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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Is there a second thread for the horse/obsessive ex owner?

278 replies

ExtraordinaryQuince · 24/03/2021 13:51

Just that really.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
9
CaveMum · 30/03/2021 15:52

I'm wondering what DH will say to this one, it's within 10 miles of where we currently live and WAY over our budget.

www.rightmove.co.uk/properties/87066874#/media?id=media3

SchadenfreudePersonified · 30/03/2021 16:38

IT'S GOTTA STAINED-GLASS WINDOW!!!!!

I'd get rid of all the weightlifting equipment and keep my mammy wolfie and all her little wolflets in there until the babies were big enough to wreak havoc run about outside.

CaveMum · 30/03/2021 16:46

@SchadenfreudePersonified

IT'S GOTTA STAINED-GLASS WINDOW!!!!!

I'd get rid of all the weightlifting equipment and keep my mammy wolfie and all her little wolflets in there until the babies were big enough to wreak havoc run about outside.

I can picture them now terrorising, er I mean, bringing joy to the parishioners of a Sunday morning Wink
ExtraordinaryQuince · 30/03/2021 16:48

@BlueEyesWhiteDragon

I keep eyeing up Saarloos wolfdogs which is the closest I reckon I could get without actual wolves.

There is a breeder who I follow and every time they have pups I have to battle with myself not to get one. We already have 7 dogs so really another is madness especially one which I understand to be relatively high in time demands but once these GSDs have aged and the DSs are a bit less time demanding (not because they young but because we rural and I spend all my time driving them places!) I'm having one of these ..

Seven dogs! ShockEnvy

Even more envious of you maybe getting a baby woluf!

OP posts:
sueelleker · 30/03/2021 17:03

I can picture them now terrorising, er I mean, bringing joy to the parishioners of a Sunday morning Perhaps they could sit outside the church and join in with the singing?

eeek88 · 30/03/2021 17:22

The original thread inspired me to send a text to the person I sold a horse to 6 months ago. I haven’t heard anything since she picked him up and often wonder how he’s doing but have held off contacting her until now, to give them time to bond etc.

Only 103 more messages to go... sigh...

MyOtherProfile · 30/03/2021 17:53

Can I just check have there been any more messages from the previous owner to BlueEyes? I've lost track a bit now we have a different OP and I can't just scroll through the green posts Grin

SchadenfreudePersonified · 30/03/2021 18:50

@sueelleker

I can picture them now terrorising, er I mean, bringing joy to the parishioners of a Sunday morning Perhaps they could sit outside the church and join in with the singing?
If my theory about all the water getting stuck at the top of the earth because of the Big Boat In The Canal, the world might get top-heavy, and tip up, and the sudden abrupt force pull the earth away from the moon (which will then wander the universe and probably end up with Jupiter which seems to hoard moons) - now, where was I?

Oh, yes - I remember. if we lose the moon, what are the wolflets going to sing to? It's traditional. It's instinctive. It could scar them for life!

Also - while I'm on about it - what about werewolves? Will they become extinct if there isn't a moon to swap them back and forth? We need to know these things!

I know the boat has been moved (or so they tell us - the waves were still very shallow at Beadnell today so I have my doubts), but what about the next time?

SchadenfreudePersonified · 30/03/2021 18:51

@eeek88

The original thread inspired me to send a text to the person I sold a horse to 6 months ago. I haven’t heard anything since she picked him up and often wonder how he’s doing but have held off contacting her until now, to give them time to bond etc.

Only 103 more messages to go... sigh...

Do you know roughly where she lives? We could all get in our cars and drive around until we spotted him.

Can I just check have there been any more messages from the previous owner to BlueEyes? I've lost track a bit now we have a different OP and I can't just scroll through the green posts

No news yet, as far as I am aware Profile

ApplesPearsAndCrumble · 30/03/2021 19:17

REA e-mailed back [happy face]

I am viewing the 5 acres with stables Friday. :)

No matter what happens I have decided that my horsy days are not over and I am about to rediscover the very happy years of my childhood.

In relation to my wolflets eating the neighbours lambs (from my Outer Hebrides crofts). No of course they will not. They will be hearthside wolfies waiting for their lamby stew that is cooked in the inglenook out of le cresuet dishes.

[I might have a bucolic vision of my farming future....... ] Grin

ExtraordinaryQuince · 30/03/2021 20:16

@SchadenfreudePersonified We need to get Brian Cox onto this- it could be a catastrophe!

