Friday, February 27, 2015

February - Got Snow?

First week
2nd week

Just filling a bird feeder can be a challenge with so much snow.  The bird bath can still be seen week one.  The top of it is visible in week 2 and it's totally buried after that.  I have to dig down to the can we keep the feed in.  It's sort of fun walking through our snow blowed aisle ways that we have to get to places such as the wood pile or bird feeders.  
3rd week



First week
We thought we were pushing the snowbanks back far enough to start but we didn't.  Now the banks are well into the area of gravel so John has been parking where we normally have lawn.  What a mess this will be come spring.  That bank is solid and 20 feet thick now.  We've done our best to keep things cleaned up and spent a LOT of time plowing this winter.  But it is quite a snow load we'll be working with for some time to come.
2nd week
today
Beautiful snow
Who needs a fence?
King has never had it so good though.  His pasture is no good to him with all the snow.  About 3 feet, give or take with the drifting snow...so he's been spending time in the area we snowplow to get out to the shed.  This has given him quite a lot of room to move around compared to other snowy winters we've had.  Still.  He'd be happier if we could find a way to go riding.  We'll have to wait a little longer.  We did do some "driveway dressage" recently but it was more of "driveway rodeo" on a horse who wanted to GO.  So waiting is what it will be for now.
When will it be spring?






Thursday, February 19, 2015

January

C-c-cold
January went by in a hurry.  The first weeks we were 5 of us living here.  By the end of the month just 3.  The oldest is in his new apartment now and the middle boy is back in his dorm at college.

We moved furniture out and then around which brings great joy to the cats.  We move many a bookshelf before deciding where they all go (for now) and this cat thought each bookshelf should really be a cat toy.  
Bookshelf fun

Knitted fingerless gloves
I did enjoy knitting up 4 or 5 pair of these "treads" fingerless gloves this season.  The boys seem to like wearing them.  Even when playing rock, paper, scissors.  The cold outside saw us spending a lot of time inside.  So many games to play!  Hearts is a favorite still but Spades has been a new favorite of the crew.

Turkeys
The turkeys were hoping to find birdseed spilled on the ground for them.  We have had large flocks visit the yard a lot this winter.
Cat TV
When it's too cold to hunt outside the cats enjoy the window bird feeder.  They spend a lot of time just staring at that feeder.

Favorite ice breaking activity
The Miller Brook is mostly frozen again which means it's time to break the ice.  I'm not sure why this is the most fun thing ever but all of the boys have enjoyed this activity over the years.

Beach Ride
January 25th found us going to the ocean for the "last hurrah" before real snow arrived.  It was a very windy day but with the help of crew we were able to get this last ride in.  I don't expect to get back to the ocean again to ride for a very long time now.  It was a day to bottle and remember.
Crew!!

Post "blizzard"
First big snow came on the 26th.  It's hasn't slowed down since then.

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Christmas

So many fun ways to enjoy Christmas!  We went to Strawberry Banke this year for their Candle Light Stroll and enjoyed remembering years past when we went with the little boys.  They loved it again.  I think the oldest enjoyed the tinsmith the most as we saw presents given from him that he bought with that man.  I enjoyed the magic show we attended especially.
Our little boys posing with Father Christmas at Strawberry Banke's Candlelight Stroll
Our middle son worked at the Farm Museum's Christmas on the Farm event the day or so after he arrived home from college.  It was a banner year with the highest attendance yet.  He was very busy and happy after working that day.

 Mouse the present
Back at home we've enjoyed our old cat deciding to be our present this year.  She has spent many an hour sleeping under the tree, all nestled in around the presents.  Our Christmas Cactus needed no help this year in being moved or anything.  It's blooming on schdule and beautifying our dining room.

Christmas Cactus in bloom on time

Christmas Day at Laurie & Rob's house
On Christmas Eve we visited neighbor and friend Amy, then off to church for the candlelight service with Louise playing organ, then off to Ken & Louise's house for what she called "pickies".  Finger foods and harp music playing.  We visited and ate and played Sequence and enjoyed the evening together.  Then Christmas day found us visiting again only this time at Laurie & Rob's house with kids playing and present exchanging.  My favorite Christmas memory is of all the "little feet noises" in our house.  It reminded me of the early years with the boys.  I'd wake up to the sound of little feet running down the stairs to see what Santa brought.  This time the little feet were from our 22 year old.  He works the night shift now.  7pm to 7am so he was kind enough to let us all sleep in until nearly 6am.  He'd been awake all night of course.  So I woke up to excited running through the house of this "boy" waking his brothers and us.  By the time we arrived home from visiting around 4 in the afternoon...John and I both collapsed for a nap.  We're feeling a little older lately maybe.  :)
Warm Christmas weekend ride
The weekend after the holiday was sunny and warm so I took advantage and went for a trail ride up in Effingham with friends.  That skyline was just beautiful.  More beautiful than the photos could show really.  What a great time.
Christmas visit with Cory & Justin
And on Sunday we visited with Cory & Justin at their place to with them a Merry Christmas too.  This adorable little one entertained us the whole time.  Never a tear or a whine.  What a sweet little boy.
Uncles make the best toys

