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Get a Real Horse... Fruitbat Time....

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  • People at work are always coming over and commenting or asking horse questions.

    One of my favorites (though it's not really about horses, exactly) is: "wow, look at all those ribbons... did you win those?" (I have about a dozen in my cubicle for color).

    I always feel like saying, "No, actually I didn't, I just beat down a shortstirrup kid and stole them so I could pretend to be a talented rider."

    People also ask about my horse all the time, and ask if I compete or race him. Till recently I've been saying, "no, he's too young, I haven't really started training him."

    You'd be surprised how many people ask how old he is, and upon hearing "3" say something like, "Isn't that really old for a horse? Aren't they all retired when they're four?"

    And back to the ribbons for a second- I seem to have a lot of difficulty explaining to people that having a bunch of ribbons (from IHSA shows in the Alumni division) does not mean I am ready for the Olympics. "But you have ribbons- so you must be really good, right?"
    Last edited by caffeinated; Mar. 21, 2006, 02:28 PM.
    "smile a lot can let us ride happy,it is good thing"

    My CANTER blog.

    Comment


    • LOVE the blanket one, LOL!

      Jackie Blue mentioned not being snarky if someone asked you about your dog's breed, which reminded me of a horse show where I spotted a well-dressed middle-aged man playing with an adorable puppy. With a wondrous smile on my face I asked, "What is it?"

      He paused, and then in deliberately measured tones said, "It's a puppy."

      Comment


      • lots of idjits out there!

        My arab gelding used to love proving the 'cowboys' wrong by going out and promptly doing whatever it was they said they couldn't do at the time, with style and panache. After one day of a litany of sage advice about how No arab will go into water, likes water etc etc. I dropped the reins and my boy waltzed up to a running(!) sprinkler, puts his nose on the top and changes the spray pattern a few times, then walks over the thing and stops, so he can have his stomach washed!! LOL!!!
        I just looked at them and one guy blurts out--"Yeah-but-but a REAL horse won't do that!!" WTF?? All these years I've been riding a robotic animitron horse, and NO ONE TOLD ME!! Not even my friends--damn!

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        • I've been on this BB for years and I sti ll don't understand the whole fruitbat thing! someone explain, please!!

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          • PT winging your way!

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            • My Studly Gelding

              Well, I thought it was pretty funny at a dressage show, when one of the other exhibitors (presumeably someone who knows SOMETHING about horses), came up to me and asked how much it would cost to breed to my oh-so-well-mannered and beautiful stallion. Huh? Well, I will admit he has a very nicely developed neck, and he is 16.2 and a very nicely marked 2nd gen App/TB cross, but he was gelded at age 18 months and is one of the most un-stallionlike horses around. Obviously, they looked no further than his neck, because an examination ...uh....lower down would have made it clear that he was NOT a stallion. LOL Being a nice person, I laughed and told them that (a) if we could breed to him we'd both make a lot of money (pointing at lack of testicles) and (b) his sire was still alive and standing at stud in Southern California.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by SandyUHC
                LOVE the blanket one, LOL!

                Jackie Blue mentioned not being snarky if someone asked you about your dog's breed, which reminded me of a horse show where I spotted a well-dressed middle-aged man playing with an adorable puppy. With a wondrous smile on my face I asked, "What is it?"

                He paused, and then in deliberately measured tones said, "It's a puppy."
                that's fantastic
                Future Re-Rider
                "Take care of your memories, for you cannot relive them." [Bob Dylan]

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