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The danger of horses
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tiompan
tiompan
5758 posts

Re: The danger of horses
Aug 06, 2017, 16:49
Yes , ,the non pull off sounds more like it .

The original .https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H30CmBizvXg .

Elmore is oft imitated and superficially simple ,but he was more restrained than the copies , the sound is difficult to replicate too as it was mainly an acoustic with a cheapo De Armond pick up stuck on .
Sanctuary
Sanctuary
4670 posts

Edited Aug 08, 2017, 10:59
Re: The danger of horses
Aug 08, 2017, 10:50
Sanctuary wrote:
We've often mentioned the dangers that cows present when crossing fields to reach sites of interest, but not too often horses/ponies, unless trekking across moorland that is.

Well yesterday, an elderly family friend and past stonehead moor tramper with me who now gets about slowly with the assistance of two sticks, was taking her new puppy out for it's first walk. She chose a well-used local field with a public footpath through it and the puppy was kept on the lead. No stock have been put in the field for years that's why it is used by the local dog walkers.

Well I was informed this morning that midway across the field she was attacked by two horses that knocked her to the ground and according to a witness was then purposely trampled all over and stamped with their front hooves.

The bottom line is that one of her arms has been severely damaged (shredded was the term used) and has other multiple injuries, all requiring surgery until 3am this morning in the main Exeter hospital.

This poor lady lives alone, has no family and only just recovered from her second knee replacement. She walks with such a stoop that she is constantly gazing at the ground. She had no chance!

The irony is that she spent the whole of her working life as a herdswoman/shepherdess/stable hand with a great understanding of all stock - but they got her in the end it would seem!

She wasn't able to escape like most of us probably would have done but please do take extra care when crossing fields whether you feel safe or not.

I'll report back when I find out more.


Thank you for those who offered their best wishes for the ladies recovery.

The latest update - as told to me by the pre-owner of the young dog - is that on admittance to hospital the lady had bones sticking out of her damaged arm. They were pinned and plated but because there was so much flesh and skin missing she is going to have re-construction surgery and multiple skin grafts over the days/weeks ahead. I was given no updates on other injuries but my guess is they are not anywhere as bad thankfully!

You may well be correct about the dog tjj as I was told it was on a flexi-lead which are an accident waiting to happen and in my opinion should be banned! They are the ones encased in a plastic carrier with a handle and a 'trigger' that stops and releases the leash. Umpteen times I have seen dogs pile into others when on this lead when in the 'open' position and the owner not aware another dog is approaching from behind or when they have been distracted. If the dog runs to the end of it and pulls to get to another dog/anything, it can't retract on its spring and the handler left stranded with a disobedient or fighting dog on the end of it. Could this be why the horses behaved like they did?

The dog is back with the previous owner now and will not be returning to the injured lady.
tjj
tjj
3606 posts

Re: The danger of horses
Aug 08, 2017, 11:09
Once again I wish your friend a full recovery. Glad the young dog has gone back to its previous owner as your friend sounded generally too frail to cope with it.
moss
moss
2897 posts

Re: The danger of horses
Aug 08, 2017, 13:38
That is fairly good news Roy, your poor friend will no doubt spend some time in hospital and I can only wish her well, the pup will have another home. Retractable leads are dangerous, once had a two years old rescue dog who came with one, the first time I took her out and let her off she didn't know what to do with her freedom... and yet was scared stiff of the 'noise' of the lead, not sure she wasn't beaten with it. Wretched Chippenham waiter was her last owner.
drewbhoy
drewbhoy
2557 posts

Re: The danger of horses
Aug 08, 2017, 17:25
Glad your pal is on the mend but a bit of time and recuperation in hospital coming up. Flexi leads should be banned.
Howburn Digger
Howburn Digger
986 posts

Re: The danger of horses
Aug 11, 2017, 12:57
I was once harrassed and pestered by a large arrogant pony in the Upper Tweed Valley (at Drumelzier Haugh) about five or six years back. Out of nowhere it ran up behind me and started head-butting me in the small of my back, between the shoulders and on the back of my head while it whinnied and made "hmmppphh!" noises. I tried turning round and shouting at it a few times but it merely thudded its nasty wee hooves from side to side violently and persisted in its behaviour.

https://binged.it/2fxVjPr

I escaped from it by having to badly jump a burn, hurting my leg quite painfully on the shin (extensive bruising and lots of skinned flesh and bleeding). I was then met by a gang of stirks with noise, aggression and mayhem on their mind in the area I had crossed into. I ended up having to walk to the site between a nasty old barbed wire fence and a tumbledown drystane dyke with a crowd of thuggish stirks trying to head butt me through the fence.

It was a rubbish site visit and I've never been back.
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