Congratulations! I imagine that every day you spend with Tarsu since his accident must feel like a gift... but this must be like an exceptionally well-wrapped one. ;-)
Are the rubs ON her elbow, or on her belly? If they're on the elbow, your girth sounds too far forward. If they're on the belly, have you tried a ThinLine girth? I've yet to hear of a horse get galled by one of those, but there's a 30-day guarantee…
Barefoot Cheyenne with ThinLine Endurance Pad inside cover from a Skito Insert Pad, topped with Ultra ThinLine Sheepskin Comfort Pad and ThinLine shims. ThinLine dressage girth.
How about, once you make your start dot, move your cursor away from it a little in the direction you rode. It should make a box so that you can get the squiggle lines instead of just straight lines. But, your mouse has to be just a little bit away to change from hand to box.
So sorry no one answered at first, Sharon. Most of us have never hand-drawn on GE, so didn't want to mess you up :) Hopefully, Marirose got you squared away. Happy riding! Cindy
Hi Sharon, I'm sorry for not getting with you sooner. For handrawn: get on GE, click on 'add a path' (On the top, looks like 3 squares). Name the path, choose color, make the size of the line at least 2. Click on GE at the beginning of your ride, & draw away. If you move mouse to the top right side of GE a coouple circles w/ arrows appear, use the bottom one to move the GE page around. When you get all done, click OK. then Right click on the path in your list of places, click 'save as'. from your documents you can then download into a blog or to track logs. From there, you can copy & paste to your vet card. To measure the trail: right click on the path at GE, click copy. go to http://www.emaltd.net/google/gec/utilities/index.asp?l=en then paste the path from GE in the box. Click on british units, then calculate.
Hi There,
Still trying to get the hang of this thing. But it is the perfect place to have a nice Endurance blog! Did you notice our pictures kinda look the same? Your colors are better, though!