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All I Want For Christmas…

December 29, 2007 by Christine Meunier Leave a Comment

So now that it’s passed, go figure I find some really cool gifts! Am questioning whether this guy *was a farrier but got sick of things so decided to take it out on his tools/horse shoes? Love the site! Stumbled across the link from Pony Tail Club – a great blog by Madison.

Some of the products that really appealed to me:

Horse shoe bookends

Pretty cool lamp


Mug rack – Couldn’t you just picture all your horsey mugs on this?


Horse shoe rocking chair.

*I’ve since read About the Horseshoe Guy and found out otherwise… ie – the actual story. Quite an amusing read, actually.

“At least when my horse loses a shoe I don’t have to buy four new ones.”

tag: farriery, job

Filed Under: Career, Horse Related

Equine Law

December 29, 2007 by Christine Meunier 2 Comments

So hopefully you’re not out to find someone that can help you sue and things somehow relate to horses. However, there are many practices that provide law services and specialise in equine law. Services could be related to storm water compliance, manure management, hazardous waste contamination and land use permitting and entitlement issues.

Or perhaps advise on the purchase, sale or lease of horses and horse facilities, equine insurance, boarding disputes, breeding disputes, trainers, horse parks, horse associations, non-profit entities, tack and feed stores and other equestrian businesses, risk management, employment disputes, intellectual property protection, entity formation, and estate planning.

For someone with a law background, or who plans to go into this area or is currently studying and has a passion for horses, perhaps it would be worthwhile looking into a practice/s that already provide services in this area. It’s also not a bad idea to have a few contacts if you are setting up your own place or are leasing out/selling horses or providing another service relating to equines.

Some firms to look at:
Equine Law Firms – United States of America Equine Law.
BB&K – California Law Firm.
Gabriel Ruddy and Garret – Qld, Australia.
Equine Law – Legal News and Featured Articles.
Tilly Bailey Irvine – Equine Law.
Horse Force – standard legal contracts to the horse industry.

“They say he rides like part of the horse, but they don’t say which part” – Filmgoer’s Companion 1965

tag: equine insurance, equine law, leasing horses, agistment, australia

Filed Under: Career, Horse Related

The Neddy Wears Prada…

December 23, 2007 by Christine Meunier 1 Comment

I finished up at work this Friday just passed with the view to change directions in 2008 although still working with horses. The last few weeks at Larneuk have just proven how much I can still learn about horses and the care of.

We had a mare that this year aborted her foal sixty days before she was due. Consequently, once we’d gotten her back in foal, boss wanted to check on the pregnancy to ascertain things were going along normally. In the Thoroughbred industry, a mare is checked initially to see if she’s in foal fifteen days after she’s been bred to the stallion. If positive (in foal), this is followed up with a scan at 30 days and finally 45. This is generally the last check done in the Southern Hemisphere and at this stage, you’re due to pay whatever the stallion’s fee is.

I know that over in Ireland a 60 day scan is carried out also, or at least a vet was practicing this scan while I was over at the National Stud. However, I hadn’t really seen a lot of these scans on the vet’s scanner screen. Our vet confirmed that at sixty days this particular mare was still in foal and at this stage in her gestation, it is actually possible to sex the foetus. My boss can look forward to a colt being born next year, all things going well!

A week ago I was out feeding a paddock of mares and foals and noticed a young filly with a rather weepy eye that was half closed over. Conclusion? Grass seed. This time of year it’s so dry and the barley grass is rather prominent on the farm and the foals tend to frequently manage to get a seed in their eye. The vet had a look at it and managed to find and remove the seed. He pointed out that the blood vessels in the eye grow at a rate of 1mm/day when aggravated and due to the length of the vessels, he could deduct that the seed had been there four days – bad observation skills on my behalf, perhaps – but an interesting fact to know. Bub’s eye is fine now, by the way!

The most surprising thing that caught my interest was on my last day however, when the farrier came to visit. He showed us a shoe that he’d removed from a recently turned broodmare on a nearby farm.

Now that the mare is no longer in racing, the farrier is going to try leaving her barefoot and see how things go. This may be welcome news for the owners. The shoes she had on her feet, he informed me and another staff member are known as a ‘Sigafoo’. It looks like a general light racing plate with some type of glue/silicon around the perimeter of the shoe and attached to this is a hessian like material that reaches around the shoe and actually comes up over the wall of the hoof once the shoe is attached to the horse.

Apparently the hessian thickens the wall of the hoof, acting as another layer that the nails can be driven through. This is for horses with thin hoof walls. And the cost for a pair of Sigafoo’s? $660.00. Ouch! My lovely horseriding boots don’t cost anywhere near that!

“Horse People are Stable People.”

tag: ireland, australia, thoroughbred stud season, farriery, vet

Filed Under: Education, Horse Related

On The Road Again…

November 1, 2007 by Christine Meunier 1 Comment

Just loaded up a horse that is positive 45 days in foal today and therefore ready to leave the farm and head home and it hit me… transport! Don’t think I’ve got that listed as a possible job – terrible!

If you love travelling and handling horses and like the idea of getting about the country and viewing different places, then perhaps you should consider getting into horse transport.

Granted, you’re going to need truck/semi license but that may be your only prerequisite. Take a look at http://www.transportdrivertraining.com.au/.

The transport companies I’m familiar with in Australia include:
Livestock
Goldners
Carmody’s
Victorian Horse Transport

“A racehorse is the only animal that can take thousands of people for a ride at the same time.”

tag: driving license, transport, thoroughbred stud season

Filed Under: Career, Travel

Hot or cold?

October 31, 2007 by Christine Meunier Leave a Comment

Thoroughbreds and other breeds are often identified by brands, these days applied via freezebranding as opposed to previously branding with a hot iron.

Was having a think the other day while out on the feed run and came to the conclusion being a brander would be another job with horses that pays well for a small amount of work, far as I can see.

Once all the babies are weaned, it’s time to ID them so we get in a guy by the name of Carter-Smith to come out for an afternoon and brand all the young horses. Now on rough figures, a whole heap of horses may cost say $40 to brand. On a small farm, there may be about 40 weanlings to do.

$40 x 40 = $1600 – this can be achieved in a couple of hours work. Now is this can be made on a small breeding property, imagine a thoroughbred stud that’s practically a production line.

Downside? You’d need a lot of clients to keep yourself going as a brander as it’s a once in a lifetime thing. However, if you managed around 1500-2000 horses a year (perhaps your client base could be made up of Thoroughbred, Quarter Horse and Standardbred breeders to reach these numbers) you’d be bringing in $60,000 – $80,000.

Sure, there are costs – travel and therefore time and petrol, plus the dry ice/liquid nitrogen needed for branding; but they seem to be minimal.

Check out:
http://www.freeze-branding.com.au/

“Unless you are the lead horse the view is always the same.”

tag: australia, job, horse stud, horse breeds, branding

Filed Under: Career, Horse Related

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