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Re: [RC] [RC] travelling wide - Suzi Maiorisi

Oh, I so needed some humor today...Thanks!!  Twisting feet...sorta like the passenger tires that were on my 'new' (used) truck that twist and sway when towing my trailer...
Suzi and Swaying Holly who will be swaying no longer :)
 
----- Original Message -----
From: rides2far@xxxxxxxx
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 1:52 PM
To: ladurgin@xxxxxxx
Cc: rides2far@xxxxxxxx; heidi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; kclanin@xxxxxxx; katswig@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [RC] [RC] travelling wide
 

>>>So what was Isaiah anyway, and don't say a prophet,I know that part
:0).Sounds like he was gaited or part saddlebred. . . Laurie

He was 7/8 Arab, 1/8 Walking Horse. His registered name was Count Moonjur (sp?) My farrier guessed the Walking Horse part because when he walked he looked like he was trying to unscrew his hind shoes. Each step there was a little twist.

I named him Isaiah 40:31 for the verse "They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength. They shall mount up with wings as eagles. They shall run and not be weary and walk and not faint" (I think that's right, going from memory) The lady had called to tell me she'd make the trade to buy him just before the church service where our pastor preached on that verse. I sat there trying to figure out how to get that message into a name and finally gave up and thought, "Let'em look it up theirself". Isaiah didn't turn out to be the most coordinated horse. Vets said he was amazed he could trot out without tripping over those ropewalking front feet.

Then, when he did his 100 with a junior rider the SERA newsletter listed him as Isaiah 40:30 which reads "even the youth grows tired and weary and the young men stumble and fall." Considering the rider was young and the male horse was clumsy I thought that was pretty amusing.

Angie once more replacing a one word answer with a novel. >g<

>O.K. Now everybody's got me wondering if they'd think he was on the
>forehand if they saw him move. I know he's pulling downhill when he's
>doing his runaways, and feels like a racehorse who's thrown his center of
>gravity out about 5' in front of his nose when he gets it in his mind
>to...but he can also go down the trail really feeling like he's got it
>together and is up under himself. I'd say he covers the majority of the
>distance after the first loop without pulling that often. If he ever
>starts flopping a long I can give a squeeze and the rear end comes back
>up under me...as opposed to my old horse Isaiah who I will now mention to
>intrigue those of you talking dog gait.
>
>Isaiah had a huge belly, and a narrow rear end that never learned to go
>wide. He trotted along like a coondog with his rump to one side...maybe
>hunting a way to get those legs past that belly without spreading. His
>rear end trailed along behind, his front feet flipped up as he flopped
>them out there. His nose was in the air, and he went downhill fast but
>reminded me of someone running downhill totally out of control
>windmilling their arms. He rope walked in front and flipped one foot out
>to the side. His best speed was 7mph... heart rate was very low but
>anything over that and all those weird legs just went everywhere like a
>car wobbling when out of balance and he'd get a worried look in his eyes.
>All that said...he did 1000 miles including one 100 miler with only one
>pull and no lost time lamenesses or vet bills. He retired sound only
>because we couldn't stand to ride him long enough to wear him out. >g<
>
>While we're at it...how come the best long distance
>dogs...coondogs...travel at an angle?
>
>I'm sending Heidi a bunch of Kaboot photos in various gaits. We'll let
>her explain what she sees to you. :-)
>
>Angie
>
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Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER!
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