New Farm-All Coming Together

Can you find Kona's dirty ball?

Can you find Kona’s dirty ball?

The new Six Meadow Farm is coming together!  All the fencing is done.  The arena is very rideable.  The house has most of my pictures that I have collected, saved and treasured up on the walls.  The rooms look pretty complete.

My contractor just texted me that he has corrected the electrical problem in the barn and he is has the fans working on each horse’s stall.  And not a minute too soon as temperatures are headed into the 90’s today.

We have put in numerous flowers, loads of mulch, pavers and rocks.  We have spread “guaranteed to grow anywhere” grass seed in the bare areas around the farm and dragged off broken limbs, construction debris and rocks from the grounds.

Occasionally, when we finally stop long enough to sit still, we cannot believe we are lucky enough to live here.  When Amber visited she kept asking me if I didn’t feel like I was on vacation and no, at that point I did not.  We had been working like manic fools to get everything ready.  No vacation there but last week, when I finally did slow down enough to have that vacation feeling, I was so gratified to just sit and watch the horses graze, the wind blow through my numerous wind chimes and dogs lay close by.

And speaking of the dogs, broken back dachshund Lula is doing very well.  She has responded great to medication, rest and therapy.  She thinks she is back to her old self and the hardest thing is keeping her from running, jumping or playing.  I thought I had lost her and am thrilled at this turn around.  Meanwhile, Kena, the Doberman with the lacerated paw, returned for her last visit to vet today (number four) to have the remaining staples removed from her foot.  The infection is gone and she is finally bearing weight on her leg.

Kona got his hair cut yesterday and was so happy to be home.  He wanted to play lots of ball as I tried to get the plants all watered.  His answer-as shown above-just drop his nasty ball directly into whatever plant I am trying to coax along.  Then I have to pick it up and throw it again.  Freaking smart dog for sure.  Annoying, too!

All the horses were in back under saddle this last weekend, even Snowboy whose feet have been in bad shape.  Arianna rode both Mickey and Snow and they did not disappoint us.

Arianna getting a little gallop out of the pony.

Arianna getting a little gallop out of the pony.

 

Mickey tucking his knees like champ.

Mickey tucking his knees like champ.

Bruno has been going well for Amelia and they will have their first lesson with Dev on Saturday.  We have moved closer to civilization and are really enjoying all our friends.

With all the pastures, arena and barn work to do, it was finally time to invest in a small tractor.  In Wharton, where tractors seem more plentiful than people, it was never a problem to get someone (beg someone) to come drag our arena (thanks, Scot!) or shred our pastures (thanks, Richard!) but here we will learn to do it ourselves and hopefully save money over the long haul.  Lauren had resorted to dragging the arena with my VW Golf and I may never remove all the sand from in and on the car.

Neither Lauren or I had driven a tractor before or knew much about it but we got a great price and great instructions from Shoppas in East Bernard.

Learning the tractor.

Learning the tractor.

I still haven’t driven a tractor and hope not to, but Lauren got right on her obsession of dragging the arena and it looks great.  She has yet to run into a fence or smash into the house.  I feel that is positive.

Of course, Kona had to get on the tractor, too.

Of course, Kona had to get on the tractor, too.

My mom is doing better.  I think she believes the hard pink plaster has been on her arm all her life.  I do not think she understands why it is there but just accepts it now like it is just the way it is.  Another month and we will hope to get it off for good.

Thanks to all of you who have been riding along with us through all our journeys.

 

Give me back my home town!

Wharton County courthouse

Wharton County courthouse

Things you take for granted as you spend seven years of your life in one town, become glaringly apparent once you leave.  Wharton has a population of about 9000 folks, is the county seat and about 65 miles from Houston.  Our new home, Richmond, I was surprised to learn actually only has a population of 11,000 or 11,002 now that Lauren and I have come. It is the county seat of Fort Bend and about 25 miles from Houston. And therein, lies the major differences in the cities.  Richmond is a suburb of Houston, with a Houston feel to restaurants, people and services.  There are pockets of rural life here but Wharton is rural life.

