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Can't believe what I have just witnessed

212 replies

Patriciathestripper1 · 11/01/2017 17:25

Ok I'm not going mad but this did happen:
Went over to my stables to show Dh where I wanted my outdoor security light putting.
Whilst he was up the ladder securing it to the side of the stables I started tying up hay nets and doing waters (we have two horses and my DD pony)
When I went into DD's pony's stable and whilst doing his net I heard something 'plop' into his water bucket (large builders rubble type bucket)
I went to look and it was a mouse that must have just fallen in (we find them sometimes in the horses buckets dead in the mornings but not very often)
I shouted for Dh to come quick. I'm not a wimpy sort but I didn't want to touch it but also didn't want it to drown.
My daughters pony went over to the bucket whilst I was standing in the stable door and looked down at the mouse and then to my utter amazement he pushed some of the straw up the side of his water bucket asthough he did it all the time so some of the straw went into the water and the mouse climbed out!
I have had horses all my life (parents had them so brought up with them) and I have never seen anything like that. One animal helping another from a different species?
My Dh thinks iabu and the pony didn't 'help' the mouse out of the bucket but I saw it with my own eyesAngry so I know it happened.
After a lot of 'yes it did'. 'No it didn't' I tried to recreate it with my DD wind up fish which her pony promptly picked up out of the water bucket (I think he thought it was a treat I'd dropped in as she sometimes puts an apple in there for him to 'bob' to occupy him) and he bit and broke it Hmm but I know he did it.

OP posts:
StepAwayFromTheEcclesCakes · 16/01/2017 13:56

She looks for white feathers as messages too. not long after my mum died I was in Brighton visiting my son at Uni there, DH and I took him out for dinner and when I opened my glasses case there was a small white feather nestling in there, I cried as it felt like mum was around somehow even though I know that there is no logic to it, but I couldn't fathom how it had got in.

HappyFlappy · 16/01/2017 20:44

Eccles

Flowers
Patriciathestripper1 · 17/01/2017 10:27

Well I've 'mouse checked ' all week and no more so far! Have had to fish straw out of his bucket a couple of times though.

I'm going to save for cameras to see if I can get him doing it on video (and to spy on my horses to see what they do when no one aroundSmile)

OP posts:
Patriciathestripper1 · 17/01/2017 10:28

I think all your animal tales are fantastic MNtrs x x

OP posts:
JoffreyBaratheon · 17/01/2017 10:43

OP I can totally believe it. Horses seem to me to be incredibly intelligent and yet thick at the same time... (Eg: irrational fear of leaves, etc).

When my older kids were little, we had two dogs - the dogs were the same age as eachother, but bought two years apart. Son 2 has autism and always longed for a dog. We got him a staffy puppy who became the centre of his world and, two years later, a 2 year old bull terrier which became, somehow, son 3's dog.

Every night the staffy would sit on the knee of Son 2 and little bull terrier on the knee of Son 3. But one night, the mini bull decided she was sitting on Son 2, as if she was comforting him and stayed with him all evening, not Son 3 as usual.

A day or two later, staffy, who had been apparently extremely healthy right up to that day, was rushed to the vet and diagnosed with a brain tumour. He had to be PTS a couple of days later. We all looked back on it and thought that the little mini bull knew there was something wrong with staffy, even before we did, and was comforting Son 2 who was about to lose his beloved dog.

She was a nervous wreck when staffy died and long after, refused to go to the part of the garden where he was buried. In fact she lived another 8 years, and never went there again now I think of it. She also shook uncontrollably for weeks. She took over son 2 as well as 3, after staffy went and on an evening would divide cuddles between them.

I used to walk my dogs separately every day as the bull terrier was blind and she couldn't risk being knocked into by the boisterous staffy trying to play with her, on walks. Staffy had a horse friend. We'd walk a circuit every day at the same time a woman rode her horse in the same circuit, opposite direction. She told me, when horse saw my dog on the horizon, he'd start cantering to try and get to him. This horse was utterly fixated by our dog. She lerved him. (Not mutual - the dog found her scary). And every day she'd have to be greeted by the dog, for her morning to be complete. Animals do seem to form attachments across species, and mae 'friends' with other animals. Same staffy had the cat absolutely devoted to him, like his mother. And that cat took no prisoners and liked nobody and nothing - apart from the staffy.

LTBforGin · 17/01/2017 10:46

We had kittens and one don't ask fell out of an upstairs window. I didn't know as I was in the kitchen.

Dog was whimpering at the back door (unusual for her) so let her out - thought she needed a wee.

Dog carried on whimpering outside near the kitten which alerted me and kitten was saved!!

Clever these animals you know

WonderMike · 17/01/2017 11:05

the farmer knew the difference so all would have been ok anyway Apparently sheep can remember faces of other sheep for years: news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/11/1107_TVsheep.html

tiredvommachine · 17/01/2017 11:19

Nominated for classics, lovely thread.

Patriciathestripper1 · 17/01/2017 19:04

MN just contacted me today to say this thread will be now in classics so thank you to all who have nominated it and all your fantastic animal antics Smile

OP posts:
Barbie222 · 17/01/2017 21:29

Awwwww! More threads like this please. And more and more.

HappyFlappy · 18/01/2017 17:00

Agree with Barbie - Lovely, lovely thread.

AliceMumsnet · 20/01/2017 11:40

We have a serious case of the warm and fuzzies with this thread - we're popping it over to Classics now Smile

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