I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange

14174184204224231828

Comments

  • jancie
    jancie Member Posts: 2,631
    edited July 2011

    OT - but I just found out my horse qualified for the championship show the end of August!

    I am thrilled to say the least!

  • Enjoyful
    Enjoyful Member Posts: 3,591
    edited July 2011

    Oh wow...congrats, Jancie!!  You're an eventer, correct?

  • jancie
    jancie Member Posts: 2,631
    edited July 2011

    Enjoyful - no I used to ride Hunters but with Jazzy we are doing dressage.  My trainer is an eventer though.

    Ok, the bad news.......my trainer qualified on Jazzy to ride in the championship class and she can't be at that show because it got moved to another date which conflicts with an eventing show and unfortunately I don't get to ride her instead because it is the combination of horse/rider that qualified.  I can go ahead and show her in a couple of regular classes and I plan on doing that.

    My horse and I need some mileage.  I just rode her in my first dressage show ever a couple of weeks ago.  My trainer had been riding her up until that time because Jazzy was just psycho at the shows and I lost 6 months of riding last year due to NUMEROUS bone fractures.

    I am scared to do eventing.  I always thought it would be fun to gallop and jump over those fences, up and down the banks, into the water ponds, etc. but then I watched a video called "Thrills and Spills" and it scared the crap out of me.  I would much rather jump those fences that will fall down versus the ones that stay upright because I would never put my horse at risk nor my own physical body.

  • otter
    otter Member Posts: 6,099
    edited July 2011

    Oh, jancie... geez... congrats, but I hope you can stick to dressage.  I can't imagine getting up the nerve to do eventing or cross-country (one is part of the other, isn't it? I don't remember).  Yes, the knockdown fences are bad enough, but even then the horse can get its legs banged up and the rider can get tossed.  Broken bones?  No way. I hope you get this horse/rider combo thing figured out so you can enter Jazzy in what she does best.

    How does a billy goat pee on its beard?  I don't think I can describe it without using language that would violate the Rules of Conduct.  Let's see...  I guess the simplest way is to say that some male animals are "longer" than you might imagine.  Since things in that area point forward anyway, it's not a stretch for the flow to reach all the way to their front feet.  All they have to do is lower their heads between their front legs, and it's done.  What I can't imagine is why a male animal might think females would be attracted to this.

    BTW, meat from adult goats is usually called "chevon".  Sheep meat is mutton, although I did find one website that said the term "mutton" is sometimes used for goat meat.  I think I had some chevon once, at a class picnic that included an open-pit barbecue of meat from all sorts of legally edible animals. I say "legally edible" because, of course, some types of animals cannot be consumed by people here in the U.S., even though they are popular in other equally-civilized countries. 

    I am pretty sure they had some goat meat at the picnic. If they did, I'm sure I tasted it, because I have never been averse to trying new foods, especially after a few beers.  (This was decades before BC, so beer was okay.)  They were also supposed to have horsemeat (don't start throwing things), which was seldom sold in the U.S. even then but was legal to produce and consume.  (Now it isn't legal to slaughter horses for human consumption in the U.S.  It was back then, even though nearly all the horsemeat produced in the U.S. was shipped to Europe via Quebec.)  The market that had offered to provide the horsemeat backed out at the last minute because they didn't want any bad publicity.  So, I still don't know what horsemeat tastes like, although I've heard it tastes kind of sweet and is exceptionally lean.

    Now that I've totally grossed everyone out, I'm going to sign off and go to bed.

    otter

  • Wabbit
    Wabbit Member Posts: 1,592
    edited July 2011
    This place is a continuing education class Laughing    
  • crazy4carrots
    crazy4carrots Member Posts: 5,324
    edited July 2011

    WR -- Yes, it is!  Thanks Otter!

    So, goat meat = chevon

    Goat's milk cheese = chevre

    I've never eaten it, but I'm curious as to why horsemeat is verboten in North America.

