Wednesday, June 24, 2015

21 signs you’re a horse nut

Clicking at slow-moving cars, ‘trotting’ to the shop, rocking a rider tan and using all your annual leave on going to events. Sound familiar? Here are 21 signs that you’re a horse nut

stable stereotypes

1 Clicking at cars and people — anything that moves — when they are moving slowly.

2 Being able to recite your vet’s number from memory, but you can’t even remember the name of your doctor.

3 Trimming your horse’s ears and fetlocks on a weekly basis, but having no idea when you last saw a hairdresser.

4 Putting shopping bags on the back seat, because your car boot is full with horsey stuff.

5 Walking into Tescos wearing coloured breeches, knee-length patterned socks and pumps. You can’t guarantee your face isn’t dirty or there isn’t straw in your hair either.

6 Finger nails— chewed, worn or broken, and rarely clean.

7 When your family member or friend falls off, you automatically run to the horse first.

8 Forget farmer tans, you’ve been rocking a rider one for years. Your face and arms look like you’ve been in the Caribbean for months, but your legs are always white.

9 Going into work on a Monday morning for a rest following a hectic horsey weekend.

10 Telling someone to ‘kick on’ when you want them to do something, even when they’re not on a horse.

11 Saying you need to ‘trot’ to the shop, bank or around the corner.

12 Finding plaiting bands, half packets of polos, a mane comb and other such items in the bottom of your handbag.

13 Having two wardrobes — one for best and one for the yard.

14 Talking of wardrobes, your horse’s is at least three times the size of yours.

15 You describe everything as chestnut, dark bay, grey…

16 You can take or leave clothes shopping, but walking into a tack shop excites you.

17 Paying for a several-thousand-pound saddle on your credit card and calling it an investment.

18 Thinking it strange that people waste their annual leave lying on a beach. Competing is your holiday.

19 Declining after work drinks because you need to clean tack for tomorrow’s competition.

20 Keeping hand lotion on your desk to mask garlic smells after mixing early-morning feeds.

21 Eyeing up hedges and logs — anything jumpable — on the side of the road while you’re driving along

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