I found this on another site and it reminded me of my barrel horse a 20 y.o. 15 hands, sorrel gelding, that runs all 5.
He was tied up to the trailer out behind the stands, a blaze-face sorrel gelding, roughly 15 hands, high withers, slightly ewe-neck, back a little swayed, white hairs on his muzzle, eyes sunk in with age. An old warrior with his best years long since gone away, left here baby-sitting at a small-town horse play-day.
Watched over by her parents, a young girl kissed the horse;they coached her on the fine points and wished her luck, of course. He hardly seemed to notice when the small girl took his lead; he followed without balking but not with any speed. She climbed on and walked him round some, he went without a fuss; his head was down, the reins were slack, his feet dragged in the dust.
When they called her name his ears pricked up, she sat up in her seat; trotting to the gate there was new lightness in his feet. When they got into the alley he flared his nostrils wide, picked up the bit and arched his neck, she latched on for the ride. She let him go and as they went the years melted away, and he was once again the barrel horse in younger days.
With eyes on fire and muscles bunched, raw power in his stride, blazing speed and energy wrapped in horse's hide. He had chased the cans from old Cheyenne to the Calgary Stampede, from Amarilo to Salinas, he had lived the game horse creed: "Run To Live, Live To Run," it was printed in his genes, from nose to tail his big heart pumped blue blood through his veins.
Coming through the pattern they touched the last can some; it was still up on it's edge when they were halfway home. When she asked him for a little, he gave her all he had; the barrel stood, the run was good, and the time was not too bad. When she pulls the saddle he's an old horse once again, but while he's running barrels, he's all he's ever been.
So here's to that old gamer--may our golden years like his be filled with goldenn moments and glorious memeries, of races run and races won, of places that we've been, of friends we've made along the way and good things we have seen. And someone who will need us for what we still can do--may our needs be small, our wants be less, and our troubles be but few.
OH MY GOSH. I WAS ABOUT TO CRY. I HAD A HORSE EXACTLY LIKE THAT. EXCEPT HE WAS ABOUT 14.2 AND A CHESTNUT. THE PEOPLE SAID THAT HE WAS 17 WHEN WE BOUGHT HIM AND I HADN'T PLANNED ON RUNNIN HIM LONG JUST LONG ENOUGH TO GET MY BACK INTO BARRELS AND POLES. I RAN HIM FOR ABOUT 3 YEARS. HE WAS AWESOME AND ALWAYS GAVE IT HIS ALL. I RAN 21-23 SECOND POLES ALL THE TIME AND 16-19 IN BARRELS. I DON'T THINK THAT HE WAS 17 AT THE TIME WE GOT HIM. I THINK HE WAS IN HIS 20'S. I LOVED THAT HORSE AND TO THIS DAY HE IS STILL MY FAVORITE. CAN I STEAL THIS?
OH MY GOSH. I WAS ABOUT TO CRY. I HAD A HORSE EXACTLY LIKE THAT. EXCEPT HE WAS ABOUT 14.2 AND A CHESTNUT. THE PEOPLE SAID THAT HE WAS 17 WHEN WE BOUGHT HIM AND I HADN'T PLANNED ON RUNNIN HIM LONG JUST LONG ENOUGH TO GET MY BACK INTO BARRELS AND POLES. I RAN HIM FOR ABOUT 3 YEARS. HE WAS AWESOME AND ALWAYS GAVE IT HIS ALL. I RAN 21-23 SECOND POLES ALL THE TIME AND 16-19 IN BARRELS. I DON'T THINK THAT HE WAS 17 AT THE TIME WE GOT HIM. I THINK HE WAS IN HIS 20'S. I LOVED THAT HORSE AND TO THIS DAY HE IS STILL MY FAVORITE.
BaileyCAN I STEAL THIS?
R.I.P. SCRATCHES.
12:48 PM EST