    When I lived in England, I taught English pronunciation to a couple of Philipino students who were taking their degree in Education at the local university.  Towards the end of the semester, the students brought in some cookbooks that they had brought from home. Leafing through, I noticed some recipes that included dog meat.  i asked them what it tasted like.  They replied "Have you ever had python?  It tastes alot like python".   Well, that cleared things up...not!

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011
  • lewing
    lewing Member Posts: 1,288
    edited July 2011

    Thanks for the goat urination tutorial, Otter! I swear, we are all going to be a riot at dinner parties, with all the conversation fodder we pick up here!



    I've had goat meat often; it's delicious, actually somewhat milder than lamb, I think. It's easy to find around here in Mexican, Arab and Indian markets. I've never cooked it myself, though.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2011

    Bren - love your new avatar.  I agree with everything Otter says about goats, only cuz a lot of my friends here have them, and I ony LOVE them when they are tiny, weeeny, little new kids - oh, they are SO cute.  Once my "job" was to help name one, so many are "twins." 

    However, thanks to Otter, I will never look at them the same...LOL

  • covertanjou
    covertanjou Member Posts: 569
    edited July 2011

    I learn something new everytime I read this thread!

    Good morning everyone!  It is another beautiful day here--hot and sunny.

    I have started doing yoga again, and I have become addicted to hot yoga.  It is REALLY tough, but I feel great afterwards.  Has anyone here tried it?  I didn't think that I would like doing yoga in a room hot enough to cook food...lol

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011

    Good morning Mary,

    I would rather be dragged through the streets of London, disemboweled while still alive, halved, quartered, beheaded and have my head put through a pike and hung in the Tower of London to serve as a warning for anyone who dares to commit treason against the King....

    ....than do anything with the word "hot" in it. Wink

    Following Otter's wonderful goat tutorial with a primer on what executions used to be in the old days.  

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited July 2011

    OK, what a way to wake up. Otter, thanks for the tutorial on goats. LMBO!!

    Hot yoga? Never heard of it but am off to check it out.

    Morning all. Hope everyone has a great day.

  • covertanjou
    covertanjou Member Posts: 569
    edited July 2011

    LOL, Athena!

    I am not really good with hot weather, but the hot yoga forces me to focus on my breathing instead of the heat. Like I said, I didn't think I would like it, but I do.  The first time I did it--hot yoga  Innocent, I thought I was going to pass out.  Now I like how my body feels afterwards.  Is it just me, or does everything I just wrote sound pervy?  Wink

  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011

    Good morning, all.

    I must agree with Athena on "hot," although I'll skip the execution part.  I think it might be time to switch to iced coffee in the a.m.  Today in the DC metro area, breathing outside is like breathing warm soup.  Through a straw.  That is being pinched.  UGH.  And this isn't even the worst day, or the worst of today.  I love living here, but I have always hated the weather ... I have been hot for 32 years.

    Love the goat education!  When I lived in South Asia, there were goats that roamed the streets of the large city in which I lived.  They had long, floppy ears and looked for all the world like little boys in those hats with ear flaps.  Their kids were adorable.  We lived in a walled compound, so they never came in our yard, but they were cute to look at.  I knew about the liking to be high (like beagles!), but not about the pee.  Ugh.  Interesting, but ugh.  Nannies are some strange creatures to be attracted to a billy that smells like pee ...

    Eating goat.  When I lived in the Caribbean, one of the local delicacies was curried goat.  They just chopped up the goat, bones and all (they did skin it, so no hair).  I mostly ate around the solids and just used the curry sauce on rice.  Eating animals that looked like they were wearing floppy hats was not on my to-do list.  In South Asia, they did call goat "mutton," which was terribly confusing to me, as I had always understood mutton to be "mature" sheep (as opposed to lamb -- baby sheep).  I don't like eating sheep, either ... they always smell like fat wet wool when cooking.  Beef and chicken for me, but not much of either lately.

    Happy Hot Day.  May you stay as cool and as comfortable as possible wherever you are placed in the inferno today.