Here is the list of things Lauren and I have noted so far: Wal-mart as the major store in Wharton is where we spent most of our time.  So, changes in policy from store to store really got our attention.  First, we knew almost every clerk at Wal-Mart, from the efficient older blonde with her hair in a braid down her back and a Rambo like headband around her forehand.  She once asked if we could take her older mare.  It still rode pretty good, she told us, just missing an eye and crippled in the knees. The young assistant manager could always be counted on to get us through the lines quickly.  I saw Frontline Flea control on 50% off sale once.  It didn’t ring up right.  He gave it to me for 75% off! I would have bought all they had.  Not only does the staff know us and our animals but it was highly likely that if I was covered with manure, we would see someone we knew. The new Wal-Mart is twice as big, no one we know is there and we have not begun to identify and get to know the help.  Oh, and your prescriptions, that you could put in your cart and pay for up front at the regular cash register in Wharton, don’t try that here!  Security is called and you are dragged back to the pharmacy to complete your purchase there. And don’t try to go buy mulch for your garden on a Tuesday night.  You can’t buy it if there is no one there to load it for you.  You are not trusted to load it yourself.

Lauren and I went to look at tractors.  We picked one out.  We waited for the paperwork to be done.  We ran out for some lunch and when we got back, our salesman was busy with another customer.  Ever impatient, I told the salesman, I had to go.  He said that was fine he would deliver the tractor to our house Monday.  I asked “what about the contract and down payment, don’t you need those now?”  “Don’t worry, I trust you”.  Where does that happen?  Not in the city.

The local feedstore knew us and our weekly order by heart.  They were ready with the feed order as we walked through the door.  When we needed panels to keep Bruno safe, the feedstore folks loaded them up, delivered them and installed them for us when they arrived!  When we moved up here, we had gates ordered and once again, they were delivered to our doorstep.  The feedstore here has yet to even get our order right.

Although not because we wanted to, we certainly knew most of the staff (good and bad) at the local hospital.   The clinic staff was well-known to us as well. If we needed something, they would take care of us. My same doctor that I have been going to for five years, has an office in our new town, but I cannot see him here, his practice is closed.  Does that make sense to anyone?

Wharton had two Mexican restaurants if you leave out Taco Bell.  It didn’t take long to figure out your favorite.  Here there is a Mexican restaurant on every other corner.  I have no idea which one is the good one.

So, for all my complaining about Wharton, I am quickly learning, I had a lot  to be grateful for in my small town!

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I  continue to give thanks and be oh so pleased to see get well cards continue to show up for my mom! I am grateful for your thoughtfulness.

 

Is this a Vacation?

Back on Bruno.

Back on Bruno.

I am supposed to be on a week’s vacation.  My blood counts have been off, too low, and I have really planned to eat a lot of iron rich foods and rest.  Mostly I have been running the roads between here and Wharton.  Friday, after some more blood work, I took Kena, my Doberman to Wharton Vet.  She had been limping around since running with horses on Wednesday.  Turns out she had a major laceration in the pad of her foot which took several staples to close.  And it was infected.  Nothing like a three-legged Doberman.

Poor Kena!

Poor Kena!

I ran down to the nursing home Sunday with the grand kids, to find mom sound asleep. Then I drove home .  Lots of driving.  Monday dawned with the clear realization that my older dachshund Lula was in great pain.  You could not touch her.  I raced her down to Wharton Vet and left her so I could get back to the house where Dr. Criner was coming to check Bruno.  She had Lauren ride him.  He went well, it seems the hoof issues in front that have plagued him for years are resolved, but his hind left leg was not moving well.  We decided to inject both of his stifles.  Hopefully that puts him on the mend.  Meanwhile, Wharton Vet called with the horrible news that Lula’s back was fractured.  OMG!  This dog is ten years old and been all over the country with me.

She is on crate rest with steroids and painkillers.  I drive back to Wharton tomorrow for a recheck on Lula and to take out Kena’s staples.  Geez!  At least I getting lots of opportunities to visit mom.

