Nothings ever easy
Aug. 24th, 2004 09:29 amI just got a phone call from the barn .5 miles down the street, saying "we have an opening, you should tell that other barn to sod off and come here". Now I don't know what to do. I suck at decisions like this.
One side, I already told the one barn I was coming there. I have the contract but I haven't signed and delivered it yet. They are $225 dollars more than the close barn and 20 minutes away. They also have an indoor arena, the close place doesn't have even have a ring.
The far one has dirt paddocks, the close one lots of lovely pasture. The far one is full board, the close one they supply hay and grain, you have to supply shavings and clean your stalls. With the far one, I can ride all winter. Close one, I can see Tisa every day and just walk to the barn.
Dumb game. I'm sick of this.
Update on kitties - going well. Banichi hasn't made any more bathroom mistakes. He's tried twice and we caught him before anything happend. The last two days, he hasn't tried. I did get another big litter box but he seems happier throwing litter all over the place by using the ferrets' boxes. Either way, he's not peeing on the funiture, so I'm happy.
The ferrets have started trying to get the kittens to play with them. Tira has been pouncing the kittens toys while the kittens were playing with them. Midori went bouncing and chuckling after Banichi this morning on the bed. The kittens, however, don't seem to understand what's going on. When Tira grabs a toy from one of them, they flatten their ears and back off. Banichi looked horrified by Midori ... you could almost see him thinking "its making noises, they've never made noises before, SHIT ITS COMING AFTER ME!!!"
Still, things are going well on the monster front. We aren't quite trusting the kittens to be out unsupervised yet but we aren't following them around like hawks anymore either.
What a diabolical choice!
Date: 2004-08-24 08:16 am (UTC)Well, at least it ain't that bad.
But yeah. Ahh, tradeoffs. I think this is one choice you have to make for yourself. Nobody's advice is likely to be too helpful. I will only ask a few questions of curiosity and/or discovery:
1) $225 more for the far barn...is that monthly? Yearly? I don't grok these things.
2) Cleaning the stalls...you have to do this how often?
3) How easy is it in either case to go on vacation and leave Tisa in someone else's care?
4) With the close one, can you ride sometimes in the winter anyway, or is it really impossible or too unpleasant with cold weather and snow?
5) How much riding can you do in an indoor arena, or is it more for training purposes?
6) I can't remember...Are you into things like horse shows where a ring is particularly useful?
7) Can't you just drain your swamp and build your own barn? ;-)
That's all I can think of. Good luck.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-24 09:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-24 09:07 am (UTC)*Hugs* Let me know if there is anything I can do to help.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-24 09:18 am (UTC)I'm really just moaning here. I was all worked up about finding a new barn which included being pissy for not being able to find the close barn's owner, finally found one, made a decision, got the weight lifted off and then I get this call which sent me into a nice tizzing spiral again. You'd think I was looking for a reason to scatter or something.
While there are ups to the close place, the far place is probably better all around for the winter at least. If he'd called yesterday, I would have probably still made the same decision.
Re: What a diabolical choice!
Date: 2004-08-24 09:23 am (UTC)2) Its a lot like having a cat. You pick out the worst every day and do a good thourough cleaning once a week. Daily work is about 10 minutes. Big cleaning about 20.
3) That's one thing I don't know. If she's at the farther place, its not an issue.
4) You can ride as long as the weather permits. Last year, it iced up and stayed icey for about 2 months straight. Can't ride in that.
5) Basically everything you can do in a normal riding ring. This one is HUGE and is attached to the barn proper so it stays heated during the winter.
6) Yep. I really like trail riding but I also like teaching my horse new "stuff" like jumping and such and rings help.
7) Drain it, no. Fill it in, maybe. I don't want to though. For all this fuss, I'd still rather have Tisa at a nice barn with other horses (herd animals don't do well when alone) and my swamp just like it is ... only with less mosquitoes.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-24 03:07 pm (UTC)I've (finally!) had the leisure to watch the equestrian jumping in the Olympics. Yum. But I haven't had a chance to sit down and do so since '88, and I've noticed an odd change. In the '88 games, most of the horses were straight out-and-out thoroughbreds, (though didn't Big Ben have a drop of Belgian draft horse in him, magnificent boy he was!). This Games I have yet to see anyone described as simply thouroughbred- they're all "Belgian warmbloods", "sou-francais", or Holsteiners. I know that "warmblood designates some thoroughbred/Arabian ancestry, but when did all the mixed breeds take over the event? I've never even HEARD of a sou-francais before.
Re: What a diabolical choice!
Date: 2004-08-24 04:27 pm (UTC)(You may not see her every day, but she'll be better taken care of when you're not there, and that sounds better to me. That, and inertia.)
Re: What a diabolical choice!
Date: 2004-08-24 08:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-25 05:20 am (UTC)Right now, they are the big fad in the jumper and dressage world. You get a more even tempered horse that is as tall as all anything AND is light enough in the body to actually jump decently. In dressage, the big rage is the arab crossed warm bloods. Arabs give the high stepping, fancy action and refinement to the draft's big body and even temperment. Of course, sometimes you get the warmblood who got the worst of both worlds ... flighty as all hell with the draft's stubborness and a short, chunky body.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-25 05:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-25 10:26 am (UTC)