The Horse Forum banner
1 - 20 of 104 Posts

· Registered
Joined
·
1,474 Posts
Discussion Starter · #1 · (Edited)
I hope I am doing this right. I seem to be very sub-forum challenged! Anyway, this is a continuation of my recent posts in other sub-forums.

Just for amusement's sake, what the heck is "Dogpatch"? For those who aren't old enough to remember, Dogpatch is a ficticious place in a cartoon strip from the 20th century. Kind of a political satire. It was a poverty stricken dump of a community in the back country someplace. We moved to this place in 1980 and it acquired its nickname almost immediately, being a tommy-tumbledown dump, with past residents being of a reportedly unsavory character. The nickname stuck and we still find it amusing.

Anybody who's been kind enough to read my recent posts knows my current project is Laddie, a half Clydesdale, half Standardbred gelding, about 23 years old. A very gentle but troubled soul. I'll just pick up where I left off.

Laddie and I continued to work on jogging on the right rein, but we've hit the anticipation/anxiety threshold and Laddie's responses were deteriorating a little bit. I was asking for some "long interval" transitions, jogging from one letter to the next, dropping to a walk, jogging again, etc. But the "whoa" button got messed up, he wasn't stopping quite as well when asked, REALLY anticipating the jog cue and tensing up because I was starting to use a little more rein pressure to get the downward or stop transition, and he responded by getting a little more bracey.

There's no way at this point that I'm going to let him fall apart! So we backed our transitions down to walk/whoa/stand and abandoned the jog for the rest of the lesson. Stops got sloppy, so we just walked a small circle. He "knew" why we had to do this and preferred to stop after that. We did a few really good repetitions, enough to be sure he was relaxed and feeling successful.

Chatted with the neighbor over the fence when we were done, and Laddie stood there with his big ol' head in my arms.

Here is today's mud...er...mug shot. Next time I'll take that ugly halter off.

Horse Head Eye Plant Working animal
 

· Registered
Joined
·
1,474 Posts
Discussion Starter · #3 ·
Laddie makes that halter look handsome!
Oh, you're entirely too generous! LOL! Laddie was the model for the old joke, "A horse walks into a bar and the bartender asks him, 'why the long face?'" :giggle: Judging from the scrunched upper lip, he probably had his cookie radar on!

I have a caveson for this bridle (the billet is a little bit short). Although he has no need of it, I was thinking of putting it back on for vanity's sake! I can make a quick and dirty billet extender and just leave it loosely buckled. Changes the look of that long mug.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
13,389 Posts
Sometimes it can be difficult to “see” what one is looking at, when one is in a close relationship with the subject🤠

I agree with @Horse & Dog Mom that Laddie now has soft eyes and they are turned to you❤❤

Laddie’s come a long way under your care and tutelage. He may never reach the 100% mark but he is now happy and that’s important😇😇
 

· Registered
Joined
·
1,474 Posts
Discussion Starter · #13 ·
Laddie has beautiful eyes, though not in the Welsh pony sense, as they are not prominent in that big skull. But they are very colorful, a sort of light brown with many layers of different shades, almost like looking at a reflected landscape. But when I first got him I used to say he had goat eyes (as in goat eyes are hard to read, at least for a non goat person). They were always looking somewhere else, as though for an escape route. Not fear, just vacant. I think that look started to go away when I would sit in his stall with him and teach him how to pick up a ball cap and give it to me. He started to get curious about me. I would sit on that stool in his stall, and he would come over and snorfle me from head to foot. The vacant look gradually disappeared and was replaced by that "I'm available for scritches" look! But when the gear would come out, there was nothing but worry in his eyes. A moving target to saddle, bridle, mount, or if we were going to do something in harness, it was road gait right out the barn door.
I saw it all the day I went to try him out, but I had ached to own him for five or six years, just seeing him in his pasture and only knowing enough about him to make a very bad decision look good in the moment when I had the chance to buy him. "I can handle this." Right? Yeah, right. He humiliated me as early as the day I got him home. I called the people I got him from and hysterically declared the horse was insane. I was skillfully deflected, then just had to accept that I had made a very, very bad decision and I had to own it.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
1,474 Posts
Discussion Starter · #15 ·
Every time I would see your name @dogpatch I would see these, ha ha ha ha..
View attachment 1146323 View attachment 1146324 I was a big fan of these Comic's back when we got the Newspaper, I always went for the Comic's and Dogpatch and Popeye were my favorites..
LOL! I was too young to actually "get" Li'l Abner comics and didn't realize until much later that it was kind of for grownups. All I knew was that Abner was too dumb to "get" Daisy Mae.

I looked up Dogpatch on Wikipedia yesterday. Maybe we were a little too harsh on this place, calling it that! LOL! It was a dump, for sure. But it has an old soul, and I'm not the only person who ever walked onto the place for the first time and thought, gee, this feels like home. The name sticks as an amusing artifact of the early days of our 50 year marriage.
 

· Premium Member
Horse loving mama in Texas
Joined
·
1,981 Posts
LOL! I was too young to actually "get" Li'l Abner comics and didn't realize until much later that it was kind of for grownups. All I knew was that Abner was too dumb to "get" Daisy Mae.

I looked up Dogpatch on Wikipedia yesterday. Maybe we were a little too harsh on this place, calling it that! LOL! It was a dump, for sure. But it has an old soul, and I'm not the only person who ever walked onto the place for the first time and thought, gee, this feels like home. The name sticks as an amusing artifact of the early days of our 50 year marriage.
Ha ha ha, I never got to buy the Comic books, but when my Daddy got the Newspaper I got the comic's out before he did.
 

· Premium Member
Horse loving mama in Texas
Joined
·
1,981 Posts
In color in the Sunday paper. When you needed a back brace to lift it
Yes, all I remembered it was the Newspaper that I read the Comics in, but have forgotten that it was in the Sunday paper that did weight a ton, ha ha ha ha!!!! Man that was a long long time ago :cautious:
 
1 - 20 of 104 Posts
Top