Today it was time to take momma back to the orthopedic doc.  Her cast was removed ( her elbow still horribly swollen) and she was sent off to x-ray. Some healing is taking place, her skin looks good and it is back in the cast for another four weeks.

Momma getting her newest cast on.

Momma getting her newest cast on.

 

We spotted Lauren’s back doctor in the hall and asked if we could speak with him.  Lauren is in horrible pain since the horse show.  They had already put Lauren in a room when I brought mom down the hall in the wheelchair in her fresh pink cast.  The staff asked anxiously, “did she fall?”  I said yes.  I think they were panic-stricken that this tiny lady had just fallen and was being sent to the back surgeon.  No worries, we were just with the young lady.

The back doctor told Lauren and I clearly that he had no way to make her pain go away.  No surgery would be effective now.  It would be best if she quit riding.  I indicated that wasn’t really an option.  He was quite adamant.  It was devastating.  We will try more PT, more drugs and another doctor. I felt so bad for Lauren, this is her whole life.

Tomorrow back for more blood work, dogs back to vet, stop at mom’s then Dev comes to see our place for the first time.  Maybe we will talk him into a ride on Bruno!

Keep this little band of problems in your prayers.  I am getting a fruity drink, a good book and hang out on the porch pretending I am on vacation tomorrow!

Saying Goodbye to the Little Green House

 

My home.

My home.

When we moved to Wharton over seven years ago, I thought it would be my last stop. I planned to retire and die in that house.  I am not ready to retire and I am glad I have not died.   I had bounded around the country since I was as a child living in multiple states and homes.  My career had followed the same approach.  I had moved often, dragging my family from one new great job to another.  We came from Florida in 2000 to Sugar Land. I had a couple of jobs in Houston and then took a job in Wharton.

When I had spent a couple of years commuting from Sugar Land to Wharton (Ally had graduated and Lauren was soon to head to high school) it seemed like a good time to move.  I had forever dreamed of having my own place where my horses would be in a beautiful stable, my pastures always green and my arena always dry.  It was hard as a single mom to find a place with acreage and any kind of house in my budget.  Plus, I like many, had hard times in the early 2000’s, and I was afraid of taking on anything that would stretch my budget.

My friend Tara found the little green house.  Boy, it wasn’t much.  But it had six acres, it was three miles to work,  and it had two bedrooms and two baths.  That was about all Lauren and I could hope for then.  The house had holes in the floor where you could see the ground.  The bath tub in my room did not hold water and drained outside (like into the dirt).

The barn we chose (due primarily to financial constraints) was a metal building and the stalls were built by friends.  In the beginning, we could not fence all the acreage and six horses got by on about two acres.  That effectively killed the pasture.

But a lot was right with our little home in Wharton.  I will never forget the satisfaction of doing the horse chores myself.  Once you do, you swear you could never go back to boarding your horses again.  Not because it was bad, but because at your own place it is done your way.  My buckets were clean enough that I would have drunk from them (probably not a great idea) but I scoured them daily.

We were a family that came from having a seriously talented craftsman as husband and father to us to a family of women with no skills.  There was never a chance before to learn to do anything because my ex was always there and extremely capable of doing anything we needed.  But over time on our farm we learned many things, most by necessity.  There was the morning six years ago, when I was leaving for work and glanced over at the barn as I drove down the highway.  The mare, Secret, had kicked at her stallmate and her slim ankle was caught between the boards of the stall.

I flipped the car around, rushed to the barn and sawed the board in half in about one minute.  I didn’t even know I knew how to saw.  I certainly did not know I could saw that fast.

Likewise, Lauren and I learned to hammer and drill, again necessities borne from fallen boards and other disasters.  We found friends too in the little green house.  As time went on, multiple people each day would drive by on the highway out front and honk and wave to us.  They came to include the nurse from mom’s assisted living, the tech from the vet hospital, the man that provided all our sand and gravel, and the guy that pretty much we could count on for anything, Cole, that made our driveway, fixed our broken pipes and hundreds of other things over the years.  I will miss their warm friendship.

