt and a smile but with a bag of gifted ripe seasonal fruit too. The Bulk barn itself is big and airy, open on both ends, and immaculate. Sacks and barrels of feed, salt blocks, stacks of different types of pristine, flawless hay, all set in their place tidily and forget a stray hay string, there isn’t even a stray piece of hay on the freshly swept floor. It looked that way every time I’ve been there for the past couple of years and it never ceased to amaze me. They used to drive the 17 windy miles out to us to deliver hay but with imminent closure the deliveries have ceased as they sell off the last of their remaining inventory. It’s been really sad to watch the stuffed 2 story store dwindle to one story, and then, as it is now, almost empty and echoing with the inventory barely filling half the floor and the Bulk barn empty of all but hay. I feel for the employees saying goodbye to this workplace and commitment, and for the sweet lady that’s worked there the whole time and expressed her worries about finding another job. As a child of two small town entrepreneurs I love to support quality home businesses and it is always sad to see a worthy local business close.
A lovely load of 4 grain hay to be stacked in my barn. I’ll miss their hay!  

 Feeding time with lots of assistants 🙂

 For now we have plenty of lovely hay stacked in. Horses are trimmed and happy and healthy, soon to be more so once Scrap gets his teeth taken care of. September is upon us and while the days still often reach 90 degrees, temperatures are cooling nicely at night. This redhead is much happier greeted by mornings in the high 50s instead of the low 70s! It is 3 weeks until our next AERC ride at Chamberlain Creek, with a dash home to the Mendocino County Fair next weekend on the books if I can fit it in, and hopefully getting out on my horses some point before then too!