Icelandic horse eating

Never Again!

Sorry for the 24hr absence.  I pressed a button when I was trying to update the blog. However, I have learned my lesson.  I will never do that again, I promise.

Go back 36 hours (yesterday morning) when I had a very helpful meeting with Rene Looper from Tuminds – a dedicated social media training business – about my blog. The meeting was very useful and, as I am self-taught, I wanted to know if I was covering all my bases and getting it right.  I have homework now.

Anyway, we chatted about the blog’s statistics and I said “hang on, I can tell you what the numbers are and where from” but I couldn’t – nothing appeared.  So after the meeting, I decided to upgrade as WordPress kept saying I should (I thought I might get my very useful statistics back too) and with that the blog vanished into “Critical Error” territory.  I felt sick.

Anyway, I am lucky as Nick Miners is the poor chap ultimately responsible for my blog’s health and he took over and sorted everything. It was touch and go at one point and I have promised never ever to touch anything ever.

And we have a storm coming.  A biggie – 2 days of scary stuff.  OH and I have shut sheds, cleared anything that might blow away, and put food/water in every hen/duck shed ready to keep them shut in for 48 hours, if necessary.  A small price to pay for staying alive.

Shed with door shut

I’ve also moved the old horses and ponies into a sheltered field that has long grass and high walls. I’ve not put on rugs (lots of rain) as it is going to be warm and everyone is very fat – life is a juggling act.

Icelandic horse in field Icelandic horse watching Shetland ponies

For the little Shetlands, I shut one of the containers (for safety) and have haynets ready.

closed container Two Shetland ponies in container

And then this morning, we’ve had an equine dentist visit – all the old horses and ponies had their teeth done (an expensive but essential requirement) and I feel better knowing they are going into winter as good as they can be.

Horse with Equine Dentist

So, wish us luck. Candles are ready for when the power goes and electricals all charged up. All we can hope is to find everyone safe and well afterwards.

 

 

 

A Wool Week Visitor

I wrote out the whole blog and then the broadband went down and lost it all. **sigh **.

So here I go again…….

It was about how we had a visitor who was up in Shetland for Wool Week, and how I put her to work helping me finish building the electric fence track for winter for the Shetland ponies.

And then I said, as a reward for all her work, we went into the big field so she could reacquaint herself with the residents.

I also added that my visitor has sheep herself so obviously knew the ways of sheep very well.

She was, of course, a very good sheep magnet. Even Gussie got over his “stranger danger” routine which was encouraging.

And, ooh look, Lambie had a thought.

I feel I should place a light bulb up there somehow.  Anyway, it was brief.  He didn’t dwell on it.

After lunch and after more helping (building a wall of ice in the freezer so that if we have a power cut, it would hopefully protect the contents and take a much longer time to defrost), we went out to see the other ponies, while I quickly poo-picked the track.

So that was my day. I wrote about it all and then it was lost so now I am sort of writing it all out again but with less enthusiasm.  I am enjoying my visitors very much.  They are very useful.

Around and About

“Breakfast!”, I shouted and the Icelandic horses all came thundering over the hill.

Well, Kolka had a good thunder while the old men, Haakon and Iacs, walked slightly faster than usual.  Breakfast was being served, after all.

Instantly heads in buckets and that breakfast swiftly vanished.

Then there was a queue – possibly for the Ladies’ loo!

(this reminds me of John Lewis on a Saturday morning!  We’ve all been in this queue at some time.)

I went out later with the dogs and found Kolka and Iacs having a nap.

Walking with the dogs further into the field and up the hill, I also found all the sheep snoozing.  We are all making the most of this glorious sunshine because we are about to have some god-awful weather shortly – Hurricane Humberto is on its way and I am dreading it for everyone.  I keep checking all my weather apps to see if it will miss us or not be as bad as the forecast.

Meanwhile Pepper mingled.

I love this photo!

But on with the dog walk.  A little known fact this is the best place for a mobile phone signal in my area!  In our house we have barely nothing so this is where I was busy checking all my weather apps for the latest forecast.

Hell Finally Froze Over

A good friend from Wool Week came over to see everyone.  I had a lovely time re-introducing her to all the horses and ponies.

And then, after a strenuous climb up the hill in their enormous field, we finally found all the sheep enjoying the sun.

I found two empty rocks so we sat down and waited.  I wondered if anyone would come up and talk.

Lambie was sitting a little away but he did his usual film star routine for our guest.

(so very handsome)

Gussie was intrigued and actually quite brave considering he doesn’t do strangers.

And then OH joined us, having finished the dog walk, and sat down too.

And with that Lambie sauntered up.

He actually went and talked to OH (if you know Lambie or OH, this is unheard of from both sides).  OH has never been a fan of Lambie, even when he lived in the house – I think it was Lambie’s love of Apple computer cables that might’ve been the deal breaker….. or the constant faint smell of wee.

I sent this photo to the girls and Floss replied with “has Hell frozen over?”  It must’ve done.

Lambie, on a roll, then worked the field.

Still, even if Hell has frozen or otherwise, it was a lovely sunny morning and we sat on our rocks or ground surrounded by the sheep enjoying the amazing view.

Not My Day

It’s not been my day today.

I took a pile of photos to show how ‘Ster has worked out how to get into the field, when everyone else has gone under the fence and left him.

But my camera ate the photos (or I deleted them as I don’t really understand my phone’s filing system).

Anyway, I have half of them.  And after making my sheep, I found ‘Ster outside by himself, waiting patiently for me.

I went inside and got a packet of biccies.

I rattled the packet and Ster quickly realised what I wanted him to do.

He knows the routine. We devised it together.  I rattle biccies, I open the gate into the garden, he walks through and down to another gate that leads into the field.

And then I open the garden/field gate and he walks through and gets a biscuit as a reward for not eating OH’s garden plants.

But my camera ate the photos and you will never know this because you can’t see it so therefore it probably never happened.

(but I have written about this before – https://myshetland.co.uk/helping-ster/).  The photos were better today, though.  They really showed the good behaviour and the non plant eating. I will try again another day.  This routine happens pretty regularly.