    L

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011

    Mary:

    So what type of actual yoga do you do - I do power yoga and the idea there is to increase your body temperature through strength and breathing, so the room is generally very hot. Vinyasa can be quite challenging and will get the body temperature to climb new  heights with the right instructor. Or maybe it's just the yoga +history of hormone therapy combination....

    ETA: HL, If this gets any worse we should start a heat support group. I'm sure it will be hotter than what they are saying - I listenb to NPR and the local weather people there are always wrong. Tomorrow is the worst. 

  • IronJawedBCAngel
    IronJawedBCAngel Member Posts: 470
    edited July 2011

    Goats are sold for meat here to the various ethnic communities that consume them.  I have never eaten goat meat, have no desire.  I have had too many as companions for the horses to even consider it. It would be pretty easy for any billy goat to urinate on his beard.  Guess you have to be around them to understand, but they are pretty supple little creatures.  I had a client bring cookies and donuts to the barn many years back, and her daughter left her trunk open after bringing the boxes into the barn. When we went outside after the lesson, Leroy the goat was in her trunk eating whatever she had in there, including the rubber lining around the hatch.  I have had to feed them the equivalent of alka selzer when they got into something that did not agree with them, as they can bloat to an unbelievable level.  As adorable as goats can be, a lawn mover can be far less trouble, and you have the option of mowing around your flower beds, rather than watching said goat make dessert out of your daylilies.

    I love lamb, not so much the mutton.  The flavor of the mutton is so strong, but there are many in Kentucky that can't wait for the mutton at the BBQ fests.  My ex had several sheep when I first met him, and I first thought, oh, who could eat those poor darling little lambs?  By the time you have spent several months wading through their muck to feed them, while they suck up so hard next to your legs that you can't move, while butting you and chewing on your clothes, you are quite happy to wave goodbye when they finally reach about 95 lbs.  Sheep are the most profit making livestock I have ever owned. Absolutely nothing goes to waste with a sheep.

    Several years back, I can not tell you the exact year, I, along with many equine lovers, lobbied to have the production of horse meat for human consumption outlawed in this country.  I know Kentucky was very much involved in the passage of the bill to outlaw it.  Horses are such a part of my life it would be like cannabilism for me to consider eating le cheval.  I will leave that to the French!

    Good luck at your horse show, Jancie!  Horses are such good therapy!

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited July 2011

    I so feel for you DC people. Since I moved to FL, almost all summer it is cooler where I live than DC. Plus, I have a breeze all the time. Now, Orlando is another story. No breeze and ten degrees hotter. Ugh.

    Keep as cool as you can.

  • covertanjou
    covertanjou Member Posts: 569
    edited July 2011

    I do power yoga, classical hatha and ashtanga.  The ashtanga is the most difficult for me.  I also do restorative yoga on Wednesday evenings.  It is not done in a hot room, and it is all about stretching our muscles.  Since I have some hernated disks in my neck, this particular yoga really helps me.

    HL, I also have had goat went I went to Jamaica.  I really liked it--then again, I like anything in a curry sauce. 

    ETA: Barbara, you should try the hot yoga.  I think you'd like it.

  • IronJawedBCAngel
    IronJawedBCAngel Member Posts: 470
    edited July 2011

    Like a sauna here, and expected to get much worse as the overnight temps for the week do not cool at all.  They said it would be 89 by 8 am.  Yuck!  My grandson is visiting and it is really difficult to come up with entertaining things to do that don't involve going outside into the heat.  Got him up early yesterday morning to go bike riding, and almost succeeded in killing him as he fell off of his bike twice.  I am a bad Nona! 

    A breeze of any kind would feel good right now!

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited July 2011

    Mary, can I get a CD to help me along? When I get up in the AM, my main level is hot so I could do it then.

