

Safekeeping
© F. Thomas Breningstall
To be or not to be safe? Heck, that's not even a
question. Around horses, safety is a must. From the get go, don't ever think a
horse or any equine is totally safe. A horse that has never bitten, kicked or
reared has the ability to do so--and will, under the right or wrong conditions.
One time I was shoeing a mare, not for the first time, while the owner held
her by a lead rope. As I trimmed the left front hoof, for some reason the mare
reared straight up and pulled her leg away. I lost my footing and went down on
one knee.
A good horse handler would have yanked the horse back down, and pulled her
to the side away from me. The owner, however, let go of the lead rope, jumped
back, and screamed--scaring the horse even more.
As I turned my head to see what was going on, two horse feet came down on
me. One struck me on the cheek, the other on my chest. I shot to safety at the
mare's rear. When I got up, I showed the owner how to hold the horse, but she
was afraid to. So I tied the horse's nose to the wall and finished shoeing,
then went to see a doctor. Just bruises. But from then on, I tied that mare's
nose to a wall when I worked on her.
Recently, I was trimming a quiet, friendly gelding I have done many times. I
was relaxed and talking casually with the owner. Without warning BANG, the
horse blew up and ran forward past me, almost knocking over the owner. I looked
up to see a cat hurl through the air end over end, land on its feet, and run
away. The young, curious feline had decided to see what would happen if he
jumped on the haunches of the standing horse. Well, everyone found out, but no
one was hurt. The owner knew what to do to quickly gain and keep control of the
horse and herself.
The worst encounter I ever had involved a young horse, not even green broke.
Just as raw as could be. It wasn't mean, just had never been handled. Its feet
had never been trimmed, so we put the horse in a small standing stall with a 3'
wall, and it seemed quite relaxed there.
The owner holding the horse was a "J.R. from Dallas"-type guy - a
real big shot with a big house, big barn, big cars, big boots, and a big cowboy
hat on his big head. You'll soon see why I speak so highly of this gentleman.
Anyway, while I got into the stall with the horse, the big shot stood
outside the stall holding the lead line. I worked up the left front foot and
began trimming it, and the horse seemed to relax. As I held the front foot up,
I rubbed the rear leg some, to show the horse I meant it no harm. I completed
the trim on the front foot and put it down. I talked to the young horse and
rubbed it some more, and it looked calmer than ever. Slowly, I got the left
rear leg off the ground, thinking, "it trusts me; this will go okay."
I began trimming the rear hoof when BOOM, the horse blew. At the same time
its four legs went straight, the horse went up in the air. Then it went
backwards, hit the wall, bounced off, fell down, scrambled up, reared and pawed
the air with its front feet, all the time swinging its head back and forth and
flinging some kind of white stuff from its muzzle.
When the action started, from a crouched position holding the rear leg, I
jumped and cleared that 3' stall wall in a single bound - landing a little
heavily on the safe side. By the time I got to my knees, the horse had calmed
down some, but was still tossing its head.
I turned my attention to the owner to see if he had a clue as to what had
happened. There stood Mister Bigshot, holding in his puffy, non-calloused
hands, a half-empty syringe of paste wormer.
I came off the ground on fire. "What the #%&*%$# you trying to do,
kill me? You stupid **&#@*&%$, you ain't got the brains God gave
dust!" I wanted to hit him, but I managed not to. Instead, I took a deep
breath and asked, "What are you doing?"
He looked totally shocked and more stupid than ever as he tried to explain,
"I thought the horse was standing so quiet that I would give it
wormer."
I told him I doubted he was able to think at all, and that I have never seen
such an irresponsible, reckless act of stupidity in my life. I gathered up my
tools and headed for my truck.
As I drove off, I looked back one last time to see him still standing there
holding the paste wormer, mouth agape. The sight made me laugh so hard I had to
pull off the road and stop, because it occurred to me that this wealthy big
shot hadn't been talked to like that in a long time, if ever.
He never apologized for trying to kill me. I'm glad no one got hurt, but it
was too close for me.
So, work safely around those horses.
F. Thomas Breningstall is an AFA and MHA certified full-time farrier living
in Fowlerville, Michigan. His column "Hoof & Hammer" appears
regularly in
RURAL
HERITAGE draft-animal magazine, and is reprinted here with permission.
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