Golden Days - Adventures With Indy

Monday, September 29th
Golden Days

The Barn According To Indy


As promised, Indy’s contribution to the ongoing barn remodeling. But first, a little background.

Mike and I bought this place in 1992 specifically so I could bring DJ home. This property has 24 acres in total, and an almost new barn. The “almost newness” of the barn was a BIG selling point because a lot of places around here have barns - the only problem is that many of them are so old and in such bad shape that you wouldn’t store your trash in there - let alone anything you VALUED. THIS barn however, was structurally sound and had real possibilities - even if they were pretty hard to see…

I truly wish I’d had the foresight to take before and after pictures of this place. It was built as a cow barn - 30’ X 50’. The main entrance faced east with large double doors. The opening to the pasture - a bare hole in the wall with NO protection from the elements - faced north. It had a cement floor, but that didn’t matter at the time because it was piled about three feet deep in moldy straw and cow poop. There was one little 9’ X 9’ “room” on the other side of the barn from the pasture access that had been used as a STALL. It was four feet deep in moldy straw and HORSE poop. Ewwww!!!!

In order to make the barn habitable for DJ and the companion we intended getting for him, we first had to just get all the crap out - no mean feat, believe me. The plan was to make the entire side of the barn with the pasture access the horse side. So, Mike broke the cement out of that side - with a sledgehammer; built stalls - one at each end with the doorway in the middle; and then built a sort of run-in out from the door to shelter it from the elements. Nothing to it, right?

The middle section - opposite the pasture door - is OUR entrance to the Horse Side of the barn. We started with just a couple of 12 foot 2X6 boards, the lower of which slid to the side, and we got in by sliding that one back and ducking under the top one. It wasn’t elegant, and ducking under got you a headache if you didn’t duck low enough, but it DID have the advantage that, if you forgot to “close” the lower one, the upper was still there, keeping the horses on their side. That safety feature made up for a little inconvenience. The top board COULD be removed if necessary, but it had to be positioned and tilted JUST SO.

The first modification we had to make to our human entrance came when DJ broke the top board completely in two whilst scratching his butt. I know what happened because I was there when he did it. Mike then nailed a 2X4 edge on onto the outside of the (new) 2X6 to add extra strength. It never broke again, but now it was even more difficult to take down due to the WEIGHT. Fortunately, we didn’t have to remove that one often.

This worked fine for ten years. Then Indy came…Hee! Hee! It’s not that Indy MEANS to make any trouble; he’s just adventuresome and has an insatiable curiosity, not to mention a Puckish sense of humor. If you don’t count the front fence line - which wasn’t REALLY his fault because Ami had broken the main gate post a couple of years earlier while scratching HER butt - the first major change was the bottom board.

A few weeks ago, the bottom 2X6 was laying on the floor when we came out one morning. We thought Indy must have worked it out of its brackets while scratching - you got it - his butt. We replaced it. Next morning, it was again on the floor. We replaced it, commenting that one good thing about winter was the lack if itchy, biting BUGS.

The next morning however, we got there in time to SEE what was happening. Indy wasn’t scratching. He was deliberately taking that board in his teeth - working carefully to get as big a bite and he could manage - lifting if up and dropping it onto the barn floor. I replaced it and he did it again. And again. Evidentially, he found this greatly amusing, - actually, I found it hilarious myself - and I have no idea how many more times he would have picked it up if I had continued to rehang it for him.

Mike ended this particular game by putting another set of brackets upside down over the original set, so that it was impossible to take the board out by lifting it up. We also installed a chain that we could wrap around the brackets and fasten outside the stall to prevent the bar from sliding. Of course, this made it more difficult for US to get the board out should we need to do so, but I digress…

A few days later, we came out in the morning to find the TOP bar had been disengaged from its brackets on one side. The weight of the thing had bent the bracket on the other side, so there it hung, diagonally across the entranceway. This time, we didn’t even speculate about this being an “accident.”

Mike installed a double bracket system similar to the one on the lower board, plus nailing on another 2X4 over the first one, increasing the weight and taking away the edge of the 2X6 that Indy was grabbing onto. So far, neither bar has been, er, toyed with again.

I keep telling Mike we need to get this boy a Stall Ball, but he’s concerned that Indy would chase Ami with it like he does with the muck buckets. Sometimes I don’t think Ami shares Indy’s sense of humor, because he would LOVE it if SHE chased HIM with a muck bucket.

