February, 2010

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02/25/08, 7:56am…morning comes fast…

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

February 25th, 7:56am: Whoa…morning comes seconds after we close our eyes it seems. Wow. My last check of the AM is done, next shift comes in in about a half hour. He was laying down, Kathi had covered him back up with blankets (at last check last night he was still up, standing with his favorite blanket). He nickered a “good morning”, that’s always so cute in the quietness of the barn in the early morning. He took a good drink of water and now he’s set for a day of resting. He’ll be rolled over late morning or early afternoon. I told him he’d have a pretty peaceful day, not as busy as yesterday was.

02/25/08, 1:12am…Deb Sprague creates more Windchill items by popular demand

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

February 25th, 1:12am: Yes Lori Dalbec, I know I should get some rest, I will, IPicture  of Windchill and Walker purse by Deborah Sprague will…I just had to share an email from Deb Sprague. She’s been getting a bunch of requests for other pictures of Windchill and she’s created a beautiful purse – look at her work by clicking here.

02/24/08, 11:58pm…

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

February 24th, 11:58pm: No I haven’t forgotten folks…just been a busy, busy day. Wow, where to even begin. After Windchill’s 30+ hour stand, he wanted up this morning but could only stand for 20 minutes and then laid back down. A day’s worth of well-wishers gave him the ‘oomph’ he needed for his lift this evening and around 6pm or so he was back on his feet again. His newest guardian angel during the day is a new mare on this farm named Bonnie. She was adorable, watching him closely, lowering her head over the stall and nickering to him. And after one full day on this farm she’s been sold to proud new ‘parents’ Aaron & Kris, both of whom spent a good deal of time helping care for Windchill as well. Congratulations guys. Today was a day of goodwill and generosity. We have new friends from Bruno, MN (thanks again Maricle family!) And lots of new friends from Duluth and the surrounding area. I didn’t know my driveway could hold this many cars without collapsing or something. Todd brought us all a huge dinner which was wonderful! And I think we have enough strawberry yogurt for the moment, if Windchill gets to it all he’ll probably have a weight problem. Somehow I don’t think any of us would complain.

You know the one thing that will be hard for you to see if I ever do get that webcam going out there – a good one hopefully – is Windchill’s eyes. Windchill’s eyes are what capture people’s hearts. They shine with that quiet determination. They hold wonder, sadness, intelligence and love. I’m not making that up because I’m one of those insane ‘horse people’ – non-horse people have been out to visit in droves and they see him, they kneel by him and he touches them with his innocence and fierce desire to see all this through. It’s not an in your face sort of thing – it’s more powerful than that. It’s this quiet determination he has to keep breathing. Today  it was 40 degrees here. Two weeks ago it was 60 degrees colder. He was just as determined in the cold as he is now healing in this mild temperature reprieve. Amazing. We’re keeping warmer leg wraps on him now after our vet said his legs were colder than last time. Hopefully between that and being on his legs more the circulation is increasing in his legs. One more week til we’re in the clear on potential frostbite damage, so far no symptoms. He still doesn’t like his medicine, that’s downright cute. Internal organs are functioning normally. All this is good.

Windchill did very well today, soaking up the love and affection. Another animal healer and communicator stopped to visit. One told us about Windchill’s joints (sore but improving and nowhere near the pain he was in not too far back). Both said he was in better spirits. And one echoed what another had said – Windchill is sad. He’s not sad about where he is now – quite the opposite in fact. He’s profoundly saddened about his past life – that now that he knows there’s this other life he doesn’t understand why he went through what he did. You know what Windchill – neither do we.

02/24/08, 10:41am…

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

February 24th, 10:41am: Some quick updates – we have to go move bales out to a couple of pastures: Thanks so much to Lyle Shannon of Duluth for showing me how to set up videos. And Angela Vinson of IA let me know that my dates are off on my updates. Had she not been from IA I would have blamed it on time zone differences and explained that there was a lot of math involved so it couldn’t possibly be my error…but instead it’s a mixture of days blurring together, trying to keep this updated and I’m a guy and prone to letting details like that escape my consciousness. I think the dates went awry when I fell asleep typing an update two nights ago, because the dates were all wrong after that.