Texas is said to have friendly, helpful people and never was it proven more than the day we went out to find our big paint mare, Mariah, stuck with fence wire laced inside her metal horseshoe. She had been pawing at the fence and caught the slender wire in her shoe.   Thankfully, she stood patiently although only two years old at the time.  Lauren and I screamed at passing trucks and one stopped.  He had wire cutters and quickly released Mariah from the fence.

My friend Gaylyn was up to see the new house.  She reminded me how I have lived each day in total absorption of what the weather was and if it was changing.  Having three weather channels on my phone was never enough as I was obsessed with and frightened of rain and storms.  I have been terrified of the weather for seven years straight, afraid it would be too wet (flooding), too dry (no pasture) or too cold (frozen pipes).  I have driven my family (and myself) nuts!

And no reminiscing about the place in Wharton would be complete without my constant moaning about my long commute.  I am sure everyone I have come in contact with in the last several years has heard way too much about that!

So, now the door is closed and locked for the last time and the pasture stands empty for the first time for over seven years.  These years in Wharton have prepared us for this next step.  We knew exactly what we wanted and needed as we set up the new barn and pasture.  We can do so many things we could not have done before.

Wharton, its people and the town, have been very kind to us.  I have lifelong friends from these years that I hope to never lose.  But I have to tell you that a huge weight has rolled off my shoulders.  The weight from the constant worry of what disaster would befall us next, what horrible weather was on the horizon, what part of my house would quit and just stop working next,  I am relieved to be rid of all of those.  I know I will always have issues, like anyone, but in a safer, newer, better prepared home, it will happen less often.  The weather should not be a factor in my new home barring a major hurricane, but we have survived that as well and will again.

It is adios to the old house and bonjour to the new one.  Perhaps I will retire and die here.  I could do much worse.

 

 

Kona-another day on the job

Lauren excitedly standing in front of the house.

Lauren excitedly standing in front of the house.

Although Sunday, my terrific contractor and his helpers are feverishly working to set all the fence posts prior to the bad weather due to town tomorrow.  Lauren, Kona and I made another trip with more stuff.  Each of the horses have a container containing their blanket wardrobes.  Of course, there are a couple  of unnamed bins that just contain the “extras”.

Kona assuring all the horse blankets are stacked and organized.

Kona assuring all the horse blankets are stacked and organized.

The workers were finalizing the arena fencing while another started stripping the grass to expose the dirt.  Once the arena is cleared and leveled the trucks will start showing up with tons of sand. The team is working so hard!  Not sure just how many loads of fill will be needed this jumbo arena.  Could get a little pricey!  And I am sure I will need to add more later. Pretty sure it would be just as effective to line dollar bills one after another.

Sick of Kona yet?  In front of the arena, with  the tractor behind him.

Sick of Kona yet? In front of the arena, with the tractor behind him.

We got back to Wharton in the early afternoon.  I needed a break and time to re-group.  I also was anxious to spend some time with my sweet momma.  We will hopefully move furniture, dogs, cats and horses by Thursday!  Happening fast!

NSMF

Looking down the  meadow at New Six Meadow Farm.  You can see the new arena fence line going in.

Looking down the meadow at New Six Meadow Farm. You can see the new arena fence line going in.

The days have been flying by as Lauren and I move loads of hanging clothes and household items down the highway.  Several friends at work just moved but it seemed to pretty much be a weekend affair.  I think we could manage our things in a weekend. We would be tired but happily ensconced in our new house.

But boy is this move different for us!  When we moved to the first Six Meadow Farm, it was the first time we had ever kept our horses at home.  And while you a mass a lot of riding gear while boarding, it is just a small amount compared to all the horse keeping items that have come to rest here in the last seven years

We have more than a full jump course and thanks to Felicia some sturdy (read heavy) wing jumps.  We have jump gates, a full set of barrels, a harrow drag for the arena, giant pasture sprinklers ( picked up in the great drought of 2008, or was that 2009?), wheel barrows, saddle racks, assorted rakes (for manure, for leaves, for stalls), ten saddles-English/western from baby sized seats to my father’s old western saddle, and full horse wardrobes from rain sheets, fly sheets, turn-outs, award coolers, stable blankets, stable sheets, and baby Dakota’s original baby blanket.

