“Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of solitaire. It is a grand passion. It seizes a person whole and once it has done so, he/she will have to accept that his life will be radically changed.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Introducing Sam!



Well, I guess the best way to start this blog is to start by introducing our subject! Sam is the focus of this blog, his training, care, well being, anything Sam related...


Sam:
Height - 16h
Weight - 1600lb (yes, we're on a diet!)
Age - 2 years old
D.O.B. - July 26, 2010



My grandparents owned Sam's sire and dam, and so bred the pair. When I visited them and saw a cute 2 week old Sam sitting laying in the field, I knew he had to be mine. It didn't take too much convincing and he was mine. That first day, it was love at first sight. I was wearing flip flops and shorts and walked into the pasture, sat down next to him, kissed his nose, and he layed his head in my lap and took a nap... That's when I knew he was my heart horse, my equine soulmate.


To this day I can walk up to him when he's laying down and take a nap with him. We have a trust that not many people can achieve with their horses.

Now that Sam is 2, we're starting to do some training. We've been doing ground work from day one, now it's time to get semi serious. I don't want to push him or stress him, so we're taking things slow. We've done a few rides with his bareback pad and a rope halter, he did well, accepting me on his back, going forward, and learning to turn. While I like the rope halter and the idea of riding bitless, I think we're going to use it for fun, maybe trail rides later on, but not for serious riding or driving.
 


 
I keep Sam barefoot. At 2 years old he's too young for shoes anyways, but I don't want to nail metal onto his hooves just because the general population says it's better. He has strong hooves and no matter what terrain we're walking on, he doesn't put a lame step. Our Trimmer is very patient with him too, thank goodness! What would we do without Angela and Gabe Gore, our husband/wife trimmer team!?

Draft horses are very prone to EPSM, which is the muscles inability to utilize carbs and sugars for energy. While Sam doesn't have EPSM, prevention is the best cure! With the EPSM diet, carbs and sugars are replaced by fats in the form of oils or ricebran. I chose to go with ground flaxseed, rather than oil, when soaked it creates an oil-y result anyway, and it's cheaper!
AM & PM:
1 cup flaxseed
1lb Purina Strategy, Healthy Edge

During the day, after his breakfast he is turned out on pasture, so he doesn't get hay in the AM. At night he gets more feed because he's in a small paddack or his stall with hay, usually a few sprigs of grass, but nothing to sustain him, and about 3-4 flakes of grass/meadow hay. It works for us!