Okay, more importantly, we figure now that Windchill must’ve stayed up most of the night as well blowing out of the water his previous standing record. He was up for about 20 minutes this morning and then decided to lay back down and is sleeping comfortably. He shows every sign of being a kid who stayed up too late. I’m going to try to get the cam going today as it’s 20 degrees out and it seems to work when it’s warmer so you can keep trying the link above.

02/24/08, 9:11am…

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

February 24th, 9:11am: Trying to get the videos to work on here – does anyone know how to set them so they all don’t play at once so people can view them one at a time? I see the lifting crew is here – I’ll update more shortly. Windchill finally went down for rest late last night setting a new Windchill record of standing for around 30 hours! This morning he heard the chains of the winch getting ready and he’s making little ‘puppy’ noises, kind of little whines or grunts that he wants up NOW. We’re going to hoist him now, they’re waiting for me so gotta go.

02/23/08, 7:05pm: Windchill’s new record…25 hours standing…

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

February 23rd, 7:05pm: Well I hope you got a chance to view Windchill today – reception was intermittent so we had to keep resetting the laptop’s wireless. Windchill had a bunch of visitors today and made a lot of new friends. The 6pm lift crew were all out for his scheduled lift and he was standing there to greet everyone. He’s been up for 25 hours as of now! His little head keeps lowering and then he does everything a kid would do to not go to bed – munch, try to visit with people, lean his head on the stall wall. What an amazing will that little guy has. The Skorich Family of Virginia brought us chocolate chip cookies and a donation – thanks for coming all the way down here to visit the little guy folks.  At some point I’ll probably try to post the guest book of visitors who have come out to visit him so please don’t feel we don’t appreciate you and the many donations and supplies you have brought out. Stuff just keeps appearing out there – thanks for the hot chocolate with mini marshmellows (kids were complaining, apparently marshmellows make the cocoa) and to someone named Amanda who had a coffee company call me to send a shipment of coffee! What a really nice surprise. By the way, Rob Moniot, our farrier came out so you may have seen him trimming Windchill’s feet. Rob said his feet are looking pretty good and Windchill stood perfectly. If you’re looking for a good farrier, give him a call (715.363.2546)- he’s great!

Windchill’s best friend Case left today for his new home in Mankato. That puts Kisses in the stall next to him and we see a growing crush developing there. Kisses is probably one of our sweetest youngsters with a very soft loving personality. She was nuzzling and itching the little guy and we all stood there going “awwwwwww…” and then realized nobody had taken a picture. We’ll have to see how he likes having his ‘bedroom’ between two girls (Sunday is on the other side).

02/23/08, 12:18pm…Windchill cam

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

February 23rd, 12:18pm: Windchill is live! Not a great angle for him, I have the cam hanging on a rafter and the laptop set up on a ladder in the stall next door but it got signal so here he is (cam is off now as of 6pm). I don’t know if you could see how skinny he is but if you ever wanted a horse anatomy lesson, he is the lesson horse. He’s up to a 1 now on the 1-7 starvation measurement scale, that’s after two weeks of graining and feeding him.

(FYI in case you’re reading these late – I am re-running the entire Windchill story, every post, in the same order and at the same time each was posted just like it happened in 2008 so more than likely many of the links referenced in the posts no longer will work but in most cases I’ve left the posts exactly as originally written)

02/23/08, 8:55am: A Day in Windchill’s Life

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

February 23rd, 8:55am: I thought you might like a glimpse into a day in the life of Windchill. I’ll add more to it later, rounding out the evening but it will give you a fairly good idea on what his world looks like I think. A Day in Windchill’s Life

February 23, 2008: From a post I wrote in response to the question “Why?”

