Trail Dogs

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Every rider needs a good trail dog, especially if you ride alone.

Some dogs don’t enjoy the outdoors—they’re couch puppies and would rather stay indoors.  My dogs—nearly all of them rescues from the county animal shelter—all love being outdoors.  When I ride, my dog usually puts in twice the mileage my horse does.  I live in the foothills—below us is the high desert—and while the horse and I usually stay on the trail (even if we go off-roading, I follow game trails or water courses because otherwise I get lost), the dog explores smells.  The horse and I travel in the bottomland, you might say, while the dog goes up the hill on one side, comes back down, and goes up the hill on the other side.  By the time we get home, the dog is one tired, happy girl.

Chance

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His and Hers

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If you have two horses, especially if you acquire one after having your horse living with you for several years, you’ll be tempted to move the second one in with the first one, and feed them together.  But first, take pictures of each horse, and date them.  Take more photos the next month, and the month after that.  If neither one has gotten fat, congratulations.  That’s one less problem to worry about.  But if one gets fat and one day you notice you can see the other’s ribs, you’ll have to separate them because the fat one is hogging all the food.

21a

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The Horses I Live With

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173cPlease don’t get the wrong idea when I say “live with.”  I don’t live in a tent with flaps in the doors (so the sandstorms don’t blow in) and oriental carpets on the sand, sharing my fire with my husband and two horses, all of us within kicking range—although I’ve read about desert nomads who do something similar.  Is the world still empty enough that nomads live in it who have no true home, just the horses they ride and the folded tents those horses (or maybe they have camels, too) carry? Continue reading