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HORSES AND THE FEAR
FACTOR
Just when you start thinking you
know all the things about horses, they pull a fast one on
you. Like my beauty of a yearling gelding, last year.
Last year was a severe drought
for many areas, mine included. The neighbors crop land
bordering mine ended up being fenced in order to turn his
cows out on the crop that had failed to grow. It never
entered my mind that my yearling gelding had never seen a
cow and might panic over them. The rest of my older horses
had all worked cows at some time in their lives so no
problem with them. But that yearling showed me what true
fear in a horse can result in.
The neighbor opened the gate to
the newly fenced field to the far north of my land. Cows
being cows, they tore through the open gate and started
running down the field, straight towards my place. The big,
handsome colt was busy munching away in his corral when he
happened to look up and spot 60 some head of strange beasts
heading straight towards him. He was totally consumed by
fear. He spun around and first hit the 5 and 1/2 foot high
planks on the other side, busing two heavy planks in half
like match sticks. He bounced back on his haunches, took
another look at the savage cow beasts still coming across
that field, and crammed his head through the steel gate,
trying to get out. He popped the gate off the hinges and
with the gate for a necklace, headed across the lawn. The
steel gate smashed the electrical box off the power pole and
took a chunk out of my vehicle before falling off his neck.
He then crashed though the heavy wire of the first dog pen.
Through the next wire into the second dog pen, the back
through the first pen again. Snapping off two corner posts
buried in cement, in effect, collapsing the entire side of
the one 100 foot long dog pen.
He was back on the lawn now.
Eyes wide and showing white with fear. He was literally
making a never before screaming sound of fear, a sound I
have never heard before or since from any horse. The cows
had slowed their full out gallop to a fast trot and he stood
frozen, watching them come. By now, I had grabbed a halter
and lead and was inching my way up to him, talking nice and
soft. I was almost within touching distance when one of
those cows bellowed, calling her calf to her side. He spun
so quick, he went right over top of me and I believe he
never even saw me in his panic. Across the yard is a neatly
fenced area which is essentially my garbage spot. All old
broken boards, broken shovels and pitchforks, twisted wire
goes in there until I have a truck full for the dump. Well
he smashed those boards into splinters and stomped around in
there before clearing the fence from a standstill into the
mares pasture.
I breathed a sigh of relief, now
that he was in with the old girls who couldn't care less
about the advancing army of cows, surely he would settle
down. NOT A CHANCE. When dark came he was still circling
their pasture at high speed, soaked with sweat, instead of
staying with them for protection. I couldn't get anywhere
near him to see how badly he must be hurt with what he had
just done to himself.
By morning, he was to exhausted
to hardly move. The cows being out of sight helped a lot
too. And not a mark on him. After all that and no cuts,
tears, wounds, nothing. Hard to believe. Just one sorry
looking colt.
It took 4 solid weeks for that
colt to relax and eat his daily grain feedings if those cows
were anywhere near my fence line. Another 2 weeks before he
would approach a cow to stare at it and that was only if it
was standing still and not looking back at him.
So this year I was as tense as a
"Flea On A Dog About To Get Bathed", watching each day like
a hawk to see those cows coming after the crop came off.
After all, the colt himself had gone to a wonderful home,
but his brother was now a yearling and to good of a colt to
get hurt over a herd of innocent cows.
I turned this yearling gelding
out with a couple of ancient mares and waited for the poop
to hit the fan. And here come the cows, running again from
the north!!!
And the colt ran full
out................ Flat out.................Straight
towards them to meet them............The cows came to a stop
at my fence line.........The colt danced and pranced and
reached away over the fence to smell noses with the curious
calves and a couple of old crock cows who were checking him
out too. One of the bulls approached, snorted and blew snot
all over the colts chest. The bull is shaking his head and
threatening to attack, and the colt licked the big bugger
all over on his neck and shoulder...........Just licking
that ornery bull, like it was his bestest friend in the
whole world.
Tonight, a day later, the herd is bedded down next to the
pasture fence line. The colt is not with the old mares, he
is bedded down, sleeping beside his new best friends. I
give up...............My horses are not
normal.................
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