So with the Top Barn Winter Challenge over, across the land, Top Barners were thinking of duvet days and box sets. BUT NO! Rhi has come up with a Treasure Hunt for May and June. Brilliant. I love Treasure Hunts. We quickly joined up, and got the list of 50 Treasures. We only have to find 10 out of the 50, though there is a bonus prize draw for anyone finding all 50. We also have to pledge a certain amount of miles ranging from 25 to 200. Charlie and I have only pledged 25.....after all, with my lungs I can't exactly go on a hike. We all know how bad i am at doing mileage!!! However over 2 months it's only.....er.....about....12.5 miles a month, which is......er.......less than 5 miles a week. Can you hear my brain whirring?? However I am hoping we don't have to do it all on foot. Charlie is most laid back about me mounting now. We even managed a sideways step the other day. You never know.....some of our miles may be ridden!!
Of course we have no chance of finding all 50 treasures. This is Suffolk. In the Back-of-Beyond. Looking at the list now, I can confirm we will not be finding a Mountain, or a Dry Stone Wall, or a Steep Hill, an Eddie Stobart Lorry, a cobbled street or a tunnel! The Ocean is a good 6 miles from the Farm, and I'm doubtful if The North Sea qualifies!! However there is something for everyone to find, and I have already taken note of a few things not too far away. I have realised how rare Orange cars are. I followed an Orange Ford Focus the other day and got really excited!!
Meanwhile, Charlie and I are working on our Agility. March was a tough course. A Dinger! Lots of opportunities for Dings, aswell as trying to film in almost constant winds. Scores were lower than normal, but we got a 1st for Walk Only Silver Liberty and 2nd for Walk Only OLHA Medium Level. The April course is fun, but it still has THE HOOP in it. The nemesis of Hairy Footed Cob owners. Cobs just DO NOT see hoops as obstacles. Half blind ones even less so. Hoop? What Hoop? Even if by some miracle they clear it with their plate size feet, the thick feathers inevitably catch it.
So with the move to pastures green I have been constructing a track system. Track systems can be made even in smallish fields. We are currently in about 3 acres. On a small Hill. A Suffolk Hill. So the track runs down to the bottom of the hill and back up again. To get water the horses have to come down the hill and back up again. This means they are moving more than they would if we just strip grazed our way down the field. In the wild, horses do not have the same problems as our domestic horses. Because they are moving. Horses are designed to move and browse for forage. MILES a day! I keep thinking of putting a tracker on Charlie to see just how far he moves in a day. I can't make it too complicated as Daisy The Highland is known for getting lost!!! But it does make them think as well.
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