Lauren thinks there might be 30 or so wardrobe items (back to the hoarding accusation).  Oh, and then we have at least 30-12 foot long solid wood jump poles. So far Lauren and I have loaded and hauled all the loads.  Ally has helped upon arrival at the new place.  This has wrecked havoc with Lauren’s healing back and my ever limited physical abilities.  Four days in and the old house is looking pretty bare but not the shed, garage or barn.  Wow!

Movers are coming Thursday to move the big household items.  Wonder what they would do if we asked them to load those 12 foot poles up?  Probably wouldn’t go well.

Dawn over the barn as we waited for the concrete truck to arrive.

Dawn over the barn as we waited for the concrete truck to arrive.

Friday the concrete arrived at dawn and it was pretty great seeing the first aspects of a lifelong dream (to design our own barn) unfolding in front of us. Kona was on hand to be sure all was going according to plan.

Kona and the concrete truck!

Kona and the concrete truck!

The wood posts for fencing and the arena arrived next. Kona quickly evaluated the load to determine if we had gotten everything we ordered.

Kona after completing inventory of the the fencing equipment.

Kona after completing inventory of the fencing equipment.

Today the work on the arena and fences got started.  Bruno and Snow’s pasture have all the posts up.  The arena has grown from our original dimensions. I am not sure what size it is ending up but it looks as if it could double as a football field, which is about a hundred feet longer than I had in mind.  Oh well, in this case bigger is probably better.  Once again Kona was on site to assure the posts were being set right.

Are you starting to feel like a Where's Waldo game is underway?

Are you starting to feel like a Where’s Waldo game is underway?

So, all is well at NSMF.  I figure about 40 more trips and we will shut the Wharton doors for good.

 

 

Getting Used to it

I figured that the best way to get happier when I am grieving for my old friend, Kid, was to take a little trail ride.  It was Friday.  We were supposed to be jumping with joy over closing on our new house but alas all the papers are not complete so we continue to wait.

Off for a ride on Mickey.

Off for a ride on Mickey.

Lauren headed off to Dallas to look at some horses for a friend.  Ally was having her girls weekend in Matagorda.  Even Jordyn was too busy for granny with a cousins weekend planned at her other granny’s.   I had three days stretched out before with nothing but more packing and cleaning ahead of me.

I spent dinner with my mom.  She was crying when I came into her room.  She told me that her husband, Jim, forgot to come by and see her today.  (He hasn’t seen her since December but what does it matter?). I got her convinced he would be by soon and she perked up.

When I had fed the horses and the long Friday evening still stood ahead of me, I thought what the heck, I am taking a ride.  It would be far better than the ghosts of Kid I was seeing every time I looked around the barn.  It is dangerous to ride alone especially when your nearest kin is several counties away but I put on my helmet secured my cell phone, grabbed the poodle and off we went.

image

As always sitting in a saddle is better than about anything on earth.  Add to that I was asking Mickey for a little speed and you find it is hard to be sad when you are careening down a trail at warp speed. And yes, Mickey still has warp speed.  After our little terrifying run, I was breathless and adrenaline laced.  Everything looked brighter.  I noticed spring had finally come.  The corn was sticking its head above ground for the first time and the were fifty shades of green.

The corn looking up to the sky.

The corn looking up to the sky.

The rest of the weekend went quickly with lots to clean (does anyone really need five pairs of Davis splint boots or four colors of SMB boots?). Apparently, we do.  They are all clean and packed along with every single blanket, sheet, or turnout that the horses covered in mud this year.  Yes, all clean and organized. I am beginning to see some hoarding characteristics coming through with Lauren.  I think Mickey’s wardrobe consists of over 15 sheets, blankets, turnout, award sheets and coolers.  Thank God Feather can wear them!