  • bluedahlia
    bluedahlia Member Posts: 6,944
    edited July 2011

    I'm doing standstill biking to improve my gait and strengthen my leg muscles, so am not in your league yet, but hope to get there.  Yoga is on my to do list.  Yesterday was a good day, no freezing (and I don't mean the cold kind).  Hopefully it will keep up for our NOTL get together or I'll be holding onto one of you ladies for the scenic walks.

    Goats!  Well  there are the human kind (which I don't care for) hehe and the animal kind which are too cute, even if they are drenched in pee.  I have had a lot of Indian food which has goat as the main ingredient, and although I feel bad eating it, it is delicious.

    Hope everyone has a good day.  We expect it to get to 33 Celsius today and 36 tomorrow with humidity on top of that.  Not sure what that would be in F.

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited July 2011

    Blue that would be 91, which is our high temp for today.

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011

    Morning, Blue. Interesting about biking to improve your gait. By that do you mean balance? One thing that has helped me a lot for balance (I don't have any medical problems, but I have always been clumsy) is stretching and strength exercises with my legs. I wonder if abdominal exercises and core training/strengthening with a ball would help in your case? I am amazed at my much balance is really a product of strength and strength training has always been a better option for me than step aerobics or walking. 

  • covertanjou
    covertanjou Member Posts: 569
    edited July 2011

    It is 32 in Montreal today--38 with humidity (100.4), so it is hot!  The forecast tomorrow is 44 (111 F) with the humidity!  Oh my! 

    Barbara, I think that would be a great idea.  I am sure you can find a yoga CD.  You can then do it in the hottest room of your house.  Try to find a CD of a power yoga, not restorative yoga.

    Blue...lol!  I agree that I prefer animal goats to human goats! 

    ETA the weather in Farenheit 

  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited July 2011

    Good Morning!

    Since we've ruled out goats and making soap down here ... I'm going to mow before it gets to 100 today.  Tomorrow it is supposed to be a scorcher (according to NOAA).

    Blue .. I was wondering if you were okay .. you were pretty quiet yesterday.  Hoping you feel better today .. and if you need someone to lean on at NOTL, I'll be your buddy.

    I'm impressed with all you gals that do yoga and exercise!

    hugs,

    Bren

  • bluedahlia
    bluedahlia Member Posts: 6,944
    edited July 2011

    Athena, I am doing the stretches as well.  Need to strengthen my leg muscles because I wasn't using them much before surgery due to poor balance.  I had 6 bad falls last year alone, so was afraid to do things.  Simply walking was an adventure some days.  I'm in the late stages of PD having had it now for 12 years (probably more and not yet diagnosed)  It was young onset whch is a little more complicated than the PD older people get.  I'm reteaching my body how to walk properly but it will take time.  Freezing is awful.   My feet feel like they are glued to the ground and my body jerks forward.  I'll get there....I'm a tough cookie.

  • bluedahlia
    bluedahlia Member Posts: 6,944
    edited July 2011

    Bren, I was out most of yesterday and too tired to post when I got back.

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011

    You definitely are a tough cookie! (((Blue)))

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011

    And Bren - so are you - mowing in this weather? Stay hydrated!

  • AnneW
    AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
    edited July 2011

    BLUE--have you done the PT that incorporates BIG motions? I know there's a name for it. My local cancer rehab center also does work with PD patients, and I see them doing this from time to time when I'm there for Pilates.

    GOATS--are now grazing the acres of Boulder Open Space, to rid us of our noxious weeds. Now, if they only ate prairie dogs...

    FYI--so for my nudie photo for the cancer rehab clinic's calendar, I needed to come up with an inspirational or witty saying to add to my bio. I searched and searched, finding really serious stuff that didn't quite fit me. Then I stumbled again on Elizabeth's tag line. Perfect. So, that's with my photo, crediting her as Elizabeth Konacat.

    Leaving hot CO tomorrow for hotter and humid MN. How did we ever live without A/C? I generally don't need it here (evening storms dropped the temp from 95 to 65 by bedtime. Sweet!) But in the south where I grew up? Or MN, where I spent my summers?? Can't handle that now, with the humidity. Ugh!

Categories