• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Horsetales Nevada

SALES - HORSE PROPERTY - TACK EQUIPMENT - HORSE HEALTH & RESEARCH & TRAIINING ARTIICLES COVERING EVERY EQUIINE BREED & EVENT

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Horse Tales Publication
  • Advertisers
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Uncategorized

Chilly Pepper Update

March 15, 2022 by Horse Tales Nevada Leave a Comment

cilly-pepperUPDATE – Kimmy has a new sister. Ms. Kisses was found injured on the range. She had been attacked by a predator (as best we can tell). So the 1st TWO orphans of the season are here. Both needed vet care and are eating and drinking well.

KIMMY is Here. She is an abandoned, orphan foal. She was found scared, alone, hungry and cold in the mountains. We are heading to Doc right now, but are going to need your help now.
She has lots of ticks and is pretty shaky. No idea how long she has survived alone.

Any time they are abandoned, you have to worry about why!!

She needs your help, most likely will need Plasma and we could easily be looking at $700 or more?

PLEASE HELP KIMMY now.

Goldendale Vet – 509- 773-0369 if you want to donate directly to the vet. Heading there now. Feels like I have ticks crawling all over me. Ughh

THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO HAS BEEN HELPING SAVE THESE PRECIOUS LIVES!

Please check out our Adoption page!
https://www.facebook.com/groups/543121366934903

If anyone wants to help, Supplies can be sent to Palomino Chilly Pepper
12965 Green Saddle Drive, #233
Golconda, NV 89414

or

Palomino,
C/O Mama Mel
1630 Pumphouse Rd.
Toppenish, WA 98948
checks to PO Box 233,
Golconda NV 89414

or Donations can be made at:

CashAp-$LauriArmstrong
Venmo – @Lauri-Armstrong-2
THANK YOU for everything we have received. **

https://smile.amazon.com/ch/55-0882407 

If you shop at Amazon, please go to this link.

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO KEEP HELPING US SAVE MORE LIVES, YOU CAN GO TO:

– You can go to Paypal<- PLEASE NOTE – Paypal shows Wild Horses in Need, as we are dba- Chilly Pepper if you would like to help these horses. ->
You can donate via check at: (PLEASE NOTE NEW PO BOX #)

Chilly Pepper – Miracle Mustang,PO Box # 233, Golconda, NV 89414

You can also donate via credit card by calling Palomino at 530-339-1458.

NO MATTER HOW BIG OR HOW SMALL – WE SAVE THEM ALL!

SAVING GOD’S CRITTERS – FOUR FEET AT A TIME

Chilly Pepper – Miracle Mustang, WIN Project – Rescue & Rehab

We are now part of the WIN Organization

WIN (WILD HORSES IN NEED) is a 501c3 IRS EIN 55-0882407_

If there are ever funds left over from the cost of the rescue itself, the monies are used to feed, vet, care for and provide shelter and proper fencing for the animals once they are saved.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Remembering Chuck Corley

September 22, 2021 by Horse Tales Nevada Leave a Comment

January 25, 1935 – May 8th 2021

Remembering-Chuck-CorleyThe Corley family lost one of its own, Chuck Corley 89, beloved brother of Jon Corley. As most of us know, the Corley family is a well-known Carson Valley Ranch Family. Jon and Paula are known for their charitable activities in our communiy. They are also the founders of the great Harvest Festival Pumpkin Patch held every October here in Gardnerville. The Corley Ranch is now operated by family members Johnny Raper and Jonie Corley Raper.

Chuck was the older brother of the family and a real cowboy from Laramie, Wyoming, but every year he would travel to the Corley Ranch and put on his scary Wolfman costume and delight all the children with his wonderful antics. He loved children and they loved him. He helped with most of the festival activities and made the visit to the ranch a memorable one for each and every youngster.

The 2021 festival will be wonerful again this year like it is every year but Chuck’s family and all of those little children he entertained will miss this great mascot Wolfman, his smiles and his joyful attitude cannot be replaced but his memory will linger there with all of those who come to enjoy the Harvest Festival. As was noted, Chuck Corley loved young people and was a real working cowboy. He loved sharing his knowledge with young people interested in all things rodeo and cowboy. He would spend hours giving roping lessons to any youngster trying to perfect their roping skills.

Chuck was generous with his time, and it brought him great joy when he could help young people, especially those pursuing rodeo sports. Chuck passed away after a day of roping and branding at the Ranch he resided at in  Laramie. He is survived by his grandchildren, Tatem (John), Stephanie, Joe, Suzie and Kate; and his brother Jon Corley (Paula) and all the extended Corley family members.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Listening to Horses

November 15, 2020 by Horse Tales Nevada Leave a Comment

By Cindy Hartzell
Edited By Bruce Hartzell

Listening to horses is a skill that involves more than just using one’s ears. It involves a willingness to explore and master four other senses: Sight, Smell, Touch, and Extrasensory Perception. The latter is defined as; the faculty of perceiving things by means other than the known senses, such as: by telepathy or clairvoyance. I realize others may find themselves uncomfortable with the idea of telepathy or clairvoyance, yet, consider the following; have you ever found yourself thinking about someone out of the blue and you can’t seem to be able to get them off your mind? Then they  call, or you run into them somewhere. Perhaps you call them and discover they are struggling with life’s challenges. This is telepathy. It is a natural gift all of us possess. Animals, especially horses, are sentient beings. They have the ability to feel and to experience emotions, such as: joy, pleasure, pain and fear. This intuitive ability helps them know what humans are feeling.

