Well, at least that's the planned budget...let's see if he stays within it.
The fact that we got all the metal roofing material as leftover SWAG from the last film we did should help...:)
It sure is pretty. And such a lovely day to be out working, (or taking pics and not working)!
2 comments:
This is sooo incredible. You must come and build one for us! Free metal roofing rocks. We roofed the bard last year with it. The pool looks luscious in the background.
Very happy you are back in blog land. Glad you saw the pics of Sterling out and about. And his monkey, too!
Hi,
Thanks for visiting my blog I hope you found some of the information helpful.
Here are a few informative links to check out on Lyme’s:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyme_disease
http://www.netpets.org/horses/healthspa/lyme.html
http://www.myhorse.com/health/preventative/lyme_disease_in_horses_requires_health_treatment.aspx#top
http://www.lyme.org/otherdis/ld.html
If you like the horse and are thinking of taking him on, of course, it's your decision. But I can say that for myself having a few horses in the barn with Lyme is not a really big deal for us. when they get a recurrence occasionally we give them a course of doxycycline and then they are better for months at a time. It's an ongoing thing that just takes vigilance and it's not hard to deal with. So if you really loved this horse you are considering I wouldn't let it stop me as long as you know how to deal with the disease and know it is usually not debilitating for the horse, we still ride ours and the recurrences aren't all that often. I find it hard to answer this because I don't know your level of involvement or expertise with horses. My best advice would be to have him vetted by a reputable vet and ask them all the questions you would have regarding Lyme's and see if it's something you want to deal with.
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