The Case of the Empy Stock Tank

Last Thursday, as I was driving home from work, Jack called to say that the horses had broken the plug in the bottom of the stock tank, and it was dry when he went out to feed. He cobbled together a temporary solution, and I stopped at a friends and picked up an unused stock tank at a friend’s place on the way home. I set it up the next morning, then swapped it out with out swap tank with its new plug the following day. I placed the spare stock to the side where I would remember to return it.

Each night we would go out and find the empty stock tank. My friend had warned me hers might have small holes, and I started to worry that ours had a small leak as well, which occurred when the horses broke the plug. These are sturdily build Rubbermaid 70 gallon stock tanks, and it is not reasonable to think three horses would drink sixty gallons of water in one day, even the hot dry ones that we’ve been having. Even the tray on the ground that I fill with water so suicidal varmints aren’t tempted to drown in the stock tank was dry.

So yesterday morning, having once more gone out and found an empty stock tank, I set up both stock tanks and filled them to the brim. When I went out last night, one was down about half, and the other was down about one third. This would be about sixty gallons of water. As a rule of thumb, a horse will normally drink about ten gallons a day. Hap, who loves to play in water, dipping his head and splashing water on his chest and legs, is probably emptying most of one tank, which is why we have been running dry. I’ve rarely kept him here in the summer with two other horses, which is why I haven’t run into the problem in the past. Two stock tanks were too much for even Hap to empty in one day.

I feel like Nancy Drew.

Lily Communicates

Lily was very good during our lesson today. After our lesson, we were alone in the arena so I pulled off her tack so she could roll. It was very warm by then so I held her while my trainer hosed her down and suggested that I take Lily back to the arena so she would have somewhere to roll again. Lily followed me out and I took the halter off in the place she rolled before and stepped away from her. She lowered her head and looked at the ground and then deliberately swung behind me and stopped in what would be the “heel” position for a dog. It seemed quite obvious she was saying no thanks to the roll and that she was ready to go back to her paddock.. I didn’t bother to put the halter back on her and she followed me through the barn and to her paddock.

Deckers, Colorado

Two recent fires in Colorado, the Oxyoke fire near Deckers, Colorado, and the Hilltop Fire near Parachute, are both now 100% contained, thanks to the valiant effort on the part of the firefighters. I’ve been through Deckers, which is not all that far from our house as the crow flies, but is a considerable drive on mountain roads. As is my habit, when I heard about the Deckeres fire, I found it via Google Maps, and discovered that Deckers, Colorado has a street view on Google Maps. (Colorado Springs doesn’t rate high enough to be on Google Street Views.) Check it out if you want to see the proverbial one-horse Colorado mountain hamlet. Be sure to rotate the view (arrows in upper left) so you can see the mountain stream.

WordPress iPHone App

I haven’t really lusted after an iPhone, despite fondling the ones belonging to my sister and niece. I don’t really like telephones in general, and cell phones in specific. I do have a cell phone, but in any gathering, I would wager that my cell phone is the oldest and most battered one there. I started carrying one (that rather resembled a brick) over a decade ago, after I lost the trailer off the hitch of my truck the first time. I still think of the cell phone as an emergency device rather than an accessory.

However, I must say that the WordPress Open Souce iPhone App, which purports to allow you to update your WordPress blog, would tempt me into buying one if I had $400.

Which I don’t.