OP posts:
SchadenfreudePersonified · 30/03/2021 22:21

Perhaps between them Brian Cox and David Attenborough could sort out the physics and the ecological implications of the sea getting stuck at the top and the effects on werewolves.

MyOtherProfile · 30/03/2021 23:16

Thanks @SchadenfreudePersonified. I don't want to miss anything!

steppemum · 31/03/2021 09:30

We used to have th eperfect set up. ( for someone like me who loves horses but doesn't actually want to own one)

parents bought run down farmnhouse and did it up.

It had beautiful stables. Garage sized but proper old stables, 2 loose boxes and hay loft.

My parents had no need of stables, but one of our neighbours had a teenage daughter, and the field over th eroad was up for rent.

So she rented our stables, horses mostly out during day and just in at night in winter. But she woudl bring them over to the stables to wash them, groom them, feed them and tack up to ride them.

I was allowed to (with permission) help.

bliss.

tiredvommachine · 03/04/2021 09:27

This thread can't die!

Sarahlou63 · 03/04/2021 10:14

A few years ago I was given a horse as the owner couldn't keep him (relationship failed/lack of funds) - I think she was the third owner. The people who bred him got in touch and I was happy to send a few photos. A couple of years later I sold him to a woman who adored him in a way that I didn't (he was very much a one person horse).

Some months later the original owners messaged me again and when I told them he'd been sold on they went mental! Apparently they should have been given first refusal and he should have only ever been gifted - never sold Confused

They found my FB business page and started leaving terrible fake reviews - nutters!

SchadenfreudePersonified · 03/04/2021 18:04

TBH Sarahlou - I don't blame them for being annoyed. If they'd wanted the horse to go to some random, they could have sold him themselves.

It would have been courteous to contact them and let them know that you could no longer keep him and at least give them the opportunity to say "Oh - don't let him go, we'll have him back!"

I would have been royally p*ssed if you had done this to me - but having said that, they gave him to you with apparently no strings attached so . . .

And leaving cr*ppy FB reviews isn't on.

@iredvommachine - thank you for stamping your foot really hard and loudly and waking us up again.

Sarahlou63 · 03/04/2021 18:17

They didn't give him to me - they gave him away as a 3 yr old to person A. Person A gave him to Person B (as original owners couldn't/didn't want him back). Person B gave him to me - he was 6 by then.

SchadenfreudePersonified · 03/04/2021 19:30

Ah - that changes things SarahLou - I misunderstood your post. When you said third owner, I thought the people who gave him to you was the third owner, not that he's been given away and then ended up with you as the third owner (is that right?). This puts a different complexion on it.

I do think that most times an animal should be sold rather than given because there are too many people will take an animal on a whim when they haven't really thought about what is involved - time and money - in it's care.

Sarahlou63 · 03/04/2021 21:26

Yup, I absolutely agree. Buying a horse is the easy part - no-one tells you about picking ticks off their anus or sheath cleaning Wink

WithLoveFromMyselfToYourself · 04/04/2021 01:23

I really don’t like the sound of sheath cleaning. I won’t be googling it 🤢

SchadenfreudePersonified · 04/04/2021 07:46

@WithLoveFromMyselfToYourself

I really don’t like the sound of sheath cleaning. I won’t be googling it 🤢
Nor will I, Myself.

Anus tick mental images are bad enough . . .

WellThisIsShit · 11/04/2021 01:31

Well now I’ve learnt all about tracks, which sound a good way for horses to live. Isn’t Mumsnet informative?!

VeryLittleOwl · 12/04/2021 20:12

@WithLoveFromMyselfToYourself

I really don’t like the sound of sheath cleaning. I won’t be googling it 🤢
Then whatever you do, don't Google 'sheath cleaning bean'!!

This has been doing the rounds of the horsey bits of the internet for years and is a pretty accurate description - and I've had to do the 'squeeze firmly' bit in Step 7, the pony went boggle-eyed for a second and then looked greatly relieved!

Step 1:

Check to make sure there are no prospective boyfriends, elderly neighbours, or Brownie troops with a line of sight to the proceedings. Though of course they're probably going to show up unexpectedly ANYWAY once you're in the middle of things. Prepare a good explanation.
Step 2:

Trim your fingernails short. Assemble horse, hose, and your sense of humour (plus, ideally, Excalibur cleanser and perhaps thin rubber gloves).

