by SydneyandStorm » Tue Feb 17, 2015 4:18 pm
Username: apart
Barn: Sionnach Stables
Show name: Fhinné de Taibhsí, meaning 'Witness of Ghosts'.
Call name: Fhinné
Gender: Mare
Age: 25 years
Height: 18.1 hands
Breed: Shire
Discipline: Cross-country
Head: 10
Neck: 9
Shoulders: 8
Forelegs: 12
Chest: 8
Barrel: 8
Hindquarters: 11
Hind legs: 10
Feet: 8
Action: 12
Coat: 8
Intelligence: 4
Willingness: 2
Trainability: 4
Natural talent: 11
Training: +3
Attitude: Sensitive
Shows entered:
Shows won:
Grade:
Breeding fee: 2,000c
Ee Aa crcr zz FF dd chch gg tt oo sbsb splspl rr lplp ww
Last edited by
SydneyandStorm on Tue Dec 29, 2015 5:59 am, edited 13 times in total.
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SydneyandStorm
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by landofmakebelieve » Tue Feb 17, 2015 11:57 pm
Username: piaffes in the snow
Barn: Briar Hill English Facility
Show name: BH Velvet Finest
Call name: Velvet
Gender: Mare
Age: 3 Years
Height: 18.2hh
Breed: Shire
Discipline: Three Day
Breeding fee: Closed
Short story: Velvet wrote:Looking back as far as I possibly can remember, my first clear memory is the day that I first met the outside world. As a young foal, I was tiny and weak, and so for the first three weeks of life I was kept in the stables.
A groom came in and clipped a lead to my dear mother's leather halter and lead her out of the stall. Of course, I stumbled after her, protesting leaving my home in the warm stall. With the lulling nickers of my mother, however, I eventually relaxed and walked calmly, yet cautiously along behind her.
When we came to the end of the barn, I stopped dead in my tracks. It was so bright out there! Whinnying frantically to my dam, I began to panick. This outside world terrified me, yet I could not live inside forever, and mother was getting farther and farther from me.
When mother heard my panicked calls, she too stopped, and once again encouraged me with her comforting, familiar voice. Tentitavely, I took a few steps into the stone path to the paddocks, my knees shaking. I whinnied once more to my mother who answered with a soft snort.
After many moments I just seemed to settle, and walked quickly to catch my mother. And so our journey carried on, down the stone path, through the willow trees and finally to the white-fenced paddocks. I was alarmed to find many other foals frollicking while their dams' grazed quietly nearby. Mother tossed her long mane and whinnied welcome to her companions. As soon as she was free in the field, she trotted purposefully toward the other mothers. I followed, and by her side is where I stayed for the rest of that day.
And there you have it. My first memory.
Last edited by
landofmakebelieve on Wed Feb 18, 2015 2:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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.
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by waldeinsamkeit. » Wed Feb 18, 2015 8:55 am
do you think I could change her to a warm blood if I get her. I need horses, but I have no use for a shire
Username:
Barn:
Show name:
Call name:
Gender: Mare
Age:
Height:
Breed:
Discipline:
Breeding fee:
Short story:
╭
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx╮
'hello, I'm waldeinsamkeit.
but you can call me walde, or sam
I prefer the her, she pronouns thanks
i currently am interested in horse
or wolf rps, so pm me if you have a
semi-literate or literate one uvu' ╰
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx╯
my howrse ✧ credit
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waldeinsamkeit.
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by Cooluser1615 » Thu Feb 26, 2015 11:17 am
Username: HeroHorse
Barn: Sionnach Stables
Show name: Fhinné de Taibhsí, meaning 'Witness of Ghosts'.
Call name: Fhinné
Gender: Mare
Age: Three years old
Height: 18.1 hands high
Breed: Shire
Discipline: Cross-country
Breeding fee: 3,500c
Short story:
A long time ago, from a horse's point of view, Fhinné de Taibhsí shared a stall with her dam. The stall- the entire livery stable, in fact -was described by the humans as safe, modern and free from the dangers of the outside world. That was true, up to a point. Yet Fhinné was but an innocent, ever-curious foal and neither the roomy stall nor her caring dam could prevent her from looking through the stall bars at the goings on of the stable. The sights which Fhinné saw were interesting enough, but there was only one which haunts her memory to this very day.
It was a cold morning in one of the earlier months of spring; about early March or late February. A cool gust of wind wafted into the stable block- the double doors were both cast open. It was not the breeze itself that caught Fhinné's attention, but what the breeze blew into the stable. Thirteen swallows, darting around in the wind as though they were leaves and not birds. Fhinné's eyes fell on one bird, who had fallen behind the small flock. The creature turned its head as though looking around the barn and, to her horror, plummeted to the ground. An icy chill seemed to run down the young foal's spine and she felt that she heard a noise, so faint as to have possibly sprung from the wild realms of her youthful imagination. Then again, perhaps the sound bore a deeper, darker origin than that. Either way, it was the first time that Fhinné saw death. It was by no means the last.
Last edited by
Cooluser1615 on Fri Feb 27, 2015 8:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Cooluser1615
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by SydneyandStorm » Fri Feb 27, 2015 11:54 pm
HeroHorse wrote:Username: HeroHorse
Barn: Sionnach Stables
Show name: Fhinné de Taibhsí, meaning 'Witness of Ghosts'.
Call name: Fhinné
Gender: Mare
Age: Three years old
Height: 18.1 hands high
Breed: Shire
Discipline: Cross-country
Breeding fee: 3,500c
Short story:
A long time ago, from a horse's point of view, Fhinné de Taibhsí shared a stall with her dam. The stall- the entire livery stable, in fact -was described by the humans as safe, modern and free from the dangers of the outside world. That was true, up to a point. Yet Fhinné was but an innocent, ever-curious foal and neither the roomy stall nor her caring dam could prevent her from looking through the stall bars at the goings on of the stable. The sights which Fhinné saw were interesting enough, but there was only one which haunts her memory to this very day.
It was a cold morning in one of the earlier months of spring; about early March or late February. A cool gust of wind wafted into the stable block- the double doors were both cast open. It was not the breeze itself that caught Fhinné's attention, but what the breeze blew into the stable. Thirteen swallows, darting around in the wind as though they were leaves and not birds. Fhinné's eyes fell on one bird, who had fallen behind the small flock. The creature turned its head as though looking around the barn and, to her horror, plummeted to the ground. An icy chill seemed to run down the young foal's spine and she felt that she heard a noise, so faint as to have possibly sprung from the wild realms of her youthful imagination. Then again, perhaps the sound bore a deeper, darker origin than that. Either way, it was the first time that Fhinné saw death. It was by no means the last.
Congrats, HeroHorse! What a cute little story and a very unique memory! <3
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