Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Igor Growing Up

It has been almost eight months since Igor joined us as another WebbPet addition. He has come a long way from the scared, starved, abandoned kitten Jason and Carter found at a gas station right after Christmas. He is now nine or ten months old. He's definitely on the small side and I don't know if it is because of his severe starvation, if he was the runt of the litter, if he's going to have some late growth spurts, or if he is simply a small cat. He looks bigger in pictures than he does in person.

Igor has long ago moved on from hiding in the back corner of the feed room to interacting with the horses, chasing bugs, and generally keeping an eye on his kingdom. His kingdom thankfully remains rather small, and he considers the front barn and the pastures surrounding it to be his territory.

Igor can proudly make the claim that he has his very own air conditioning unit. A few weeks ago I insisted that Jason purchase an AC unit for the office of the front barn to make sure Igor was comfortable when he was shut in there at night. Between Oscar with his heated house and Igor with his AC unit, I would say our stray cats are prepared for all weather events. Being a WebbPet is really a great gig to have in life.

Igor surveying his kingdom

Igor and Jason

prowling around

Igor is not the best feeding supervisor

helping me soak feed

Igor in one of his favorite sunning spots

Igor on top of the world . . . or at least on top of a stall

Igor hanging out at the water trough with Duesy 

Igor and Havana

stalking through the grass


Igor covers a lot of ground

Igor says, "you can't see me . . . but I can see you"

cat rubs from Jason 

Igor and Bruno 


Norman and Dawn

Taylor tried to stay awake . . . 

. . . but he gave up

Moe and Homer

Lily and Maisie

Gibson

Hemi and Thomas

Mick and Paramount

Merlin and Remmy

Hesse and Baner

Havana and Fabrizzio (Alfie rolling behind them)

Gus, Wilson, Walon, Magic, Johnny, Ripley, Toledo and Rubrico

Digby and Blu

Silver

Alfie and Bruno grooming

 Mina having an extra lazy morning with Miss Lyle looking on

Sunday, August 6, 2017

Sunday Stills


Gus and Asterik grooming

Thomas enjoying a good roll and belly scratch; Cisco behind him


Sparky, Sabrina and Timbit

Homer and Trigger

King munching on leaves . . . 

. . . Apollo was also eating trees; when you are 18+ hands tall you get all the good stuff that no one else can reach

King and Trigger being silly after breakfast

Chance having a post-meal nap . . . 

. . .note the closed eyes and droopy lower lip

grazing under a pretty morning sky; L-R Silver, Faune, Donneur, Lofty

Cocomo and Flyer entertaining themselves while waiting to be fed


Gus and Roho

Gibson and Donneur

Cuffie and Traveller making typical pony faces at each other

Dolly and Dawn grooming

MyLight and Calimba grooming

Hemi, Levendi and Apollo

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

The Joys of Farm Equipment

(post by Jason) It's a good job that everybody around here has something that they're especially good at. Of course I think we're all especially good at caring for horses, that goes without saying. But successful full time farms require people with a lot more skills than being good at caring for horses if they are really going to go well. 

Melissa excels at communicating with our clients in various facets. She takes the photos and the videos, writes the blogs, she does all the invoicing and she handles nearly all of the day to day client/horse care issues that come up. In truth there is very little that Melissa isn't good at. Comparing myself to Melissa perhaps it's easiest to say that I don't think there's very much that I'm good at! Thankfully I do bring a couple of savant like skillsets to the table. 

One of these skillsets is that I very much have a green thumb. If I can't grow it successfully and, for lack of a better word.....well, then it probably can't be grown successfully or well in this part of the world. Green thumbs are very necessary on any horse farm because there is no animal group on the planet that I am aware of that's harder on pastures than continually grazing horses. 

If you don't manage a horse pasture rigorously even at low density, a group of horses will completely destroy a pasture over time. Horses are spot grazers. Because they have both top and bottom teeth they can, will and do graze certain areas of the pasture literally into the ground while leaving other areas, sometimes mere feet away, completely untouched. Nature abhors a vaccum; bare ground is not a natural condition so once the grass goes one will very quickly have an excellent stand of weeds. I spend hundreds of hours and many thousands of dollars repairing, maintaining and enhancing our pastures every year. While I would never claim our pastures are perfect they are a very long step better than the unmanaged and unmaintained horse pastures that are so typical.  I love to make green things grow and I think my efforts are apparent when comparing them to other local horse pastures. 

I mention my other savant like skillset reluctantly because it's NOT something I enjoy even though thanks to a lifetime of conditioning I am pretty good at it. I can keep old, wheezy, elderly farm equipment going for a very long time. Every farmer out there will nod his or her head when I say that even new farm equipment likes to find reasons to break down for seemingly no reason. 

Thanks to large levels of computerization which come with large levels of cost we don't currently own any brand new equipment. That's a good thing because it's well past my level of expertise to keep *new* equipment functioning. Our "new" tractor was manufactured in the late 1990's and is almost 20 years old. Most of our tractor attached equipment is this vintage or older with the exception of our larger bushhog. Some of it is much older. Our John Deere manure spreader was manufactured in 1949 ! Our older Kubota tractor was manufactured in the 1970's. Imagine the joys of keeping a vehicle that you used every day in running order when it was forty years old. That's about the level of fun that old farm equipment brings to the table. 

Thanks to a lifetime of keeping old equipment in running order I have a pretty fair skillset to call upon when things go awry, as they often seem to do. At this point I think an example is called for. The other day I decided to clean up, grease and service our 70 year old manure spreader in preparation for some hard use later this month. I was unsurprised to find that our older tractor....the one I wanted to hook to the spreader...... wouldn't start when I went to turn the key. I figured it was the battery which was well past it's replacement date so I thought I'd jump in the truck and head to town to get a new one. 

I had insult added to injury when I went to start our truck which is only two years old only to find that it too had a dead battery! Oh well, easily fixed. I took the car to town and got batteries for both truck and tractor. The truck battery must have been a dud because a new one fixed the problem immediately. Unfortunately a new battery did not fix the elderly tractor which still refused to start. That left wiring, solenoid and starter as possible problems. I've replaced all the wiring and I redid the starter a couple of years ago so the solenoid was my best guess. Another trip to the parts store and lots of fiddling with wires yielded..... finally.....a tractor that started. I let out a victory whoop that all our employees heard! But victory with any type of farm equipment is always fleeting, so wish me luck on the morrow when I try to make stuff work again! 

one dead solenoid


Trigger, Chance and Convey

Romeo and Asterik

MyLight and Calimba

Renatta

Lotus and Gus

Hesse, Baner, Taylor and Alfie

Cisco and Levendi

Wilson and Walon

Magic and Ripley

Johnny and Happy

Charlotte and Renatta

Sebastian

Toledo and Rubrico

Rocky and Johnny