Gentleness with Sequoia

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Two years ago this week I had a lovely experience with our horse Sequoia and at the time I was watching some instructional videos from Paulette Evans of Ribbleton Horse Attunement in Australia. Today I came across a few photos that were taken on that day and was inspired to post here what I wrote to Paulette in February of 2015.

“Refining my senses of when to pull back and not ask for more than the horse is willing to offer”.

Dear Paulette,

This is Tamara in Los Angeles. I wanted to tell you that I absolutely LOVE watching the sessions on the Ribbleton Online Training each week! Having never had a foal, it is so great to see how they develop and how you approach and work with them. They are so honest with their responses and they give you such clear answers and communication every time. It is wonderful to watch how you listen and respond to each one as an individual. Truly anyone who values horsemanship and partnership at all would benefit greatly by watching and learning from your videos.

To give a bit more detail, we have three horses and two ponies with VERY different personalities. Previously we had learned and practiced the pressure and release techniques of traditional Natural Horsemanship with all of them. While this has helped with their overall groundwork and manners, our two introverts still learned rather reluctantly. They were able to understand what we were asking, but my husband and I re-watched some of our training sessions and noticed that months later, they just didn’t look filled with joy when we were working with them.

After beginning your online training series, I walked into our pasture one day to ask our most introverted horse to come and work and then stood still to try to listen a bit harder to what he was telling me. Instead of doing a gentle hind-quarter disengagement to ask him to bring his head around to put on the halter (which he was trained to do), I simply stood, scratched his withers and walked away. I repeated this process at least for ten minutes with the understanding, that if he didn’t end up completely wanting to be with me on his own, that would be our session for the day. After what seemed like an endless amount of time, however, he finally locked on to me so deeply that I opened the gate, he walked out calmly and stood in front of a pile of fresh hay without the slightest desire to go and take a nibble. He was calm and entirely focused on me above the call of food, which for him was astounding! 

I started to get the bridle and saddle out, but then noticed that he flicked his glance away from me ever so slightly when I went to put them on. This was a normal occurrence, but as I always try to be gentle and he doesn't usually give a glaring admission of rejecting the tack, I would normally tack him up anyway. Today, I decided to “Be like Paulette” and keep listening on a deeper level. I put the tack away, pulled out a neck rope and bareback pad, and then asked him if these items were ok. His response was so obvious! He said YES and then followed me down to the arena WITHOUT me even asking him to and stood quietly for me to mount. We proceeded to have one of the most connected rides we have ever had. And afterwards, when he rolled, we laid together in the sand for over 30 minutes, with me stroking him the entire time. At one point, he even fell asleep so deeply that he began to twitch and dream with me laying on top of him. Let me say that he has NEVER done this before.

It was absolutely magical!

I thought I had relatively decent listening skills before, but your course is bringing me up to a much higher level and really causing me to re-think some of my old patterns and habits of being around and working with horses, as well as refining my senses of when to pull back and not ask for more than the horse is willing to offer. 

So thank you!”

Sledding in Big Bear - Click to Watch Video

When I was a child, I only went to the snow in Big Bear twice in sixteen years. I understand now that my parents were not fond of the cold, nor winter sports. But as Big Bear is so close to LA, and such a magical world away from city life, it is one of my new goals to bring as many children up to see the snow as possible each season. Here is a video of the local snow after a big storm. And can we say.....thank heavens for the new trend of sledding with helmets!

Roxie Comes Home from the Vet! - Click to Watch Video

Hooray! Today is a happy day on our farm. Roxie is coming home from the vet. Soon after she arrived with Moxie and Soria she began eating less and less until one day she basically stopped altogether. Dr. Jana, our wonderful alpaca vet, came and gave her a vitamin-B shot, antibiotic, pain reliever and probiotics as well as force fed her through a tube, but she continued to decline in health. So we crossed our fingers and sent her to live with Dr. Jana at her home/hospital for three weeks in the hopes she could restore her back to health. And it worked! We think Roxie might have developed an ulcer from the anxiety of leaving her previous home, but whatever the true cause, Dr. Jana worked her alpaca magic and Roxie gained 19 lbs of weight in three weeks. Most importantly, she has her appetite back and is now happily chewing her cud again and digesting in all three of her stomachs as all healthy ruminants do! I also want to say how much I love my Land Rover, as it can hold four boys, four dogs and an alpaca very comfortably all at the same time. Great vehicle!

Rain in Southern California - Click to Watch Video

So it seems that we are finally being blessed with a wet winter. The Californian drought is officially over up north, but not yet down south. As the season is not yet half way over we suppose there is hope for that to occur down here too!

Simi Splashing in a Puddle - Click to Watch Video

Today is Christmas Day and our family traditionally takes a hike, bike or ride of some kind. This year it happened to rain enough in the days before that one of our favorite puddles was able to form in the local park. Simi, our 12 year old Thoroughbred/Trakehner gelding, loves water and was the happiest one of all of us about finding this little pond in the hills!