A horse’s capacity to feel positive or negative states makes them powerful facilitators, especially in the fields of assisted learning and therapy. They feel what we feel. They mirror back to us in ways that helps us  take shifts and changes in our own personal behavioral patterns. Those of us who have horses in our lives can also experience and benefit from our horse’s abilities and gifts. In my opinion, it is our responsibility as horse people to learn to think like a horse, this includes learning to master our senses. When we do so, we are listening to our horses in ways that empowers us to be the best we can be for them. Mastering the art of horsemanship is a lifelong journey and requires dedication, determination and discipline. It also requires we think out of the box, a box labeled by our limited beliefs. This includes a misunderstanding of how horses learn, and how they live, and interact with each other. A willingness to be open to changing one’s views on how horses interact with humans is essential in achieving horsemanship expertise. Often horses are labeled as bad because they demonstrate undesirable and dangerous traits.

Many horses find themselves being sold repeatedly. Others end up on a truck with a oneway ticket to slaughter. As my understanding of horses has grown, and the more horses I have encountered on my horsemanship journey, I have come to the following conclusion. A horse who behaves “badly”, or “dangerously” is not doing so because this is who they are, rather their behavior is a symptom or result of something much deeper. Sometimes it can be because the horse has not been given the Listening to Horses continued opportunity to learn things in such a way that promotes their understanding what is being asked of them, or how they will benefit. Instead, through fear, or the risk of pain, they are forced to perform. Over time, the results is a spooky horse, a horse lacking confidence, a horse that is completely shut down or an angry aggressive one. Often this is because the humans who are engaging with the horse lack the understanding of horse psychology, horse behavior and herd dynamics. What results is a horse that learns undesirable behaviors simply due to a lack of the proper guidance from their leader. The consequence is the horse’s owner will have a horse who does not respect their owner’s space, or takes off, or won’t stand still to be saddled or mounted. I even see horses that are completely unresponsive to their rider on the trail.

Another reason a horse demonstrates a change in their behavior is due to their underlying physical issues. These can often be medical problems. There are times, such as now, that I am willing to be uncomfortable and vulnerable and share my own personal experiencesand lessons so others may benefit in living with their horses. As many of you know, my main partner is RC, a beautiful 12-year-old palomino paint horse, whom I have had since he was 11 months old. He has been, and continues to be, one of my greatest teachers. In 2016, while we were in an intensive training program, he began kicking up at his cinch during our sessions. This seemed to come out of the blue, and it wasn’t consistent. My instructor urged me to push him through it because he was just being bad. Yet his behavior persisted.

I decided to change his cinch to one that was new and made of a different material. It seemed to make him more comfortable and his cinch kicking subsided for several months. In the spring of 2017, his behavior returned intermittently, and when it was windy, he would do an odd behavior, as if a bug had flown up his nose and he was trying to blow it out. Oddly, I would only see this behavior when it was windy. Later that spring, after a great riding session, while turning him out to pasture, he spooked and hit my head with his. He knocked me unconscious for fifteen minutes and I ended up in the hospital with a triple-brainbleed. I figured this was simply my being in the wrong place, as I removed his halter something must have spooked him. Later, I noticed other new behaviors. He had begun to lower his head and jet his lower jaw out to one side, then the other, while grinding his teeth. This would happen at feeding time or after a riding session in the arena. Meanwhile, he still intermittently kicked at his girth. In fall of 2018, we noticed he was favoring his front right leg and I began seeing muscle atrophy over the same shoulder. I called the chiropractor, and he came out and adjusted RC’s neck and a few other areas. Yet, he continued to favor his shoulder.

Next, we visited his veterinarian. They performed X-rays that revealed arthritis in his C5-C6 spinal vertebrae. His diagnosis was that his arthritis was creating a peripheral neuropathy that manifested as pain in his pectoral muscle where the cinch sat. Knowing this, I called in a saddle fitter, who also does sound wave healing, which made him feel much better. With regular healing treatments I could still ride him without his peripheral neuropathy acting up. As time moved on, I noticed RC began to “act up” while on the trail. He wouldn’t stay on the single-track trail. Instead, he would veer off to the left or the right, and he seemed as though he was becoming  spookier than usual. Initially, I thought this was him just being naughty, and I just needed to be a better leader for him. I also observed there were times when I took off his halter to turn him out in his pasture, he would jerk his head back as if I had shocked him. While this certainly can happen when haltering horses and it will startle them, I knew that a lot of the times with RC, I had not shocked him. Why was he jerking back?

