Monthly Archives: September 2020

Poor Old Men

A terrible morning.  We woke up to hear screaming horses and, upon rushing outside, found the gate between the two fields had “somehow” come open.

It has been windy recently and perhaps the rope had finally frayed and given up, or perhaps a ginger ninja (we have three, so there is a choice of ninja with specialist rope skills) has spent the night chewing it.  Who knows.

Anyway, Taktur and his friends had rushed into the old men’s field and were beating them up.  By the time we arrived on the scene, Klængur was hiding in another field and, with OH on the gate, the girls quickly caught Haakon and Iacs to take them to his field too.  Taktur and his mates were galloping around, high on adrenaline from bullying feeling very pleased with themselves.  I shot them a filthy look and concentrated on Iacs and Haakon, who were relieved to leave the scene and feeling very sorry for themselves.

Iacs seemed physically ok but Haakon had bites on his neck and there was a little blood.  We gave him Danilon (painkiller) and then checked on them all regularly.

I went down later with a huge bag of carrots to distribute. Carrots make everything better.

 

I could tell Haakon was still upset.  He refused to talk. Once he was the boss of the herd and now he is not.  It hurts.

I really feel for him.   A few years back Haakon would’ve given as good as he got and put everyone in their places leaving them all in no doubt that he was the boss.

Anyway, those days are gone now and Haakon, his wounded pride and his friends are in a good field away from the bullying rabble.

I am glad these three are together.  They are a close little group who rarely bicker and seem to be fairly equal in status.

Bloody stallion. Bloody other horses.  Poor Haakon and Iacs.

 

Not So Little Albert Potato aka Albie

Anyone remember the little orphan foal who came to us in the spring of 2016 – Albie’s arrival blog post (Albie was called Brisk then)?

He was funny little chap who needed lots of love and attention.  A Mummy’s boy without his proper Mummy.

So this is Albie now, 4 years on.  A solid little chap.

Still a huge (literally) Mummy’s boy.

We adore him.

But, best of all, definitely one of the boys.  He has been accepted – it took a while as he was in their eyes “different”.

I was just thinking today that Albie has come a very long way from the poor little sad “screaming” foal who wanted his Mum more than anything.  Even though we were totally out of our depth, we tried our very best for him (Floss put in the hours – she truly did – out all weathers and hours with her bucket of milk) and we were also very lucky in being given a diary from another Shetland pony breeder who had bucket-reared a foal which gave us some essential guidelines to follow.

We are very proud of the gorgeous (if slightly fat) pony Albie has become.  He is a total joy.

**** sniff, so proud ****

Boring, Sorry

This is the world’s most boringest blog post and I am sorry. There is no excuse except I have been busy doing the mundane stuff that made up my life today.

My morning was spent trying to work out the logistics of going south at the end of this month.  Youngest daughter has been accepted by Bristol University to do a Masters degree in Chinese-English translation.  I have decided to drive her down south, settle her into wherever (halls or a flat) and then drive on to see my mother for a week.  I haven’t seen her in just under a year. I was meant to go south in the middle of March for her 80th birthday celebrations but it was all postponed.

BeAnne is doing well now. Her health issues seem to be well controlled by a twice daily cocktail of drugs. Although she is a bit of a doitin’ old lady, and a fat one at that, I am hoping Her Maj will be fine without me for just under two week.  Obviously I will worry like mad and, if BeAnne is not coping, then I will drive as fast as I can home. She will have Daisy and OH who will look after her and see to her every need. It is the best I can do.

These days, it is not easy leaving Shetland but hopefully today’s efforts have not been wasted in organising our trip south.

So that’s the plan.

As it was Thursday afternoon, Daisy and I went over to Transition Turrifield to pack vegetables for their delivery box-scheme.

(the view from the shed)

 

My Wee Flock

I have a wee flock of sheep.  Sometimes they almost like each other.  The arguments have stopped.

(I also like having my ducks in a row too, so you know)

Anyway back to the sheep.  I was feeling kind today and I let them out of their field early as there is a storm on its way.  Lots of wind. Lots of rain.  The sheep are free spirits and hate the confinements of a terrible field (green grass, fresh water – how they suffer) and this is the one field they can’t escape from.  Around the house are their two sheds – one for girls, one for boys. They arrange themselves.

Lambie waited by the gate trying to catch my eye every time I went past.  I was tidying up the croft, putting stuff away so it wouldn’t be caught in the wind.

Once I had finished my chores, I shouted and they all, to a sheep, came out.

(so very handsome)

A little known fact, sheep yawn!

Missy is a big girl now and her sister, Madge, is huge too.  She has also done some growing and is larger than her mum, Edna.  I might almost say fat.

From the front – Edna, Missy and Madge (chunking along).

Missy is still very tame and if I shout “Lambie”, she replies and Lambie gives her the evils.

Missy is still nursing from Edna which looks a bit uncomfortable.

And this is the face of a sheep who wishes her daughter was weaned.  Poor Edna.  She looks very bored of this but she’s keeping the weight on and Missy will hopefully wean herself.  One day.

So that’s my happy wee flock.  Let’s hope the storm isn’t a bad one.

 

 

TurmerAid Entertainment

We like to rotate our fields all year round and so recently the Icelandic boys have all been moved.  They are still (and probably always will be) split up as Taktur refuses to play nicely with Haakon.  So now we have the youngsters on one side (left) and the Old Men on the other.

Kappi lives with the youngsters too.  Taktur doesn’t seem to bother him.  He gives him “The Look” and Taktur takes his urges elsewhere.

Kappi also doesn’t mind the young ones and their idiot pranks.

Klængur, although not very aged, is with the Old Men. He was never a huge one for playing and appreciates the peace and quiet that comes with age.

Haakon is very, very old.  He has seen it all and is not very impressed these days.

And Iacs thinks he as young lad, but is actually only year younger than Haakon – they are cousins.   You can probably tell.

I fed Haakon his daily TurmerAid (you have no idea the difference in him) and did a spot of ragworting – I just can’t walk past the wretched vile plant and do nothing.  I use the old boxes for everything including a single dose for Haakon. It is just the right size for one horse.  Having thrown the now-empty box down in the field and, while I was pulling weeds, I saw out of the corner of my eye that Iacs was playing.  He was very pleased with himself especially when he managed to pick the box up!  Silly-frilly-Billy.

If you do want to buy TurmerAid, please use the code “Lambie10” and it will get you 10% off.

‘Ster says hello by the way!