Our friend Leo trapped in a stall. |
Of the many boring things in
our lives, being trapped in a stall is probably the worst of them all,
especially after your food is gone. Together with the help of a few other
horses, we have come up with five easy and fun boredom killers.
1.
Try to find a way
out. Start with the doors first. If you cannot get the door to open, try the
walls. Often in stalls the wooden panels slide up and out. Even if you do not
succeed in escaping, you did something for about 30 minutes to an hour.
2.
Cover your poop.
This will blow another 30 minutes of your stall time with each pile you make.
The easiest way to cover your poop with shavings is to walk right past the
piles repeatedly. Be sure that when you are passing by the poop piles, you kick the
shavings up or else you will have a ring of no shavings and poop still out in
the open. Be sure to cover all piles before moving on to the next boredom
killer.
3.
If you have
hanging buckets in your stall, a quick and easy game is to see how far you can pull
one back without letting it slip through your teeth. When the bucket slips and
falls, it makes a very loud sound that will annoy anyone in the area.
4.
Fun toys.
Occasionally, good humans will put these toys in our stalls to play with. The
only problem is that we don’t know how to play with them. A few experienced
horses who have mastered these toys have recently told me their secrets. You
usually either pull on the toy with your teeth, just like you do with the
hanging buckets, or bop it with your nose. If you do not have any of these toys
in your stall, make some. Rubber buckets that sit on the ground can be played
with as a toy.
5.
Pooping in your
water buckets. This is a very difficult task. You must be an expert at positioning
yourself properly. First you need to take a quick drink of your water before
you defile it. This is the danger of pooping in your water buckets--you cannot
drink anymore until your human comes and refills the buckets. It may be a
difficult boredom killer, but the instructions are simple. Aim and fire.
That’s our two bits!
These are really smart horses!
ReplyDeleteYou continue to amaze me with all of your wonderful advice! Thanks.
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