by landofmakebelieve » Tue Jul 22, 2014 7:05 am
Bluespark sharped her claws on the bark of a tree after returning from a walk. After she felt that her claws were good and sharp, the blue eyed warrior padded across camp, just in time to meet her brother coming into camp from hunting. "I don't know how you enjoy hunting," The black she-cat growled, picking up a vole and padding off to a shady place to eat her meal.
Coyotecry returned to camp with a meaty squirrel clamped between his jaws. The muscular tom dropped his prey on the pile and gave a yawn, narrowing his eyes as his sister approached, her usual grumpy look on her face. Flicking his tail, he nodded greeting to Bluespark, rolling his eyes whenever she growled at him, "I don't know how you enjoy fighting for no good reason," The tom retorted as she padded away.

hello, bonjour
please call me believe
herro der mes amis, i am believe. proud canadian, ottb loving, colt breaking, nfr dreaming. pictured on the left is my racetrack reject, landofmakebelieve, aka molly, moo, shmoo, whatever name comes to mind x] molly is a 10 year old canadian bred thoroughbred mare, and standing at about 16.2hh, we look a little wonky when we chase cans, but la dee da that's alright. molly and i tried several disciplines. i tried desperately to get her to catch on to dressage, but unfortunately, she still has the race bred mind and is all go. however, together we found a discipline which we could both enjoy; western gaming. this summer we started travelling to barrel races locally. our current record on a standard size pattern is 17.314 and we are improving with every run. and to all the low budget barrel racers out there such as myself, a word of advise; chin up darling. you may not have a million dollar mount under your butt, but you and your crossbred, rejected, hard headed, rescue baby can do it. you know why? cause those girls sitting in their custom circle y's, upon shiny, top of the line mounts are full of themselves. they think there's no way they can lose. they get cocky. stay humble, believe in yourself, in your horse, and most importantly ride your little heart out.