On May 30, 2019, I was preparing to take RC and a young colt to a friend’s ranch to work them. I was planning to pony the colt around the property behind RC, while the colt would carry a saddle. I walked RC up to the trailer. He was fine, although he did perk up upon hearing our young mustangs whinnying from the training area. As I went to tie him up to the trailer he spooked and pulled back. The rope sucked my hand into the metal cleat attached to the trailer. The result was I lost half a finger and the tip of another one. Again, I justified this as one of those unfortunate accidents that happen with horses and decided to use it as a way to help others learn about the dangers of tying and how to help reduce that risk by using blocker ties. Fast forward to the summer of 2020, RC still displayed all the previous mentioned behaviors from time to time. But now, he frequently stumbles and trips while riding on trails. He also had numerous episodes of bucking and rearing while on these trails, which is so unlike him. There have even been times that it seemed to me that he was wandering down the trail as if he is cognitively not all there. After extensive blood work, and many consultations with his veterinarian, the conclusion is: my trusty steed has some sort of neurological brain stem disorder. I am devastated. I kick myself in the butt for not having realized that those signs back in 2016 where not due to my horse “being bad”. I regret that I listened to a trainer, who said he was just being stubborn, instead of trusting my own intuition. realize that the two traumas I have endured were due to the changes going on in his brain and not because he was being a jerk.

It is with a heavy heart that I admitted to myself that RC’s recent outbursts on the trails could have been extremely dangerous for both of us. Going through a spontaneous bucking episode on a steep narrow path or next to some granite outcrop was asking for another trauma, whether it be me, or him, or both of us. RC is now retired, and I am embracing him as my teacher. The lessons he is currently teaching me are profound. These I will share later. As this chapter in RC’s and my life is still being written, I have started a new chapter. Recently I have taken back a mustang mare I previously placed with an owner in 2018. The reason for her being returned was because she had developed a bad habit of abruptly stopping during a lesson or riding session. No one could make her move.

Also, she would bite at the rider’s stirrups while being ridden. When I saddled her up with my western saddle she would not stand still, and she would become very worried. When she eventually did get saddled and I’d send out on a circle on the ground to warm up, she would tuck her butt and run as if she was trying to run out from under the saddle. I called in my saddle fitter and sound-wave healer, Donnis Thran. Through her assessment, she discovered how sore this mustang was along her back, neck and hindquarters. She fitted her with a saddle pad that can be shimmed and did sound wave work on the tension and sore spots. The results is her behavior has improved. I also called out my licensed equine chiropractor, Micky Doyle, to see if she needed adjusting. She was out in her atlas, ribs, carpal area on her left leg, along with her lumbar and pelvis areas.

I find it amazing that this mustang, with that much pain, would even tolerate a rider on her back at all. After her adjustments, she is now standing better for saddling, although she still understandably gets a little worried it might hurt. Now she moves out on a circle during groundwork with more confidence and balance. No longer does she bite at the stirrups and I sense she is beginning to relax and find the rhythm of us riding together. The more body work and balanced riding we do, the more I see this mustang relax, trust, and show me the depths of who she is. Remember, when a horse is misbehaving or has begun doing things that are unusual for them, they are trying to tell us something. Stop, take the time to listen, and use your senses.

Help them by finding their problem and seeking solutions, instead of just assuming it is a behavioral issue. These two amazing horses have taught me so much about the art of listening with more than just my ears. I have learned to take the time to check in with my intuition and ask, what is this horse trying to tell me, then to be willing to do what it takes  to find the root cause for their behavioral change. Please consider that often behaviors are just an expression of deeper underlying issues. It is our job as horsewomen and horsemen to listen to our horses and figure out what is causing those undesirable behaviors.

Cindy Hartzell © 2020
Heart Soul Confidence-Based
Horsemanship™

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Primary Sidebar

HORSE PROPERTY - TACK EQUIPMENT - HORSE HEALTH & RESEARCH & TRAINING ARTICLES - EQUINE BREED, EVENT, EQUINE Research, horsemanship

Recent Posts

  • Saddle Up for Genoa Western Heritage Days
  • Your Work Ethic is Everything
  • Kids N Horses
  • Cotton Rosser (1928–2022), Rodeo legend
  • Etta and Leadership by Kim Chappell

Recent Comments

  • Laurie wheelock on Famous Women In History Barbara Worth
  • Rick Karcich on Wild Horse Tales By Mary Cioffi
  • James on War Horse: Horses in World War II
  • Kaaren Arrington on Famous Women In History Barbara Worth
  • Tracy Penner on Famous Women In History Barbara Worth

Archives

  • February 2023
  • September 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020

Search

Copyright © 2023 · Horsetales Nevada | Serving All of Nevada, Northern & Central California, and Parts of Utah, and Idaho | Images Courtesy of Mary Cioffi