Thanks for riding along and a prayer that Six Meadow Farm gets moved SOON, would be much appreciated!

Marching On

Guess what this is?

Guess what this is?

It has been awhile since I wrote about all the goings on at the farm and in the family. We have had a frantic month of selling our farm while dealing with the sellers of our new place that have been less than benevolent in working with us.  From oil and gas leases from the past to multiple surveys to adequately depict the property, we have been flying around.  This has all been coupled with trying to pack everything we own, a busy work schedule, and problems with the animals.

At this point, today, we are scheduled to close on Six Meadow Farm tomorrow and our new place on Friday.  Then a new set of fun begins when we start the construction of the barn and fences.  Lauren has wished for her father numerous times, as she says, “he would make sure this place looked great”.  He was/is a great craftsman and she is right our barn would look infinitely better if he were the contractor.  But, alas, I don’t see him coming to town to take over the job.

The sand and gravel being set down for our new driveway.

The sand and gravel being set down for our new driveway.

It has been a rough and tumble month for the horses, dogs and cats.  Roland was here six weeks ago.  Bruno tore the shoe from his bad foot five weeks and six days ago.  He has gone all this time with no shoe on the foot that must be shod at all times.  The rain and wet conditions have made it difficult to get anyone out to help us.  Snowboy, in a classic Snowboy move, decided to load himself up the couple of steps to the tack room where the feed had been set out for all the horse’s dinner.  He ate at least 18 pounds of feed; high carb, high sugar feed.  Dr. Criner was appalled.  Is he alive?, she asked.  He should have colicked and died.  I don’t believe he even got a belly ache.  He was angrily asking where his dinner was when we did not feed him that night.  Now, his feet are looking horrible and I am hoping it is due to the horrible wet weather and not a result of his binge eating.

Speaking of dying, my brand new cat, the Burmese, that I had waited to get for so long, was attacked and killed by BrownDog.  Lauren ran out the front door to catch Muffy who had escaped the fence and BrownDog took that opportunity to storm the cat room and kill Hula.  I buried him in the back pasture and silently asked for forgiveness from his breeder that I did not protect him better.

If you go to the first, early blogs, you will see my description of BrownDog and that I trusted her the least of all the dogs.  She has become increasing aggressive.  She has attacked both the Corgi and Muffy, injuring them badly.  She has also snapped at my grandchildren.  I thought  about and tried out different alternatives but in the end, I stood with my beautiful BrownDog at the vet as I had her put to sleep.  I could not live with myself if she hurt a child.  She was the sweetest dog ever to Lauren and I.  It was a difficult decision.  But I am happy for my remaining dog family that they are not constantly scared.

So, a difficult time emotionally for us.  Lauren still has not been back in the saddle to jump, but physical therapy is going well and we hope to get her back to work this week.  The pain has diminished a lot for which I am grateful.

Jordyn was out this weekend.  She walked Snow around on his sore feet and then had a great time taking wildflowers to Bruno so he could eat them.  Bruno is so gentle and sweet to her.

Jordyn feeding Bruno wild flowers.

Jordyn feeding Bruno wild flowers.

My mom has had some health issues.  She is better now although her knees are bothering her again.  It might be time for Dr. Chau to inject them again.  It was like a miracle last time.  She has been happy and bright.  I think her memories diminish a little more each day. I am grateful to the staff and especially her sitter, Janet, who give her so much love.  She is safe and loved.  Not a bad place to be.

Thanks for riding along with all our adventures.  Hopefully, I will turning the lock on my home shortly.

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Top picture is my water trough which sits under the dusk to dawn light attracting a hoard of June bugs.  We moved the trough.  Yuck!

Top picture and this one are my water trough which sits under the dusk to dawn light attracting a hoard of June bugs. We moved the trough. Yuck!

Pin Oak ride. Pin Oak Win!

