Sunday, November 3, 2013

The Day My Horses Escaped

Quite a bit has happened, I'm down to one horse (it's a good thing, given life's reality), and boarding down the street. But before I catch you up, I thought it would be fun to tell you about the DAY MY HORSES ESCAPED from the barn.


All photos courtesy of google earth.



It was a quiet day. My daughter had come to the office and she and a friend were going to go play with the horses for an hour or so.  I  looked out the office window and noted the gate was open.



I texted my daughter saying she needed to close the gate.  She said she had it open because her friend's mom was on the way.  That's fine, I texted, but the side gate is open so make sure you close the gate to the street.

The moment I hit send, I looked up. And watched in horror as Lily and Cotton headed for the open gate and the street, heads held high, tails flagged, looking like a pair of wild horses headed for a cliff. 


I shrieked and ran out of the building, assuring my colleagues with a shout that I would be right back. (They later presumed someone was injured and two of them headed to the barn. Given that I was thinking of killing my daughter, they weren't far off)




By the time I got out of the building, the girls were running after the horses, who had taken a left turn at the first intersection. At least the horses weren't headed for the train tracks (one half block ahead in the above photo). I ran to the horse trailer, grabbed two ropes ( I noted neither kid had a rope, planning on just grabbing manes, I suppose), and at the stop sign managed to flag down a car.



Put yourself in the poor driver's shoes. Crazy woman carrying two ropes runs up to your car and pleads "Can you help me catch up to those horses?"

Yeah. He was awesome. 

"I used to live on a ranch," he said.

We headed down the street, but there are several cars in front of us.

This is when I learned an interesting thing. My horses are parade trained. Cars creeping up behind them mean "move forward." All these drivers were herding them right toward a busy street. With a blind hill.




They ignored all the fabulous grazing opportunities. All of them.

The good news is they were just headed at a trot, not galloping like crazy. Sometimes they'd walk. 




Right about here in the photo above we passed my daughter and her friend, who were in no way able to keep up with the horses.  I was beginning to panic. I could see the cars didn't know they should just STOP. I asked the driver to go around a few of the cars, because we had to reach the horses before they got to that street.



The other cars didn't stop. Neither did the horses. They got to the stop sign above. They started to go to the right and the train tracks. We were about to veer off to go after them, but something must have bothered them in that direction. Both horses switched and headed up the blind hill. 

Right about here there was a miracle. Me and the guy in the car I highjacked were passing vehicles trying to get up to the horses. Then a guy in a little black pickup did the right thing.




He parked his truck across the road just ahead of the horses, just past the third telephone pole in the picture above (risking getting hit by a car himself). This "herded" the horses into the hospital parking lot.




We zoomed up near the parking lot and before it stopped moving I jumped out of the car and ran over. I started talking to Lily. She stopped, and looked over her shoulder at me. "It's about time, what took you so long," she said in her invisible thought balloon. She seemed immensely relieved.

I tied a rope around her and, after carefully explaining to a bystander that she was very, very gentle and wouldn't pull on the rope, handed her off.

Because Cotton had decided he wasn't done.




He thought he'd just head back across the street. I caught him next, his head still a little high, but eyes pretty calm. I suspect that without Lily by his side he wasn't up to more running around.

If we hadn't caught them the next stop would have been the water park. And then a golf course.




I profusely thanked all our rescuers and when the girls finally got there (completely out of breath) we had a very stern talk during the long three block walk back to the barn.  Lily and Cotton seemed relieved to get back to familiar pastures. They casually strolled over to the water trough, giggling. 

At least that's what it looked like to me.



Urban horse living. Not for the faint at heart. 

10 comments:

Dan and Betty said...

Betty's Icelandic Morgunn got out once. All he did was fun around around property several times. He ran across our front, then down the neighbor's drive to the vacant lot behind us, across that, then down our side again. He did this several times and I just watched him. About the third or fourth time he stopped and looked at the gate. A friend was there and I hollered, "Open the gate." She did and he promptly sauntered back in. He had his fun and he was ready to settle back down.

Kids and horses - gotta love or kill 'em.

Dan

Allenspark Lodge said...

Just can't tell you how much I love happy endings like that. There are SO MANY places it could go wrong.

Love them good Samaritans.

Bill

Grey Horse Matters said...

Very scary. Glad everything turned out alright.

aurora said...

Yikes! Glad things turned out okay.

Nuzzling Muzzles said...

Good to hear from you again. Hijacking cars is how we've always caught horses too. Mine haven't made it out to streets and highways, but I've helped neighbors catch their horses.

Anonymous said...

I hate it when that sort of thing happens - very scary. Glad it worked out OK.

Was wondering where you were . . .

Shirley said...

Hey- welcome back! Gotta love it when there's a happy ending. Even if they did giggle.

Laughing Orca Ranch said...

Whew! I'm glad they were both ok, and I bet the girls felt terrible, too.

Looking forward to more updates from you soon.

How are YOU?

~Lisa

Dom said...

So so scary! Glad you caught them just in time!

Wolfie said...

Holy crap! Glad there was a happy ending!