Wow this year is moving fast....or is it my age? We are over halfway through the Top Barn Winter Challenge. In fact we are just finishing Week 7. We have had no rollover or Holiday weeks, so I'm aiming to finish with Charlie on Week 10, and maybe even Daisy if I can bank some more time with her. Both are working on Agility. Charlie got 2 x 2nd places last month and Daisy was un-placed in our attempt at Equigility. In fact we were last with a poor score of 90/100. But, trying to teach a 24 year old that is used to trying to lean on the bit and pulling, to respond on a loose rein off a headcollar is certainly a work in progress!!
Spring is still springing. Although it's rained a lot, the temperatures have gone up. The wind is still cold, but you can't stop Mother Nature. The bloody Ragwort has started to pop its ugly heads up. But the snowdrops are well and truly out, along with some daffodils. And the Blackthorn trees are starting to blossom. Hello Hayfever season!
And this brings me on to the subject of over-rugging. As you all know our herd of Natives live out 24/7 naked and as fluffy as they should be naturally. With the nights getting lighter, they are shedding their winter coats. All as nature intended. They have not been cold this Winter (wet yes). We don't have to rush around taking rugs on and off the minute a cloud comes over. They are shiny and muddy and healthy. It's been 13c. Horses are comfortable at much lower temperatures. They survived the Ice Age. Their coats are designed to stand up and trap the heat in. The act of eating roughage causes an internal heating system. Over-rugging a horse not only messes up its coat, but causes untold metabolic issues, leaving the horse unable to regulate its body temperature.
So one of the Shetlands has grown a really really really thick coat. She looks like a cross between a lion and a siberian hamster. Poor thing was getting sweaty in 13c, so I have given her a beard, neck and belly clip. It was a real test for my Liveryman Harmony Plus Clippers, as they really only look like trimmers, and are as quiet. But as they have worked really well on Charlies thick feathers, I gave it a try. I am so impressed with them! Although I think the blades may need a sharpen now!
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