HotRodZilla
GOD BLESS AMERICA
In the spring of 1984, I had a Palomino mare. She was half Quarter-Horse and half Thoroughbred. She was supposed to be awesome. She wasn't. That was one of the laziest useless horses we ever owned. On her behalf, she was very kind and loved people. She was built well and had good blood, so my dad bred her to a beautiful black and white Paint stud named Scoot; Short for Scoot-n-Bright. Turned out, that mare made absolutely beautiful babies!
In the spring of 1985, I was 13 and up early for a track meet. I knew the mare was due, with her first colt, any day and when I went to check on her, she was cleaning off a beautiful paint stud. When he was born, he was named Scoot's Golden Straw, in reference to his mom and dad's lines. It's a horse thing.
"Scoot" was born a dark grullo Tobiano Paint. Holy ****, he was beautiful, and I was the first person to ever see him and touch him. My dad immediately told me Scoot was mine. As Scoot grew, he became a very dark, almost black and white Paint with borders around all his color. He had a part in his mane, so the top 8 inches fell to the left and the rest to the right.
I lived and breathed that horse. I kinda had to; every time I turned around, we were taking him somewhere to show him off and people were offering ridiculous money for him. Scoot was stout, smart, fast as Hell, and gentle as any horse could be. People couldn't believe he was a stud because he was so well behaved.
With my dad's help, I broke Scoot and trained him. He was a Hellavua roping horse. He was fast out of the gate, knew how to chase, and wasn't so tall I couldn't bail off him. We had our days...He is the only animal I ever owned that put me in the hospital:
We were both young, I was training him and a couple miles from the barn, I decided to open him up to out do my best friend's horse. Basically, I was an *****. Scoot spooked on a tire that was in the field for some reason, dodging right and then left. I came off Scoot's right side at almost a full run and fell into a cactus, which rolled me underneath him. Scoot tried to clear me and ended up hitting me on the right side with the fronts of his back feet. He broke 4 ribs and punctured my right lung. My #4 and 5 ribs are still tweaked inward. Thank God he stopped, because I had to get on him and ride him 2 miles to the barn while it started to rain. I un-saddled him, groomed him, put him away and walked to the house with my friend. When I almost passed out at the table, my dad rushed my dumb *** the hour long trip to the hospital; where I stayed for 2 days.
I fell off that boy a few more times, up to include a couple years ago. I posted that here. Stupid horse!!
We gathered tons of cattle, picked up tons of girls, won tons of prizes, and had a great time together. Scoot was like riding a Cadillac. He had a wide back, and was the smoothest horse I've ever been on. He never bucked, not once. Scoot was amazing, and I loved him very much. He loved me too, but probably mostly because I fed him.
Last year, that ******* got his foot caught in his corral fencing and pulled some some ligaments in his right front foot. He limped for a while, but was getting better, and older.
About 3 weeks ago, Scoot did something, only him and God know what, but he really hurt himself that time. Since he lived an hour away with my mom, she did what she could to help him heal. When Scoot didn't seem to get better, she scheduled an appointment with the vet around my work schedule. That visit was two days ago, Friday, the 24th.
As soon as I saw him, I knew it was bad. His front foot wasnt working right, and he hurt. I got him into the trailer and he just stuck his head in my chest and sighed. The vet told us what I already knew. There was no fixing my boy. He had torn all the ligaments in his right lower leg and had lost all his suspension. Scoot was in a lot of pain, and surgery that cost as much as my house would only make him slightly better. I had to be the adult and choose between Scoot's pain or mine.
So after 30 years of friendship and dependence, I had to agree to end Scoot's life. I cried like a kid, and I hope Scoot understood how much I loved him. I wasnt gonna post this, but I cant stop being sad. It is STUPID to be this way over an animal, but I loved that horse more than most people.
What makes it so hard is my connection to my dad through Scoot. The only thing my dad loved more that him was our family. Dad was so proud to have Scoot. We could have never afforded to buy a horse like him. My dad would come outside for hours while we worked Scoot. My dad made sure Scoot was treated right and he loved that I could work, hunt, screw off, do whatever I wanted to do on the back of that horse. I guess losing Scoot reminds me even more that my dad and the things he loved are disappearing.
