Sunday, December 20, 2020

A week of ups and downs

We started the week with rain and we’re ending it with more rain. Clementine is all of us right now, I think, longing for sunshine and better days.




On the sunny days, in the mornings, we enjoy the light coming through the plants, which after years of being kept upstairs in the winter, migrated back to their original spot here. I remember now how much I liked them there. The weeping fig has its own little autumnal response to being brought inside. Some leaves yellow, then fall, and it shoots out new growth. We repotted it this year and I’ve shaped it a bit.



One of the ups this week was finding this Meyer lemon bud, the first we’ve had in several years of caring for this plant. It’s the slowest growing thing I’ve ever had. If we get a lemon I will be over the moon!



Another sunny day Keil Bay and I waited for his acupuncture vet and I chronicled the oak tree shadow on the barn, something I love seeing, and often think how wonderful it would be to paint a wall with such a shadow on it. It transforms the entire barn.



After two and a half weeks of total normalcy, Keil has had a relapse and is holding his right rear leg outward again. He’s weak in the hind end and putting his feet in awkward places. But his spirit is good and he’s enjoying time in the barnyard with his fleece on, knowing the peppermint brigade is on the way.

The acupuncture helps, and while we’re now having yet another rain event that means he’s not moving as much, I hope we come out of this soon. He did a little trotting in his PT time and looked very good. We hope that time will heal the nerve damage and he’ll get back to his normal self and stay there. 



 It occurs to me that a week of ups and downs is basically a little piece of a life pulled out and observed, like a series of watercolors or notes on a pad. It is all ups and downs, isn’t it? And that’s not a bad thing, simply a true thing. In the middle of the acupuncture, when Keil had his blanket off, the vet’s assistant said she wanted to wrap up in Keil’s blanket, and she did, and in some small way that brightened up the moment, when he was standing wonky and tilting in the rear, and yet the three young women who come to minister to him were cheerful and behaving as if nothing were other than it should be. He’s having a wonky day. This will help. Let’s wrap up in his fancy fleece and give peppermints and update his treatment plan and aim for the next time. 

He walked them to the barnyard gate when they were done. 

3 comments:

Grey Horse Matters said...

Keil Bay sounds like he really liked his treatment and his staff of women to fuss over him. So cute that he walked them out. Love the tree shadow on the barn, it would look pretty on a wall in the house.

billie said...

Today we had a literal up and down. They were in the front today around noon and suddenly all 5 equines galloped up the entire field/hill, including Keil Bay, who looked wonderful. Then they went on a rampage up and down the still wet dirt paddock and were doing tight circles and bucking and craziness in general - Keil slid down on his butt sitting like a dog, then hopped right up again. We separated him along with Rafer to calm things down. I couldn’t even watch the shenanigans in the dirt paddock. I’ve never seen him sit down like that but I’m frankly shocked they all weren’t flat out as muddy as it was in there still. He seems fine the rest of today and tonight!

Matthew said...

You and I both love the tree shadow on the barn!