Can you answer the question in the title?
Some fashion magazines, writers and movies will tell you that
diamonds are a girl’s best friend – but not
in my case and here is why…
Hi, my name is Linda Shute from New
Jersey, and here is why riding horses is one
of my greatest passions in life…
As a child I think I was born with horses on my brain, they’ve
always been in my life and very close to me in many ways.
Before I was old enough to drive I was very mobile because of
my horses.
My uncle gave me my first pony Trotter, his color was
chocolate palomino, he had no pedigree to speak of just your
above average pony.
Trotter was very dear to me until I out grew him. He would
perform under saddle or in harness. I started out riding
western because it was the most popular where I live.
Sometimes I would ride bareback and jump over small obstacles
in the yard.
Self made fences like two columns of a few
baskets or boxes piled up with a broom
across the top. Not much to look at, but creative enough for
an eight year old kid and it served my purpose besides Trotter
didn’t care what it looked like.
Mom wasn’t to happy a few times when we miscalculated and
broke the broom handle then she had to go buy new broom to
sweep the floor.
Trotter took me all over, sometimes I would ride him and we
would go out roaming around for four or five hours we would
travel ten or fifteen miles from home.
I would cut through farmers’ fields always careful to stay on
the edge as not to harm their crops that were growing. My
favorite ride in the summer was towards the small town of
Swedesboro through the peach and apple orchards.
A diamond can’t take me to the orchards or share a piece of
fruit with me.
As a small girl of eight or ten nothing was sweeter than a
fresh apple or peach eaten on top of my pony. I would take a
bite and give the rest to him, then pick another. I felt like
the world was at my finger tips.
Trotter gave me freedom to explore the world he fed my sense
of adventure.
Sometimes I didn’t feel like riding or a friend would go with
me, since I didn’t want him carrying two us for that long I
would hook him up to the cart and harness and drive him.
The only way a diamond can provide freedom is if you sell it
for a high price and use the money to escape from something.
How can a diamond feed your sense of adventure? Now don’t get
me wrong, I’m not saying I don’t like diamonds. They do have a
big sparkle and look nice. They can also be very expensive
As I got older I out grew Trotter and sadly had to sell him
for a bigger horse.
I still remember the person that bought Trotter coming to the
house to pick him up. We loaded him into the back of his
pick-up truck and Trotter was screaming (whinnying) and
kicking he didn’t want to leave, my heart was being ripped
out, yet I couldn’t keep two animals and I needed a bigger
mount.
It was a hard lesson learned.
Horses also taught me responsibility because they needed to be
fed and cared for everyday morning and night. Equipment and
stables had to be taken care of and cleaned daily. Horses eat
hay and we had farm land to raise hay. This meant harvesting.
When I was in my teens sometimes I could be found driving the
tractor raking the hay fields or using the baler, other times
I may be on the wagon behind the baler stacking the hay for my
horses. Then it would have to be transferred from the hay
wagon into the barn.
Since then I have bought, sold and raised about fifteen
horses. One of my favorites was Friday’s Anthem. As a girl of
sixteen I won the “Rookie of the Year” award for the “Girls
Rodeo Association” Eastern Chapter. One of my prizes was a
free stud fee to a quarter horse stallion. I bred my mare and
the colt was born on Good Friday. I named him Fridays’ Anthem.
I trained him for English and Western riding and showed him at
local quarter horse shows I eventually sold him for $2500.
The horse shows taught me to strive to achieve more. Observe
the competition and see what they are doing, what does the
judge like, who is being pinned higher than we are. Train your
horse different get him to perform different or better.
A diamond can’t teach you that.
I lived in the country and our nearest neighbor was about 3/4
of a mile away.
My relationship to my Horses was the same like that of a close
friend.
They each have their own personalities and temperaments just
like people.
They show their feelings in their eyes and ears. If they’re
having a bad day when you go to the stable you may find a tail
in the doorway instead of a face. When you enter the stall you
may find ears laid back on the neck instead of pricked forward
you learn to read their body language.
They have dreams just like we do. I remember this Standard
bred race horse I was taking care of, a trotter named Noble
Tryst. He was good enough to race in The Hamiltonian. He would
take a nap every afternoon he would stretch out in his stall
and sometimes have dreams. He looked like a big dog he would
kick his feet and make noises. You don’t see this very often
in horses. I never saw a diamond with a personality.
One day when I was working on the race track I was standing in
front of this filly and yawned. Then the filly yawned, the one
in the next stall yawned, and so it went down the length of
the barn – just like people do.
When you’re riding or working a horse and ask for more they
will give you their best and then some. How do you ask a
diamond for more and receive it?
If you're having a bad day you can wrap your arms around your
horse's neck and hang on to something and they can turn their
head toward you and wrap you into their neck like a hug. I'd
like to see a diamond do that!
They’ll listen until you’re tired of talking or crying which
ever the case may be.
Horses can be expensive, the initial cash outlay for the
purchase and the ongoing upkeep. Now you can go out and buy a
grade horse, buy that I mean your average run of the mill
un-registered horse for around $500- $1000. But, if you want
high quality pure bred stock with a pedigree you can be
talking big bucks just like in diamonds.
Warmly with a big smile,
Linda Shute
Reprented with
permission of articlesbase.com