Oh yeah - did I mention this place had a HOUSE on it too?
suzym on 09.29.03 @ 11:06 AM CST [link] [4 Comments]


Saturday, September 20th
Golden Days

News Too Good To Wait


I know I promised to detail the barn modifications Indy has, uh, inspired us to make in this post, but I have news that’s too good to wait.

Last Friday, we took Indy back to Purdue for what will almost certainly be his last check up for the abscesses. Dr. Lescun had been on vacation, and he wasn’t actually due back yet, but he made a special trip in because he wanted to check Indy himself. Is this a FANTASTIC vet or what?!

Dr. L was extremely pleased with what he found - or DIDN’T find! - on palpation. Even though Indy has been off all antibiotics for almost a year, there was no change in the little scar tissue that used to be baseball-sized abscesses on the outer wall of his bladder. No sign of any left over infection. Dr. L said those little nodules may always be there, but they wouldn’t cause any problems and that Indy would never even know they were there.

So, I guess this nightmare is FINALLY over. When Dr. L explained to the attending vet student what had happened to Indy, she looked appalled and asked him if he saw this kind of castration complication often. He replied that he had NEVER seen this castration complication before and neither had all the other vets he consulted with while Indy was hospitalized. What can I say? Indy is going to be okay, and, at this point, that’s all that matters.

While I was there, I asked Dr. L about the fact that Indy seems to be extremely sensitive to insect bites. Both summers that I’ve had him, the bugs have just driven him crazy. It’s not just the bites themselves, but they seem to make him feel itchy all over. How can I expect him to concentrate on working when all he can think about is trying to scratch EVERYWHERE?

Doc suggested I try supplementing him with Omega 3 fatty acids. He said that had proven quite effective in humans and dogs. After thinking about if for a while, I remembered a Cocker Spaniel that I had back in the 70’s that had allergies. We supplemented him with a prescription product - can’t recall the name - that I know realize contained Omega 3. It helped him a lot, so I’m hoping for the same success for Indy.

After rummaging around the Net for a bit, I ordered Indy a flaxseed product called Omega Horseshine from ENRECO - http://www.enreco.com/enreco/Products/Horseshine.htm I will post the results of this experiment here. Keep your fingers crossed. It’s hard to imagine how Indy’s skin could appear any healthier or his coat shiner, so I don’t expect to SEE any difference. I just hope Indy FEELS a difference!

More IndyAntics next time, for sure. ;o)

suzym on 09.20.03 @ 11:57 AM CST [link] [3 Comments]


Monday, September 8th
Golden Days

September Mornings


always make me feel that way…

Neil Diamond ~ September Morn

I’m not a winter person. Heck, I’m not a FALL person. :o( September is a depressing month for me no matter how nice the weather is - and it is quite nice right now. Still, I get that old Fall Feeling, and it gets me down.

As for Labor Day, it was fantastic here - rained ALL day. Temperature was okay, but that endless rain was depressing, downright dismal it was.

HOWEVER - I can always count on Mr. Goof Ball (aka Indy) to liven things up, even on the gloomiest days. We started the morning as we always do; Mike and I, cleaning the stalls and feeding breakfast - along with their morning carrots of course! Both these guys are pretty easy on their stalls, almost NEVER pooping inside. They do however, pee - especially Ami - so the stalls do require mucking out the wet spots and periodically adding more shavings. This was one of those mornings.

We use baled shavings, and Mike has this idea that I shouldn’t be hauling them around, so he always does this himself. He was just pushing the wheelbarrow with a couple of bales of shavings into the stall area when Indy - in his capacity as Supervisor Of Everything - came in. He immediately began his inspection of the wheelbarrow and its contents. Mike said, “You pick up your cone - how about picking up this bale for me?” That was probably not the thing to do…

Indy thought about it for a moment. Then he opened his mouth as wide as possible and sank his teeth into the biggest chunk of the bale that he could - and picked it up! Of course, the plastic around the bale wasn’t up for this and promptly ripped open, shavings going everywhere. This seemed to please Indy no end, and besides, Mike asked him to do it, right? He “helped” Mike with a few more bales as well. That’s Indy - always there when you need him. ;o)

Indy and Ami both are always there when I need them, in many ways. Only with my horses it seems, can I let go of everything and live in the Moment. While I’m in their presence, that Moment is all that counts, and the world and all it’s grief and worry just goes away… Yeah, I guess I COULD live without them, but WHY?

Next time: More barn remodeling due to Indy’s insatiable desire to understand how everything works - and his uncanny ability to dismantle things in his quest for that knowledge.
suzym on 09.08.03 @ 10:50 AM CST [link] [3 Comments]




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