Moxie, Roxie & Soria

We are happy to say that the new alpaca enclosure is finished and we were fortunate enough to adopt three wonderful girls into our lives to inhabit the new space the same week. These female alpacas were their owners pride and joy and we had the privilege of seeing their breeding lines and prize winning history. Moxie's grandfather (the black alpaca) was a champion in the US, Soria (the buttery colored one) won 3rd place in the country for her beautiful coloring and soft fiber and Roxie is just plain adorable with her brown fleece and white face. We are now looking forward to learning how to spin the fiber ourselves so we can eventually knit many scarves and socks for Christmas for all of our friends and family. Fun!

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Young Fleur Piggy in the House - Click to Watch Video

Fleur came to us when she was quite young, small and cute. You could pick her up to move her without difficulty so she used to hang out for a few hours at a time in the house easily able to be returned to her pen in the evening. I googled the subject further and found out that pigs are smart, neat and can actually make decent house pets. I have since decided that whoever wrote those articles has never had a full grown adult pig! Fleur loves dirt and mud and rooting with her nose in the plants all day long. She eats anything and everything! The last thing that would make her (and us) happy would be to be stuck indoors all day on clean floors staring at the dusty, shrub filled yard outside. Here is an old video that makes me nostalgic for about one minute....and now just makes me happy that we have a solid pen where she can live permanently in the great outdoors.

Our Alpacas were Killed by a Local Mountain Lion

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P-45

Yesterday we lost our three alpacas at 4:30 am to a local mountain lion who was looking for breakfast. It was a sad day and we can only imagine how terrified they must have been when the lion came in their corral. The neighbor said all of the animals made such a commotion that the noise got them out of bed. They arrived on the scene just in time to see our black alpaca Max being dragged away down the canyon. The lion left the other two to come back and retrieve at another time. We learned that they eat the organs first, then return later to finish eating the carcass. In the wild a mountain lion would only manage to kill one animal as the rest of the herd would flee, but if the prey is in captivity, they will keep killing anything that moves due to instinct whether they can eat it in that moment or not. A breeder in the next town lost ten alpacas in one week. That being said, the silver lining is that the lovely woman who originally gave us our first alpacas, now is ready to find a home for three more. And they are females! This is great news as our original alpacas were males, and our intact male Max used to fight with the other two quite a bit. We recently had him castrated and it took his testosterone level down by about 50%, but he was a stud long enough to remember the desire be number one, so the squabbles still occurred, just on a lesser scale. Female alpacas don't have the need or desire to fight, so they will be much more peaceful together. Hooray! Now all we have to do is weld a steel hog wire gate on to the front of the barn where the girls can safely be enclosed at night. We thought maybe the horses would be enough of a deterrent for a lion, but apparently not. All of the other small animals have fully enclosed pens and the horses protect each other the best they can by sleeping in a herd. So onward and upward.......but not of course without saying many prayers for our beautiful boys whom we lost. They will be missed. (Note: photo is not of the actual lion responsible for the deaths, but one who lives nearby named P-45. Our kind neighbor who heard the attack and ran outside was too busy chasing him away and trying to save the alpacas to take a photo).

Wandering Piggy - Click to Watch Video

Once a month our pig Fleur wanders up the driveway looking for a beau. She often goes and sits on our neighbor's front porch. When we see these days coming, we need to keep her in her pen for 72 hours until the urge passes. However, sometimes we miss the date and she goes on a walkabout. This is what it looks like when our neighbor is kind enough to bring Fleur home.

It's not easy....but it is funny!

Diego giving the Bunny Kisses - Click to Watch Video

I never knew I would like rabbits so much! They are just so soft and snuggly (when they want to be held that is) and so much cleaner than guinea pigs. Besides having an insane ability to dig and chew, they are very easy keepers. We have had lots of fun acquiring different bunnies over the past year and the dogs actually enjoy them too. The guinea pigs are too tempting for the dogs not to nibble on, but the rabbits usually only endure tongue baths. Who knows.....maybe they like it?

Max and Firecracker Driving Home - Click to Watch Video

Most people trailer animals in a horse or stock trailer. We decided to see if our two new alpacas would fit in the back of my Land Rover. It was a bit tough getting them in, but once in the back they 'kushed' for the majority of the ride, which means they laid down like a camel with all four legs underneath them. Driving down the 101 freeway with alpacas in the car was definitely a new experience, and secretly I kind of wished we would get pulled over by a policeman for driving too slowly! But thankfully the journey was uneventful and they stayed still for most of the ride home. 

Vaulting on Cinnamon - Click to Watch Video

One famous horse trainer I read about said, "Don't be afraid to fall off a horse. The ground will always catch you!" But as clearly this is never anyone's goal, the best way to learn to ride is on the back of a small pony. It's just so much safer as the ground isn't nearly so far away! Here are our boys during their first week vaulting on Cinnamon. This has been a great new experience for all of us. Thank you Jana!