meme · winter

Five Things on My Christmas List

Thanks to Cob Jockey for a great idea for a meme!

Some of these things are a bit of a reach, and as such, I haven’t actually put them on my Christmas list. (My parents don’t believe in Christmas lists; they take them as a challenge and a list of things not to buy. My boyfriend’s parents are very good about lists, but because of that I tend to be careful about what I put on there. Ahhhh, relationship Jenga.) But if I could put together my ideal Christmas list? These would all be on it.

1. Sore No More Gelotion

I love this stuff. I will take as much of it as I can get. I enumerated the reasons why it is my favorite in my product review of a few weeks ago.

2. Dublin River Boot

COVET. I love the look of them, I love the idea of them, I want them. I want them with a fierce lust that I usually reserve for new books and heavy duty pick up trucks. (Yes, I’m kind of boring.)

3. Saddle Stand

Believe it or not, I don’t own one. Usually I put my saddle on the side of my truck bed to tack up, but that’s getting kind of old. This would be great to have for tack cleaning, too.

4. SSG 10 Below Winter Gloves

I seriously need to step up my winter glove game. It’s really starting to get cold now, and the fleece gloves I use right now are not cutting it.

5. Smart Shape Base Layer Tights

I feel pretty good about my base layers up top, but right now I just have the winter breeches on bottom – and they are glorious, but I’d like the option of stepping up the ante when I need to.

So, what do you want for Christmas?

winter

Dear Winter, Go Away

Many people are complaining about their recent cold snaps, so I just thought I’d share a slice of Vermont.

We’ve been fairly reliably into the teens over night for a week or two, and Saturday night (of course, while my boyfriend and I were driving down to New Hampshire) we got a full-on snowstorm. Whiteout conditions on the highway and a couple of inches on the ground waiting for us when we returned home.

Today, three days before Thanksgiving, it was 6 degrees when I woke up and did not crack double digits until 10:00 am. We are predicted to get to the mid-twenties by this afternoon but I think that’s a lie.

Our low for Thanksgiving Day is 1 degree. Yes, one single lonely degree. Let’s not even discuss what the wind chill is likely to look at – it’s been whipping down into the valleys and cutting through everything like a knife.

If it does indeed keep warming up I will head to the barn this afternoon and longe, but – yeesh. This is unusual even for cold, snowy Vermont.

gear · winter

Winter Gear: Experimentation

As far as I’m concerned at least one or two pieces of my winter gear need tweaking each year. Here are a few things I’m experimenting with right now, or will be experimenting with soon.

Part 3: Experimentation

Quarter Sheet

I’m honestly not entirely sure why I am feeling like I want to experiment with a quarter sheet this year. Maybe because it’s been almost five years since we’ve lived somewhere with true winter weather. Maybe it’s that this winter will be about legging up. Maybe it’s that I really want to commit to more hacking this year – which will mean more time in exposed weather.

Either way: I’ll start the experimentation with some borrowed sheets from the barn, and if all goes well I’ll be pondering something like this Amigo sheet from Smartpak, that I have my eye on. Ideally, I want something waterproof on the top, so he can have an extra layer if it’s snowing.

Cashel Cozy Toes 

I’m not sure I would be experimenting with these if I hadn’t bought some on a whim several years ago. After a long hack on Friday left my toes completely numb, I pulled these out of storage and for today’s hack put them on my jumping saddle, which is my trail riding/hacking saddle. So far so good. It was quite windy today and my feet were fine on a longer ride than on Saturday. On the other hand – I was also wearing better socks and my winter boots, so any improvement might be due to them instead.

Here’s what they look like on the saddle.

They were easy to put on, and I didn’t even notice they were there once I was riding. I couldn’t run my stirrups up like I usually do when I was done, but that’s not the end of the world. I will leave them on and try to evaluate their effectiveness over the longterm.

Darn Tough Socks

I know, I know, I just got done writing a love letter to Smartwool. But these are a) local, b) reportedly just as warm and c) come with a lifetime guarantee. No matter how much I baby them, my Smartwool socks wear through in a far shorter time period than $20 socks ought to. So I’ll be investing in a pair of these next month and testing them out.

chores · gear · winter

Winter Gear: Barn Chores

In Part 1, I covered a few items that have worked well for me while actually riding my horse. Today, I’ve got a few tips for the rest of the time, ie barn chores and before getting on.