Scoot has some nationally ranked kids and grandkids running around the rodeo and roping circut. He made absolutely beautiful horses with great builds and good demeanors. I'm hoping he was able to breed my daughter's Arabian mare, but we'll see. I'd love to start over again with one of his babies, buy there's no replacing him, only attempting to fill this void.
Dammit...I hate this!!
In the spring of 1985, I was 13 and up early for a track meet. I knew the mare was due, with her first colt, any day and when I went to check on her, she was cleaning off a beautiful paint stud. When he was born, he was named Scoot's Golden Straw, in reference to his mom and dad's lines. It's a horse thing.
"Scoot" was born a dark grullo Tobiano Paint. Holy ****, he was beautiful, and I was the first person to ever see him and touch him. My dad immediately told me Scoot was mine. As Scoot grew, he became a very dark, almost black and white Paint with borders around all his color. He had a part in his mane, so the top 8 inches fell to the left and the rest to the right.
I lived and breathed that horse. I kinda had to; every time I turned around, we were taking him somewhere to show him off and people were offering ridiculous money for him. Scoot was stout, smart, fast as Hell, and gentle as any horse could be. People couldn't believe he was a stud because he was so well behaved.
With my dad's help, I broke Scoot and trained him. He was a Hellavua roping horse. He was fast out of the gate, knew how to chase, and wasn't so tall I couldn't bail off him. We had our days...He is the only animal I ever owned that put me in the hospital:
We were both young, I was training him and a couple miles from the barn, I decided to open him up to out do my best friend's horse. Basically, I was an *****. Scoot spooked on a tire that was in the field for some reason, dodging right and then left. I came off Scoot's right side at almost a full run and fell into a cactus, which rolled me underneath him. Scoot tried to clear me and ended up hitting me on the right side with the fronts of his back feet. He broke 4 ribs and punctured my right lung. My #4 and 5 ribs are still tweaked inward. Thank God he stopped, because I had to get on him and ride him 2 miles to the barn while it started to rain. I un-saddled him, groomed him, put him away and walked to the house with my friend. When I almost passed out at the table, my dad rushed my dumb *** the hour long trip to the hospital; where I stayed for 2 days.
I fell off that boy a few more times, up to include a couple years ago. I posted that here. Stupid horse!!
We gathered tons of cattle, picked up tons of girls, won tons of prizes, and had a great time together. Scoot was like riding a Cadillac. He had a wide back, and was the smoothest horse I've ever been on. He never bucked, not once. Scoot was amazing, and I loved him very much. He loved me too, but probably mostly because I fed him.
Last year, that ******* got his foot caught in his corral fencing and pulled some some ligaments in his right front foot. He limped for a while, but was getting better, and older.
About 3 weeks ago, Scoot did something, only him and God know what, but he really hurt himself that time. Since he lived an hour away with my mom, she did what she could to help him heal. When Scoot didn't seem to get better, she scheduled an appointment with the vet around my work schedule. That visit was two days ago, Friday, the 24th.
As soon as I saw him, I knew it was bad. His front foot wasnt working right, and he hurt. I got him into the trailer and he just stuck his head in my chest and sighed. The vet told us what I already knew. There was no fixing my boy. He had torn all the ligaments in his right lower leg and had lost all his suspension. Scoot was in a lot of pain, and surgery that cost as much as my house would only make him slightly better. I had to be the adult and choose between Scoot's pain or mine.
So after 30 years of friendship and dependence, I had to agree to end Scoot's life. I cried like a kid, and I hope Scoot understood how much I loved him. I wasnt gonna post this, but I cant stop being sad. It is STUPID to be this way over an animal, but I loved that horse more than most people.
What makes it so hard is my connection to my dad through Scoot. The only thing my dad loved more that him was our family. Dad was so proud to have Scoot. We could have never afforded to buy a horse like him. My dad would come outside for hours while we worked Scoot. My dad made sure Scoot was treated right and he loved that I could work, hunt, screw off, do whatever I wanted to do on the back of that horse. I guess losing Scoot reminds me even more that my dad and the things he loved are disappearing.
Scoot has some nationally ranked kids and grandkids running around the rodeo and roping circut. He made absolutely beautiful horses with great builds and good demeanors. I'm hoping he was able to breed my daughter's Arabian mare, but we'll see. I'd love to start over again with one of his babies, buy there's no replacing him, only attempting to fill this void.
Dammit...I hate this!!