The doctor told Lauren that she could exercise her horses on the flat, like walk, trot, canter, don’t fall off.  Then walk, trot, canter other direction, still no falling off.  Get off.  Take horse to barn. So, what did she think would be a good way to get back in the saddle again?  Well, of course riding hot, fresh, giant Bruno bareback.  Only good news I have here is that Bruno was pretty quiet.  Lauren tired of this fun and I went back for his saddle and off they went again.

Bruno has never (and probably won’t ever be)  an easy guy to ride. And with two month.’s rest, he was ready to run. Off they went with Bruno flipping his tail in agitation and Lauren sitting quietly with a big smile on her face. Of course, just to keep things at the peak of excitement, Kona felt he should chase and   bark at the big horse all the way around the arena.  If an ape ever gets loose in the show ring with Bruno or Feather, there will be no worries.  They don’t even notice him any more.

Here is a link to the Friday ride on Bruno.  See if you can spot where he almost starts bucking.  We have so much fun here.

We got a text from our friend Kathy to see if Lauren wanted to come up to show and hack horses for her and trainer Trapp. No question about that, we changed clothes fast and headed to Katy.

Kathy and Lauren, on Ky, in such of a quiet ring to ride in.

Kathy and Lauren, on Ky, in search of a quiet ring to ride in.

Lauren called the big, imported gelding, Ky, amazing to ride.  She wanted to buy him but I told her, we would need to chose between a house and a horse and it is hard to cook or take showers  if you spend all your money on a horse.  Really, just pointing that out.

Lauren having a wonderful time on an amazing horse.

Lauren having a wonderful time on an amazing horse.

I headed home after Lauren’s ride to see my mom who has been sick and pack some more boxes.  Lauren stayed on for the night’s Grand Prix competition.  Kathy and Trapp have a partnership on a horse named Capitano.  He had been coming along well in his training but had yet to win a GP on the caliber of Pin Oak.

A large field of riders was there to take on the fences set over five feet high.  Trapp made great decisions about how to ride the course and Cappy responded with speed and accuracy to win the $25,000 Pin Oak Grand Prix.  If I had known all of that would happen I would have stayed for sure!

Congrats to Trapp, Kathy and Cappy for an amazing ride.

Trapp with blue ribboned Cappy after winning last night's Grand Prix.

Trapp with blue ribboned Cappy after winning last night’s Grand Prix.

Bring Spring

The newest wreath for momma's (Midge) door. Thanks Tara for beautiful job.

The newest wreath for momma’s (Midge) door. Thanks Tara for beautiful job.

Tomorrow is the first day of spring.  I hope spring finally comes and STAYS here in south Texas.  Our arena is rideable for the first time in months.  Bruno got out in the pasture and enjoyed the warm sun, romping up and down the fence line.

Spring for us this year, will not mean my usual trips to the garden center, bringing home plenty of annuals and my favorite perennials.  I grow plumarias, a flower from Hawaii. They winter in my cold, dark garage.  They come out of dormancy and start life again in spring.

Just as spring, will not mean Pin Oak for us, it will, hopefully, mean moving to our new home.  Our house has that “bare chic” look now.   Most packable things have now been packed.  And no matter how I try to anticipate what I will need that item inevitably ends up at the bottom of the last box I just taped shut.  That’s if I am lucky enough to remember  which box my stuff is in.

It is warm and balmy out.  I should go out and ride Feather (Lauren can’t ride and anyway, she is off to see Florida Georgia Line at the rodeo),  despite the terrific weather,  I am pretty exhausted from work, the stress of the move and my job, where new projects seem to pop up each day.

We have pushed the loan officer handling the buying of my new home to get the closing done fast.  Our sellers will leave for the Philippines on April 1 st.  Now, the loan and closing on my existing house seems to be going no where.  I have said many times, that it is hard to get anyone in this county to do anything in a timely matter.  Proves out again.  Maybe things will get moving and we can close before our seller leaves the country.  We will see.

Congratulations to everyone kicking off the Pin Oak show today. I know many of you all earned some great ribbons and prizes today.  But even if you showed and someone else took the ribbons home, know what a tremendous honor it is to just be in the ring today.  There are a lot of riders who wish they could be there in your place.

Happy Spring!