My biggest tip here is that in chore clothes and gear you can be much bulkier and hence much warmer than when riding. I therefore wait until the last possible minute to transition from barn clothes to riding clothes, and I do it in a warm space. Often, I bring down my helmet, riding gloves, and riding boots to the heated part of the tack room and leave them there, then leave him in the crossties to go change into my riding stuff, then get right on.
Part 2: Barn Chores

Women’s Wildcat Boots from L.L. Bean: The first thing you should know about my love affair with L. L. Bean is that half my family is from Maine, and L. L. Bean has played a major part in every family Christmas as long as I can remember, even if it’s just re-wrapping an old box and thus getting everyone all out of proportion excited before they actually open the box. I love, love, love L. L. Bean.
Ahem. Anyway. These boots, you guys. They are the very, very best. In fact, these are not actually my barn boots; I wear a lesser knock off of these boots every day. These are my shoveling the driveway, walking to work boots. These boots kept my feet warm in -18 on my walk to work. True story. As soon as they are no longer publicly acceptable they will be my new barn boots. They are warm, comfortable, sturdy, and they are backed up by that glorious L. L. Bean guarantee. Lose one in the mud? Pop off a rivet? Gash it open on a stall door? No worries. Send ’em back and they’ll replace them with brand new ones.
Smartwool: Yep, here too. Usually wear regular socks, then Smartwool ski socks over them, and wear them for both barn chores and riding. The key for barn chores even more than riding is to have the long, knee-high, extra padded ski socks, because if there’s a sensation worse than cold snow down inside your boot and against your bare leg, then I can’t think of it right now.
Flannel and Fleece Lined Jeans from L. L. Bean: See above re L. L. Bean. Then go buy these jeans. I will warn you: they fit like your grandmother’s jeans. They don’t have a ton of give and they are not fashionable. But those factors are far, far outweighed by the fact that these are the warmest and most durable jeans you will ever own. I promise. I usually start off the season in the flannel lined and in the depths of January transition to the fleece lined. Sizing tip: they run small, and if you have any height to you at all I’d recommend getting the Medium Tall or Tall. (I’m 5’9″ and not especially leggy for my height, and I need the Medium Tall.)
Gloves: again, this is a hole in my gear. I usually wear mittens over gloves if I’m actually doing chores, not tacking up, but I have no special brand, just some leftovers from skiing days.
Neck Warmer: Same as riding.
Hat: No special recommendation here. I usually wear one I like, which means I’m alternating between my Middlebury ski hat and my Old Sturbridge Village wool hat. The key here is to wear one, because a significant percentage of the body’s heat escapes through the head, and to make sure it goes down over your ears. (Also, to remember to remove it and put your helmet on. Don’t be like me and get halfway down the aisle every time before realizing that thing on your head is too warm to be a helmet.)
Part 3 next: Experimentation, with a few things I’m adding in to the mix this year but am not yet sold on.
gear · winter

Winter Gear: Riding

There are some great guides out there to winter riding and winter barn chores – see also Cob Jockey’s excellent product reviews – but I thought I’d go over what works for me. All of my horse-owning years have been in New England, and half of them in Vermont, so I know from cold weather horsekeeping.

For reference: my rule of thumb is that I will school down to 15 degrees, and will sometimes go out and just walk around bareback from 10-15 degrees. Colder than that (and we had three straight days last year of below 0 temperatures) and I will go out to check on him if I’m feeling very motivated but mostly I am holed up at home under blankets.

Part 1: Riding

Devon-Aire Power Stretch Full Seat Breeches – Love, love, love. I’ve had other winter breeches, but too often they feel more like wearing diapers than wearing insulated breeches. (These Tuff Riders are a particularly bad offender.) These are warm, flexible, and relatively sturdy: they’ve held up pretty darn well for several years now. They are also the only full seat breeches I wear on a regular basis, for whatever reason.

Not my boots, but very similar to them – Ariat Brossards

Ariat Winter Tall Boots – My much-beloved winter tall boots are no longer made by Ariat; the year after I bought them, they updated the line. They are closest to the Ariat Brossards: somewhere between a “true” tall boot and an insulated barn boot. They are warm and comfy and not too thick and my only, only complaint is that they are pull-ons and the only way to pull them up is by the velcro tabs at the top and I am perpetually terrified that I will break the tab.

Smartwool – I don’t leave the house in the winter without something from Smartwool. Most often it’s socks – over the years I’ve invested a small fortune in work and casual and ski socks and I am fanatical about taking care of them. I have a few other things and this year I’m planning on some underlayer investment as well.

Turtle Fur Neck Warmer – Actually, I lost this a year ago but until then it was an absolutely required part of my winter gear. Makes a huge difference, especially when moving at speed while riding. This is on the top of my list of things to replace this year before it starts to get really cold.

Down Ski Jacket – Haven’t the foggiest what brand it is, but I retired my ski jacket to be my barn/riding jacket when I retired from skiing. (I am really, really bad at skiing and after messing my my right knee in a fall a few years ago, I decided that if I was going to wreck my body I’d rather do it riding than skiing.) The key here is the down: it keeps the jacket light and comfortable and warm.

Here’s where I admit the major hole in my winter riding gear: gloves. I have these SSG Winter Training Gloves but I’m just not wild about them. I need to re-examine and update this soon. For now, I’m getting by with those and some other fleece ones, but pretty soon they won’t cut it anymore.