Opening presents like a pro

Monday, December 22, 2014

Solstice

Solstice Party Bonfire
What a fun time we had at our Solstice Party.  Today is longer than yesterday and that is something to celebrate!!  We invited a few of our friends and 45 of them showed up bearing food and drinks and joy.  The weather totally cooperated with a crisp, still night.  Just what we wanted.
John preparing the LED balloons
We constructed a short walk around the property and marked it with light up balloons.  I think these things are pretty cool.  As I was collecting them this morning they are still lit and on our test one it stayed lit for over 24 hours.  The packaging promises 15 hours.  I'll get more of these in the future for sure!
Two helpers?
These two helpers did a lot of the preparations with collecting limbs and moving wood from our backyard burn pile out to the bonfire spot in the front yard.  We cleaned and transformed John's workshop into a buffet and warmup area.  Part way into the evening a good crowd of folks showed up in there to warm up and with a quick turn on of the bullet heater, the space was toasty enough in no time.  We enjoyed the food and were surprised that with little to no planning, the guests seemed to bring just the right combinations of desserts and appetizers and hearty items like soup and meats, warm drinks of cider and wassail and cold drinks of hard cider and more.  "Mitten food" I'd said when asked and that is how it went.  So much fun.

Wish Balloon
We set off a bunch of wish balloons.  We provided paper and encouraged people to toss their written regrets into the fire.  We also had fire colorants to add to written wishes and encouraged people to toss those in as well and watch the colors as they did so.
Away it goes

Good Time with good friends
I think this guy had a lot of fun in the setup and in the party itself.  We may need to repeat this event in the future.
One happy hubby

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Beach Day

Kent, Nancy & I at Well Beach
November 25th I had a lovely ride.  Then the storm started on the 26th and we got over 10 inches of heavy, wet snow.  Since then the ground has been covered in a mixture of snow, ice and crusty snow and more ice from rain storms.  We haven't been able to walk around the property without ice cleats on our boots....nevermind riding.  So my dear friends stopped by with their sander and sanded the luge run I call a driveway, my dear groom dug out the horse trailer and removed the ice sheets from the roof of it for me...all so we could enjoy a beach day together on December 14th!

They're getting away!

I'll pass you yet...

All is right with the world-I'm in front!

I love the shadow and reflection in this photo.
Let's go round again.  And again.  And again.


Do you see what I see?  More horses arriving on the beach!
Do you see the horses over there?  

We could go again!

I just love the beach

Monday, December 15, 2014

My favorite maple tree in it's colors
Here is a fall scrapbook of sorts.  Fall was so busy this year.  We should have been taking more photos.  One boy away at Plymouth State University and another boy on night shift has had quite an effect on our lives--I don't take nearly as many photos as I used to.
So many red berries on this bush near the beaver pond
Behive near the high bush blueberries
our boys being gatherers of teaberries



