
I was bubbling with excitement. I had my mustang in the trailer hooked up to the back of my truck. She was a gorgeous palomino roan mare. I was afraid she would be nervous of the trailer, but she had made no sounds as far as I could tell. I was overjoyed at having the opportunity to receive and train my very own mustang.
I was participating in an event called the Mustang Makeover. Basically, I was given a mustang of my very own and asked to tame and train the horse for the competition. If I could gain the most trust from my horse within the few months I had I could win. Who wouldn’t want to tame a wild mustang?
Granted, I might not be of the same opinion once I begin my taming process. Each mustang had its own quirks to be worked with and I had yet to discover my mare’s. I hoped she might be easier to deal with, considering she was only four years old. She might not be as stuck in her ways as some of the other horses that had been given out.
However, the mustangs had never had any contact with humans. Or so the hosts of the competition had told me. I was worried about how my mare might react to all of the change in her life. After all, she had been born and raised in Utah in the wild horse herds that remain there. I was surprised to find that any herds remained in the states at all, I had thought they all would have been destroyed by now.
I was glad to have my mustang though, so I was very happy that the herds remained today. She was a beauty, with her pale coat and her blaze. She had some corn spots on her shoulder which interested me. I wonder what she had gotten into to receive them. Whatever the reason, I felt that I might know her better by having recognized that she had such markings.
It made me nervous to think of the trailer frightening her. Each bump in the road made me wince and glance in my mirrors to check on her. I could faintly see her coat through the slits in the metal before she straightened herself. I tried to calm down some, trying to convince myself that she was a wild mustang and had been through worse.
Despite my attempts to calm myself, I just grew more anxious when we turned into the gravel road that would bring us home. The gravel here was worn and loose and didn’t make for a pleasant ride for someone who wasn’t used to it. I tried to keep the ride as smooth as possible, but my truck still slipped through along the road, the small pebbles pinging against the metal.
I still hadn’t heard any noise from the mare, even when I saw the telltale corral that marked my home. I turned as gently as I could into the driveway, sighing in relief when we pulled off the gravel and onto hard-packed earth. The ride instantly became smoother and I gained more control of the truck. I glanced in my mirrors again to check on the mustang , but I couldn’t see her through the trailer.
Carefully, I backing in towards the corral, deciding it might be better to let her settle in a more open area. After all, she was used to having as much room as she wanted, so I wasn’t about to stick her in the stable. Especially not after having put her in a trailer. She was probably frightened enough.
I parked the truck, clambering out and making my way towards the door to the corral. I pulled it open just far enough for me to back the trailer into the entrance. I quickly did just that, double-checking the gate to make sure there was no way for the mustang to get out of the corral without jumping it. I carefully held the door so that she wouldn’t be able to push her way out of it.
Stretching as far as I could, I managed to barely snag the handle to open the trailer. I pushed it down with all the strength I could send to my fingertips, pulling the door open as soon as the latch was out of the way. I almost missed the palomino blur by blinking.
My mare was racing around the corral, her mane and tail flying behind her like a kite. Her ears were pinned down and she didn’t seem to interested in stopping any time soon. I gapped some at her speed, having never seen a real wild mustang so close before. I marveled at the elegance of her stride and the flow of her muscles.
Before she could decide she would prefer to be loose, I pulled the trailer forward and closed the corral. I latched the gate closed and gave it a tug to be certain it would stay put. I wasn’t about to lose my mustang on the first day. Having made sure she was secured, I allowed myself to watch her unrelenting race around the corral.
I wondered if she would always be like this or if it was going to get better once I truly began working with her. I wasn’t very experienced in training horses, nor sealing with them, but I hoped that I might at least get to try working with her soon. I would do my research and find the best possible way to work around whatever she needed me to fix.
As I watched her, I wondered what name might suit this fantastic animal. So far, I could tell that she was frightened and not afraid to run as far as need be to get away from me and the trailer. I stood leaning against the fence, my arms crossed against the steel.
“Should I give you a show name as well? Or should I wait on that?” I asked her out loud, watching as she gave a short whinny at the sound of my voice. She fled past me with a gust of wind that ruffled my hair back from my face. I gave a small smile at that having an idea.
“What about Flit?” I murmured, laughing some as she did as the name suggested. She flitted around the corral as gracefully as a butterfly. The dust trail behind her marked her path like the shining tail of a comet. Before long, I could barely make her out through all the dust she had thrown up. “And for a show name… How about Fleeting Glimpse?” I laughed at my own ingenuity as I gazed at my new mare.