Step 3:

Use hose (or damp sponge) to get the sheath and its inhabitant wet. Uh, that is, do this in a civilized fashion with due warning to the horse; he is apt to take offense if an icy-cold hose blasts unexpectedly into his personal regions.

Step 4:

Now introduce your horse to Mr Hand. What I find safest is to stand facing the horse's head, with my shoulder and hip snugly against the horse's thigh and hip so that if he makes any suspicious move such as raising his leg, I can feel it right away and am in any case pressed so close that all he can do is shove, not really kick. The horse should be held by an assistant or by your free hand, NOT tied fast to a post or to crossties. He may shift around a good bit if he's not happy with Mr Hand's antics, but don't be put off by that; as long as you are patient and gradual, and stick close to his side, he'll get over it.

Remember that it would be most unladylike of you to simply make a direct grab for your horse's Part. Give the horse a clue about what's on the program. Rest your hand against his belly, and then slide it back til you are entering The Home of the Actual Private Part. When you reach this first region of your destination, lube him up good with Excalibur or whatever you're using.

If the outer part of his sheath is really grungy you will feel little clods and nubblies of smegma peeling off as you grope around in there. Patiently and gently expedite their removal.

Step 5:

Thus far, you have probably only been in the outer part of the sheath. The Part Itself, you'll have noticed, is strangely absent. That's because it has retired shyly to its inner chambers. Roll up them thar sleeves and follow in after it.

Step 6:

As you and Mr Hand wend your way deeper into the sheath, you will encounter what feels like a small portal that opens up into a chamber beyond. Being attentive to your horse's reaction, invite yourself in . You are now in the inner sanctum of The Actual Private Part. It's hiding in there towards the back, trying to pretend it isn't there. Say hi and wave to it.. No, really, work your finger back and forth around the sides of it. If the horse won't drop, this is your only shot at removing whatever dried smegma is clinging to the surface of the Part itself. So, gently explore around it, pulling out whatever crusty topsoil you find there. Use more water and more Excalibur if necessary to loosen attached gunk.

Step 7:

When Mr. Hand and the Actual Private Part have gotten to know each other pretty well, and the Part feels squeaky clean all around, there remains only one task: checking for, and removing, the bean. The bean is a pale, kidney-shaped accumulation of smegma in a small pouch just inside the urethra. Not all horses accumulate a bean, but IME the majority do, even if they have no visible external smegma. So: the equine urethra is fairly large diameter, and indeed will permit you to very gently insinuate one of your slimmer fingers inside the urethral opening. Do so, and explore upwards for what will feel like a lump or "pea" buried no more than, I dunno, perhaps 3/4" in from the opening. If you do encounter a bean, gently and sympathetically persuade it out with your finger.

This may require a little patience from BOTH Mr Hand AND the horse, but the horse will be happier and healthier once it's accomplished. In the rare event that the bean is too enormous for your finger to coax out, you might try what I did (in desperation) last month on the orange horse: Wrap thumb and index finger around the end of the Part and squeeze firmly to extrude the bean. Much to my surprise it worked an orange horse did NOT kill me for doing it and he does not seem to have suffered any permanant damage as a result ;-> I have never in my life seen another bean that enormous, though.
Step 8:

Now all that's left to do is make a graceful exit and rinse the area very thoroughly in apology for the liberties you've taken. A hose will be MUCH easier to use here than just a sponge and bucket, IME. Make sure to direct the water into the Part's inner retreat too, not merely the outer part of the sheath. This may require you to enfold the end of the hose in your hand and guide it up there personally.

Step 9:

Ta-da, you are done! Say, "Good horsie" and feed him lots of carrots. Watch him make funny faces at the way your hands smell. Hmm. Well, perhaps there is ONE more step...

Step 10:

The only thing I know of that is at all effective in removing the lovely fragrance of smegma from your hands (fingernails arms elbows and wherever else it's gotten) is Excalibur. Even then, if you didn't use gloves you may find you've got an unusual personal perfume for a while. So, word to the wise, do NOT clean your horse's sheath just before an important job interview or first date....

and of course, there is that one FINAL step...

Step 11:

Figure out how to explain all this to your mother (or the kid from next door, or the meter reader, or whoever else you've just realized has been standing in the barn doorway speechlessly watching the entire process).

Now, go thou forth and clean that Part

Aprilshowersandhail · 12/04/2021 20:18

Who does this to wild horses?
Specially assigned After Dark Horse Tamperers?