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

One thing I think that needs to be addressed is “why.” We’ve heard people say “why didn’t you just put him down… what a tremendous waste of resources…why spend the time keeping an animal alive…” That certainly would’ve been the easiest thing to do. Quick and easy, just the way our society has come to expect things. Who is going to miss an animal, right? I bet even those suggesting he should’ve “just been shot” (how do you become that callous?) have had a pet in their lifetime they would’ve done anything to save. Perhaps that’s why they’re hardened today. A special animal finds its way into your heart. It expects very little in return. For you business types the “return on investment” for what you spend feeding and taking care of your pet produces an incredible return in love, companionship and adoration. You don’t have to be a horse lover – you cat lovers know what it’s like to talk to your cat as you get ready in the morning or have it sit next to you at night while you read or watch TV. You dog lovers know what it’s like to be working on projects around your place and have that constant presence of a being that thinks you’re the greatest. (The difference between cats and dogs – and I have both – is that cats know they’re smarter than you, dogs think you’re just brilliant: “What! You’re letting me out to go potty! That’s great!….what? You’re letting me back in the house now? What a great idea – where do you come up with all these brilliant ideas master!”). We got a call from a gentleman who cares for gerbils. He had some tips to share. For virtually any species, there’s somebody who loves and cares for them.

So back to the “why.” We knew it was a battle with odds overwhelmingly stacked against the little guy even surviving the first night, much less the bitter cold that followed for night after night. We knew he’d have major expenses if he survived. Our assumption was that it would go on my charge cards and over time they’d get paid off – worry about that later. The “why” is a series of ‘because’ answers: Because we had to try; because we would want someone to try and save us if we were in the same awful circumstance; because humans had put him in this position and because it was our duty as humans to try and get him out of it – he didn’t ask to be born, he didn’t ask to be neglected — all he asked for when he called to us across that wind-swept, bitterly cold pasture was to please help him stop hurting. He needed us, he deserved that help, and he got it. And lastly, because he is as much one of the Lord’s beings as any one of us. He was no less deserving of a chance at life, and possibly even more so to make up for what his life had become up til then with his slow death march through the valley of starvation and neglect. I think someday we as people will in part be judged in how we treated those beings that God entrusted us with dominion over. It’s a measure of who we are.

Across this country and in fact the world,  people have been praying and sending him notes of encouragement.  They have been sending donations, and they have been coming out to see him and help with him in droves! The Ericksen’s (the Larry and Char - the horse people I told you about earlier) actually printed out his guestbook yesterday and put it in a three ring binder for us to keep near Windchill – all 193 pages. Windchill’s amazing will to survive, and his willingness to accept us humans even after all this is an inspiration to those who have been hurt in some way. Windchill probably doesn’t understand that he’s the definition of resolve. He doesn’t fight for his life every day because he will possibly be in the paper. He does this because he wants to live.  It’s his quiet testament that there is power in hope. There is power in prayer. Unintentionally, he brought all of you together – and you have all made carrying the load so much easier. For that we are so grateful. And that’s “why.”

Windchill belongs to the world. We’re just lucky enough that he’s here with us.

Jeff Tucker

One other thing – we didn’t choose for Windchill to live – he did. He asked for our help across that pasture, we gave it. His continued existence is the result of his intense desire to live. Had he chosen to let go and die, at most we could’ve made him feel comfortable until he passed and then we’d have been there with him so he didn’t face it alone. Just wanted to clarify that for those that judge without having looked into Windchill’s bright eyes for themselves.

02/23/08, 7:30am…

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

February 23rd, 7:30am: First a quick note to the crew coming out this morning – Windchill is still on his feet from our lift last night. So we don’t need to do the lift this morning at 9am. In a non-related update to this note and for future reference for anybody else who has wonderful volunteers who agree to come out even early in the morning to lift your rescue pony – remember to type your “quick note” before they have left their homes. But it was sure great to see everyone! Consider this a test of the emergency Windchill hoist system.