
Bonnie Blue and Augustus were visited by Dr. Lowell Rogers, their veterinarian, on March 7th for their spring checkups and immunizations. It was a good visit and started with Dr. Rogers complimenting Bonnie Blue on how well she looked. He said he could hardly believe she was the same horse he had seen last summer. We all agree, with her near perfect body weight of near 850 pounds, a shinny coat and a sassy Arabian attitude, she hardly resembles the old "Bones" horse that came to live with us seven months ago. So many blessings have come to all of us, we are very grateful.

Gus is a very different horse than Bonnie Blue. Gus is very low key. He is a large framed horse and he moves slowly and deliberately. He seems to be very happy being an older, slower, cooler, bigger and submissive horse. Though different, we love the big old boy already.
Bonnie Blue continues to be dominate but generally less aggressive with each passing week. However, she still has to show her butt occasionally and give him a hard time with a bite or a kick. I know this is a part of normal horse behavior, but I have not learned to fully accept it yet.
The nice reporter, Ms. Emily Ham, from the Hattiesburg American Newspaper published a "What ever happened to?" article on Sunday February 24,2013 entitled "Bones to Bonnie Blue: A Horse's Tale"
The article featured photos of Bonnie Blue from June 2012 and February 2013 and tells the story of her transformation back to health. This was a good story and we are thankful for Ms. Ham taking time to research and write it. Hopefully, it will help others move to adopt rescue animals and understand that these animals can recover and be as wonderful as any other.
This post is a lot of bits and pieces of information that we wanted to capture. The only thread of continuity running through this collage seems to be "love". Love for these wonderful animal that add so much to our lives. Yes, they can be a pain in the butt. Yes, they require time, attention and resources. Yes they are horses and can show their negative horse butts and bite and kick and generally act a fool. But, then whats new. Don't all living things that add to our lives do the same type of things? I look at these creatures and see so many similarities with humans. I see how they seek social status, how they express their affection, how they seek security and I think, wow, how similar we are. We can learn a lot from one another. All we have to do is look and pay attention.
Blessings to all.
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