
a
buddy for masada
by shannon knapp
I
first met Masada in Texas about ten years ago, when I got back into
horses after a long hiatus.
Signing
up for a Learn to Ride Western class at the adult ed center,
I was paired with Masada for the duration of the class. He was then
about 12 years old, stood a comfortable 14.2 hands high, and was a predominantly
white horse speckled with black. Something about him evoked a loner
and a stoic: he appeared to know full well what his job was, and seemed
ambivalent about it. His job (in this phase of his life) was to teach
riders how to ride.
I
loved him right off, as he was gentle and slow with me, back in the
saddle after many years away. The instructor of the class loved him,
too, and she soon bought him for her own. An Arabian, Masada has a particularly
bouncy trot that can be very difficult for a new rider. Because of this,
Masada had been having back problems his current barn manager didnt
recognize or didnt care to address. I followed Masada and the
instructor to a new barn, continuing to relearn skills and simply spend
time with Masada. He was not an impulsive or emotional horse, and didnt
seem to mind being separated from other horses. In fact, he didnt
seem to have any real emotional ties to anyone, horse or human. Although
we knew little of his history and nothing of his lineage, we knew that
his name, Masada, meant fortress, referring to a location during a specific
battle. The strong but sad name seemed to fit him.
After
a while, I began to pursue buying my own horse, so my husband began
riding Masada. They were a good pair, and when that instructor told
me she was going to sell Masada, I knew we could not find a better horse.
So we bought Masada, and I found Susan Denero, Black-Eyed Sue,
my mare (see earlier article in WNC WOMAN: Borrowing Freedom). Later,
we decided to move them and us to North Carolina. After we made the
move, and it was only Sue and Masada rather than a barn full of horses,
Sue was restless and anxious, while Masada was his usual loner self.
Sue seemed particularly upset by not having a horse friend to groom,
run, play and swat flies with. Masada didnt appear to miss all
the other horses, or to ever want or need that sort of bonding and affection.
Sue, however, was lost without it. So we looked for and found Dreamer
(our Palomino) to meet Sues emotional needs, and our herd began
to grow.
With each arrival (and we are at 13 and holding, for now!) Masada has
been our baby-sitter horse: new horses are always turned
out in pasture with Masada first, as they get their bearings in their
new surroundings. His calmness and equanimity inspire confidence in
the new arrivals, and Masada has always been happy to help in this way.
Yet he has never seemed to become attached to anyone or to mind when
separated again later.
He
was not, however, the first horse we turned out with Lucky, a 20+ year
old starvation case who came to us in early January of this year. Lucky
was an emaciated black gelding who was on stall rest and then limited
pasture time, while Masada was on vacation from his work
as a therapy horse at Horse Sense of the Carolinas. After several months
of rehab and care, Lucky was ready to move to a bigger pasture at the
main barn, and as both Lucky and Masada are the same age and have the
same laid-back disposition, we turned them out together so the youngsters
wouldnt pester them. When Masada would come in to work,
Lucky would stand at the fence and holler for him, which was to be expected.
What we didnt expect was when Masada started to cry after Lucky.
Masada
had bonded with Lucky. It was so unexpected we hadnt even looked
for it. After all, hed been turned out with 10+ horses in the
past 4 years, and had barely even seemed to notice when any of the other
horses had been moved from his pasture. Lucky brings out a side of Masada
wed never seen before, and Masada brings out a young, playful
Lucky, something we never thought wed see of the sad, thin creature
that came to us in January. They are now permanent pasture mates, and
are currently joint baby-sitting the new mustang at the farm. Soon it
will be just the two of them again, and theyll go everywhere and
do everything together: eat, drink, graze, snooze. They gallop off like
young ponies when they get off work. They groom each other. They stand
in the shelter during the heat of the day, head to tail, swishing flies
off each others face, in a slow, methodical way, like breathing.
Standing in the field like that, one black horse and one white horse,
they look like the Yin/Yang symbol balancing each other.
Shannon
Knapp
is the president and founder of Horse
Sense of the Carolinas, Inc, offering Equine Assisted Psychotherapy
in WNC. Horses have been a significant part of the healing process for
her, and she is honored and grateful to be able to share the wisdom
and grace of horses with others. Shannon lives on a farm with her husband,
Richard, and their dogs, cats and horses.