Monday, March 30, 2009

Burning Pooo!

The weather was crappy all weekend which really blew since Steven and I really wanted to go fishing in the Smokies. Instead, we did some gardening (in pots) and some work at the barn. We have been filling the manure spreader when we pick stalls during the week. We haven't been able to spread it in a little while because of the weather so once it was full, I placed it in the shavings area and waited for a dry day. One day after we finished the evening feeding, I noticed some steam coming from the manure spreader. I thought to myself, "That's weird...but I'm sure it's just doing that because of the weather." Thankfully, I was curious enough to walk over and take a closer look. To my surprise, it wasn't steam at all but SMOKE! I placed my hand at the top of the pile and it felt very warm! I called Steven over and we began digging around a little only to discover that the manure in the spreader was smoldering! It was extremely warm and smelt AWFUL!! We quickly wheeled it out of the barn and pulled it around ourselves to empty it. (It was still very wet so the lawn tractor wasn't an option) Thank goodness those things were invented so we don't have to do that everyday! Man it was tough.....Once the manure was on the ground, it still smoked a little until the mist in the air drenched it putting it out. Wow, what if I haven't noticed it? Obviously, I don't know much about compost. We've always just dumped in a pile and that's it. I've never had to deal with composting. I just find it really weird!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

And just when I thought someone finally knocked some since into them....

We finally get another BEEEYooootaful Craigslist posting. Now, I can't see how anyone would want to buy a horse from this person.....unless you are a 12 yr old girl....(maybe that's what he's going for) But COME ON!!! Really? Maybe his daughter is the one who made these pics so "puuurty" but why would you actually post them?!?! People kill me.....That's all I have to say. Idiots.


dun quarter horse mare - $1200 (oliver springs)
Reply to:Date: 2009-03-25, 12:18PM EDT

8 yr old 15 hands shoes front back great trail horse anyone can ride built like a tank sweet as a puppy xxx-xxx-xxxx
Location: oliver springs
it's NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interestsPostingID: 1091370555






Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Where would we be without horses?

I usually read the NY Times online version everyday when I am at work. It's almost a routine. However, this morning I skipped over most of it....the AIG mess, Bail out this and that, Cocaine and Rebels in Peru....blah blah blah ....Horses....Horses in the NY TIMES? Yea!

This article raises a very interesting question. Where would we be today if we hadn't discovered this instinct or genetic bond between horse and human? Honestly, I can't think of any other domestic animal that has done so much for the human race. Sure, canines have helped man hunt for centuries and cattle as well as other livestock have provided milk and meat but no animal has served man quite like our equine friends. Take a look at this article and tell me what you think!

Editorial
NY Times

Equine Alternative

Published: March 17, 2009
Early this month, a team of archaeologists reported evidence that horses were domesticated perhaps a millennium earlier than had previously been thought. The site was where northern Kazakhstan is now, the culture was called Botai and the date was around 3500 B.C. The Botai did not just herd horses for meat. Scientists found bit-wear marks on Botai horses’ teeth — a clear sign the animals were being ridden. They also found evidence on pottery fragments that “very likely” came from mare’s milk fat — a sign that the horses were being milked.
Skip to next paragraph
Related
Earlier Date Suggested for Horse Domestication (March 6, 2009)
This discovery pushes back the date for a hugely important technological change in human existence. But it’s also a reminder that domestication isn’t just the conquering of one species by another. It’s the willing collaboration between two species, a sharing of benefits. There is something in the equine nature — genetic or social — that allowed it to partner with humans, just as there was in the character of dogs.
You might also say that there is something in human nature that allowed us to seek out this partnership. Among all the animal species on this planet, humans have domesticated only a handful. And that fact gives rise to a thought-experiment. What if that genetic or social something had been missing in horses? What if they had remained resolutely wild, refusing the domestic kinship humans tried to impose upon them?
It is not a far-fetched notion. But what it suggests is an alternative history of human development, one in which we could have moved no faster over land than our own foot-pace.
How that would have retarded the spread and integration of language, culture, civilization is hard to calculate. It is safe to say that without domesticated horses, we could not have begun to be who we are today.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Composting


We cleared out our manure pile last weekend. It had grown significantly over the winter months. It started in a corner on the back side of our barn and finally reached our back doorway. When the pile was rained on and snowed on and re-frozen and was rained on again for several weeks this winter, we were unable to manuover the wheelbarrow all the way to the back so we were forced to wheel out the back door and dump. Our landlord came out with his large tractor and scooped it away. We had the smaller tractor pulling the newer spreader around one pasture while he dumped piles in the larger pastures. We went back later and pulled the drag around to spread everything out. When we made it to the older compost at the back of the pile, the landlord took several scoops over to his garden. It was fine compost, manure and sawdust mix almost one year old. It was the GOOD stuff!!! We had one guy come out to get a load for his garden and Steven has promised some to a couple of his colleagues. Hopefully, everyone will see improvements in their gardens this spring and summer with our horse poop! Unfortunately, we are not putting in a garden this year because we are most likely moving again July 1st. But we have decided to plant some tomatoes and other veggies in planters so we can take them with us if we do move.


What do you guys do with your horse poop? Do you have a composting bin? Spread it all on your pastures? Give it away? Just pile it up? Tell me!