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The Colt from Snowy River

July 21, 2013 by Christine Meunier 1 Comment

The Colt from Snowy River by Elyne Mitchell

Another brumby story by Elyne Mitchell, this novel is a little dissimilar to the others. The Colt from Snowy River tells the tale of a well bred thoroughbred colt, Buzz who is stolen away by a brumby filly in the wild of the Snowy River area.

Mitchell doesn’t disappoint in her description and depictions of the area, the flora and fauna and the unforgiving changes in weather. Buzz’s owners undertake many hunts to find the pedigreed colt that was bred for racing, finding themselves exploring unfamiliar and untouched territory across the Snowy Mountains.

Buzz soon learns that his shod hooves and his speed are his greatest protection against other stallions that would like to steal his filly Yarrawa for their own herd. The joy of having a filly as a young stallion causes him to revel in being wild and free; helps him to ignore the fact that he misses being groomed, having shelter and hard feed at night.

It’s the harsh and unforgiving winter that reminds Buzz of all that he’s left at the Snowy River homestead. Yarrawa now heavy with foal is still apprehensive about being anywhere near the humans that she stole this young stallion from.

A hoped for meeting between Buzz and his owners leaves the young stallion having to make a choice between the comfort and love of his owners, or the wild and joyous freedom of having a mare of his own, but a young foal that he is now responsible for. The Colt from Snowy River proved that Mitchell could write from a domestic horse’s point of view, whilst still enlightening readers to the mysterious land where brumbies roam, that is the Snowy Mountains.

Author: Elyne Mitchell
http://www.elynemitchell.com/
Fiction
In my library? It is indeed!  I love this series.
Want it? Get it now on Amazon.

“A well trained horse isn’t less exciting than a wild one.” – Author unknown

Tags: horse story, equine book review, equine author, horse library, horse writing, Elyne Mitchell

Filed Under: Horse Books

Reflecting Your Riding

July 19, 2013 by Christine Meunier Leave a Comment

I can get annoyed with advertising, but I like that the adverts on Facebook tend to reflect that you’ve said about yourself in your profile. I saw an ad that a horsey friend had liked the other day and decided to check out ‘Arena Reflections’.

Their catchcry is “Bespoke, Eye-catching Elegance for Performance and Quality”.  When I was studying my certificate II in Horse Studies as a part of high school, I got to attend a gorgeous warmblood stud each week to do my practical and theory. Perhaps the highlight of this was that I got to ride for an hour every Wednesday on a well schooled horse.

This was perhaps the place where my horse riding skill was most assessed and given correction. I could see what my instructor’s were referring to with regards to my incorrect position because of a long mirror that flanked one side of their 70 x 30 metre arena. It was a great tool to be able to see what I looked like, as well as see how my corrections adjusted my position – or made little affect at all!

I hadn’t considered the idea of a business making mirrors specifically for riding arenas, but I guess why not? Arena Reflections do just this.

“When to see a horse you think low intelligence, to see a man high intelligence, but to mix to make a friendship you seem to get greater intelligence” – author unknown

—

I’m having a little play with the categories on this site and have added in horse property as I feel a lot of my ‘product’ posts such as fencing and arena mirrors fit into this category. Recently the reviews section has been renamed horse books as it fits all manner of equine book related topics, not just reviews.

Filed Under: Horse Property

Free Horse eBook

July 18, 2013 by Christine Meunier Leave a Comment

Born that Way by Susan Ketchen
Born that Way by Susan Ketchen

So I’m rapt to have been accepted into an equine authors group on Facebook and one of the authors currently has the first book in her series available for free in iBooks, Kobo and on Kindle!

I’ve already downloaded myself a copy and you should too!  Head along to:

  • Born that Way by Susan Ketchen at Amazon

As an added bonus, the next two books in the series are greatly discounted – why not get all three!

I love this digital age in which you can try out an author’s works for free – a great thing in my books! 😉

 

“No hour of life is lost that is spent in the saddle.” – from a pony book written by Anne Bullen (1960’s)

Filed Under: Horse Books

Equine Office Solutions

July 14, 2013 by Christine Meunier Leave a Comment

Got administration experience?  Love horses?  Perhaps you’d like to combine the two as Equine Office Solutions do.  They address ‘the unique administrative needs of the busy equine professional.’

Let’s face it – not all horse people are business people – but they are often running a business.  Someone who is familiar with the equine industry and it’s nuances and likely clients, but also has administrative and business skills could be of great benefit to the equine business owner.

Perhaps this is an area where you have many strengths?  It could be worth gathering any person who is in need of an administrative assistant, but promoting yourself as someone who can cater to the equine industry.

Who knows, perhaps you’ll develop a niche in this area?  Food for thought.

“He who said he made a small fortune in the horse business probably started out with a large fortune!” – Author unknown

Filed Under: Career

Then Press On

July 11, 2013 by Christine Meunier Leave a Comment

When choosing to set out on your own and start up a business, it can be an exciting time, but also a very humbling experience. It is important for you to determine how much income you need to bring in to make your adventure a viable ongoing one.

A sprung shoe.

Let’s consider a farrier as an example. You’ve enrolled yourself into an apprenticeship and dream of 5 – 10 years down the track when you can be earning a couple of thousand a week, whilst only working 4 days each week.

Let’s say that you’re shoeing horses and for a full set (all four feet) you can charge $100 per horse. Now if we divide $2,000 by $100, this means that you need to shoe 20 horses. Now 20 horses seems small, it should be easy – right?

Perhaps that is the case and you feel it’d be easy for you to do five sets of shoes over 4 consecutive days (yes, I know, it may be dreaming). Let’s consider one other factor: horses don’t need to be reshod daily (thank God!).

So, if we consider that a horse needs doing every 6 – 8 weeks (let’s say every 2 calendar months to make this example easier), then if we look back at the example of 20 horses to achieve in a week an income of $2,000, then we consider that they won’t next need to be seen until 7 weeks time, this means you need to find another 20 horses for each of the other 7 weeks to keep yourself consistently in work.

Now 20 horses x 8 weeks equals 160 horses that need shoeing. Now of course, we need to consider that the horse you did last month will be brought back to you when it’s next due because you work well with the horse, do a good job and you’re cost effective for the owner.

The reality is that if you plan on going out in your own business, you need to work the figures. As a farrier, you most probably will need in excess of 200 (horse) clients to keep yourself consistently busy. Even if this is the case, there will be dry periods – just because you’ve done the figures doesn’t mean that they’ll add up to what you picture every time – other people may have different ideas when it comes to how often they’ll get their horses feet seen to, and whether they’ll utilise your services again.

However, it’s important that you dream big, do the figures and in spite of setbacks, reassess and then… press on.

“A Dog looks up to a man,
A cat looks down on a man,
But a patient horse looks a man in the eye and sees him as an equal.” – Author unknown

Filed Under: Career

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