Teaberries aka wintergreen aka checkerberries

Someone is very pleased with his new sword

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Horse Health and Homeopathy

Photo by Dusty Perin 
Last winter I went on a new quest to help out the chronic uveitis of my horse.  He had a "corneal ulcer" in 2010 I think it was.  The vet came out and checked the eye, stained it to see what was going on and left me with antibiotic cream to apply to the eye for some time while it healed.  He told me that while it was healing I'd maybe see veins form and then it would heal the rest of the way.  It looked like a white spot on the surface of his eye.  This happened in the fall that year.  Then he got another one in the summer.  I can't recall just now if it was 2011 or not.  Anyhow, after that 2nd one and just applying the ointment again I wondered a little more about it.  
The next year or so I know there were more.  I do recall at one point reading up on it when one happened in the summer...perhaps 2013 and I read about neck threadworm being a possible cause.  My vet was away at a conference so I just wormed with ivermecterin in case.  Worming is a whole different discussion.  I'd been going forward with only worming to the fecal tests which I can say now...isn't the right plan for my horse.  I still get a fecal test done once a year but he stays on a worming schedule throughout the year now.  That ivermecterin dose he reacted to in a big way.  Lumps all down his neck and chest and on the back of his hind legs.  He was actually loaded with little neck threadworms.  We live right next to a beaver pond and this horse is totally eaten alive by mosquitos in the summer.  I guess some had those little threadworms in them.  
Still it was not really the key to his eye troubles.  
One white spot would barely heal before another would pop up.  Always the left eye and always with those incredible veins showing up to heal the white area.  
I did a competitive trail ride in the fall of 2013 where the vet there talked about a new "plasma" treatment for the eye.  It involved drawing the horse's blood and spinning it to separate the plasma and then applying that to the eye 4 times a day for expedited healing of the ulcer.  Hmmm.  My current vet would not have been a good match for that treatment as he traveled a long way to get here.  The farm call alone would be quite expensive.  But we have a new vet who lives about a mile away from me...  Maybe I should see if she'd be game.  She came out and we did the plasma treatment on a healing white spot just to see if he would tolerate the process.  He did.  It was too late in that episode to really know if it would be a good match for him.  The next event was to have the same vet come by to meet and greet my equine dentist the day he came to do work.  While the 3 of us were chatting about horse things in general something was talked about which sparked some thoughts in this young vet.  Turns out she studied in Scotland.  She grew up here and did her undergraduate at UNH but then did her Veterinary Surgeon training in Scotland.  She literally took a step back and started ticking off the health issues with my horse.  Skin issues, uveitis, large intestine ulcers, hoof cracks...
She asked if I had ever though of homeopathy for this horse.
HUH?
More research and finally a call to Joyce Harman to consult.  Her answers were a lot to take in.  It's been nearly a full year now so I think it's worth reporting.  She's been right on with healing his eye.  
King's eye 2 weeks after first homeopathic treatment
He responded beautifully to the treatment.  She was able to suggest changes to his feed and to his lifestyle which have made HUGE differences in his eye.  For 2013 he went through more of the year with white spots than without.  For 2014 he healed that spot in January and each time an episode started at all I'd treat him and he'd never get the white spot.  Never had the veins...it would just heal.  The only time it didn't work was when I was out of the remedy and had to special order it in at our natural food store.  It took 3 weeks to arrive.  He developed a white spot during that time and it took several weeks to heal but it was never as bad as any of the ones he experienced prior to homeopathy.  

Side benefits...
Dew poisoning in 2008
King has suffered with dew poisoning the whole time I've owned him.  It's photo sensitivity and "scratches" that happens to his face when he eats wet grass.  So once we figured out the cause the first year he was kept off pasture during the time that the morning dew was on the grass.  I'd bring him up to the little barn on his small paddock each night and keep him there until the grass dried the next day when he could go and eat grass.  I'd put zinc oxide (diaper creme) on his nose to further protect it from the sun and wetness to keep the fungus off.  It's very painful for him.  It's why I ride him with no cavesson (noseband) and why I can't use hackamores on him.  The skin would be so raw.  I'd put a long face mask on him as well to further prevent sun from burning it.  This was an annual problem that I just had to keep tabs on daily as it can get ahead of us so fast.  I've never had him go into a winter with actual hair on his nose either so I'd worry about the cold burning that skin too.  

Joyce said to put him out on pasture and leave him there.  I told her about the dew poisoning.  She said it would be fine.  I didn't understand.  I did as she said.  The same remedy that we're using for his eye...it works for his skin as well.  
I had one tiny bought of dew poisoning this summer.  Not much.  Then nothing for a long time.  24/7 on pasture and no nose issues.  This was strange.  Then he had this tiny 2nd round.  

Dew poisoning 2014
Well.  The second round happened after I'd brought him up to the little pasture due to the bugs that were eating him alive out back.  He came to his old barn and started eating the grasses and clovers that grow there with gusto.  I'd never noticed what grew in there before as he always had it grazed to nubs.  I noticed a LOT of clover.  I know that alsike clover is a problem but I'd never really seen any on our property.  Until now.  
Red Clover in King's paddock
Alsike Clover in King's Paddock


Alsike Clover causes the issues he had on his nose but that's only a part of the poisoning it can cause.  The remedy has kept his nose intact this year but our change in horsekeeping has also helped us to discover this clover and now I can do something about it.  This is the first winter he has had hair on his nose.  I'm so glad for that.
First attempt at a "selfie" on trail ride Nov. 25
I know this photo doesn't show it well...but that is one fine looking nose on King.  He does still have that nose "bump" from old injury which I still have to be careful with nosebands about...but maybe a hackamore is in his future someday.  I think he'd like that.  :)