Part 2: Barn Chores coming tomorrow.

adventures with the vet · farrier · winter

Winter is coming

First things first: I’ve often said that my barn, which is at a higher elevation than most of the other places in my life, has its own weather patterns. Last night that proved true: I left work and drove up and up and up…and at a certain point, the cold rain solidified and turned white, and I stared in disbelief for a few minutes before swearing.

Luckily, none of it stuck. But winter is well and truly on its way: all the trees are naked, it’s below freezing every night even in the valley, and this weekend we’re putting in storm windows and sealing everything off under plastic.

Tris is going well. We had a good intense ride on Wednesday, and when I got off he was sweaty through his fuzzy winter coat. Whoops. So, 45 minutes of cooling out and drying (walking, swapping coolers) for 35 minutes of riding. It’s been a very long time since he’s been sweaty like that through his winter coat. Hopefully he’ll go back to his usual self soon, because I really do not want to play the clipping and blanketing game.

His most exciting news now is that also on Wednesday the farrier did his feet – and he’s back in normal steel shoes! Hooray! The notch in his toe is small enough that it looks like a bad chip, and the farrier left the epoxy out entirely. By the end of the winter the foot will look practically normal – it’ll still have some of the bulge from growing out but that will only be visible on close inspection.

Next week, he’ll get his flu/rhino booster, and they’re vaccinating the whole barn for botulism – which I did not know you could do! It’s precautionary, since they’re going to put a lot of the horses on round bales in pasture this winter, and apparently it has a million boosters but round 1 is next week. He’ll get his Legend shot at the same time and we’ll see where we are.

Last but not least, he’s starting to add weight again. He dropped a fair bit in the summer to fall changeover, and he was looking downright ribby for a little while, so we upped his hay, switched him to senior grain, and upped his grain in general, all in slow stages. The idea was not to just fling calories at him but to do it in small increments and find a leveling off, since he’s usually such an easy keeper. It was worrying quite a lot for a while but we are definitely on the right track now.

Whew.

surgery · winter

Spring…

Yesterday was the first full day of spring. We had several inches of snow on the ground and are getting more today. Tristan has not shed one single, solitary hair of his winter coat. I am torn between worrying and admiring his good sense, because it’s not meant to go much above freezing for at least another week. (To be fair the poor pony also hasn’t seen sunlight in nearly a month, so I’m sure that’s thrown him off kilter.)

Healing continues apace. He has had three days of 5 minutes of handwalking and is doing beautifully, very eager to move out, sound to my eye. The drainage is, knock wood, slowly decreasing. When I sent the 2 week pictures to the vet hospital they said it looked good and suggested that the local vet could take a hoof knife and pare off the top blood clot to get a clearer sense of what the wound looks like underneath.

When I flushed last night, I used the tip of the syringe to move the blood clot (it’s basically a scab) aside a bit, and there was bright pink flesh underneath. Yay for that. Tris was not wild about that, which leads me to think that we’ll have to tranq him a bit if the vet’s going to do that on Monday.

He’ll also get the first half of his spring shots on Monday, and if the vet clears everything we’ll decrease the amount of wrap I’m using and try to get him into the smaller size boot so a) it’s less likely to fall off and b) he can possibly go on light turnout. (I’m fairly certain the larger boot would be destroyed in short order if it ventured outside, as it flops a bit.)

He’s now eating his antibiotics as dressing in his regular supplements, mixed in with some mints for intermittent reward, and hasn’t had them syringed in 5 days. They run out on next Friday, and we’ll talk about getting another bottle and keeping him on them. He’s down to 1/4 quart of grain a day, half in the AM and half in the PM, and holding his weight steady.

So hopefully on Monday we’ll a) cut away the blood clot and take a good close look; b) get the ok to do 10 minutes of handwalking at a time, and possibly light turnout the week after that; and c) get a judgment on the antibiotics.

surgery · winter

Spring is still far away..

Not much to report. Healing continues. Two week checkup is tomorrow, and fingers crossed we’ll be cleared for a bit of handwalking – I think we’d both like that.

In bad news, it’s meant to be -5 overnight, and we are getting a blizzard on Tuesday. Ugh. Tristan’s blanket was laid out and waiting for night check when I went to give him his evening antibiotics – have I mentioned how much I love the staff at this barn?

winter

Happy Anniversary

Seven years ago tonight I became a horse owner. What a crazy, wonderful ride.

It’s going to be -18 below here in the Green Mountain state, and so the barn manager texted me this morning asking if I still wanted Tris to stay naked. Eep! I asked her to put a barn blanket on him if she could and started shopping.

I also put the call out on Facebook for recommendations – partly tongue in cheek, as I had a marvelously tacky neon peace sign mid weight picked out.

Lo and behold, a dear friend from Flatlands messages me to say that she had her daughter’s old horse’s blanket still and her son was driving to Montreal tonight, did I want her to have him bring the blanket to me?

Wow! Yes, yes I did. So I just returned from putting Tristan’s first-ever lined blanket on him. I present to you the world’s worst picture of the world’s most adorable mustang: