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2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Publisher
hosts horse workshops
The Sisters Rodeo
Grounds resonated with the sounds of jangling harness and the calls of teamsters
when the Small Farmer's Journal hosted the Workhorse Workshops
there on October 15-17.
Lynn Miller, publisher of
the Journal, teamed up with long-time friend and fellow workhorse
clinician, Dr. Doug Hammill of Kalispell, Montana, to teach the workshops.
They also enlisted the aid
of expert teamsters Mike MacIntosh of Redmond and Tom Triplett, Hammill's
father-in-law, to help the 30 participants during the hands-on sessions.
This is the first time Miller
and Hammill have taught together and the first time the workshops have
been held in Sisters. Miller has spent the past 30 years traveling around
the U.S. teaching about workhorses. Hammill holds a workshop at his home
ranch in Montana every year.
"Doug says he's thinking he'll
come back and do this again," said Miller.
Participants came from several
states, many from the East Coast and the Midwest. From 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
each day they learned about the essentials of working draft horses. Harness
design and fit, driving principles, harnessing and unharnessing were all
demonstrated.
In the hands-on sessions,
four teams were utilized. Participants practiced the basics of driving
and maneuvering a team with a variety of exercises. Plowing and log skidding
were also included.
The teams of Belgians and
Percherons were provided by Miller and the Lazy Z ranch.
According to Miller, the best
information available estimates that in the 1980s there were around 200,000
working horses in the US.
"Now the estimates say there
are around 400,000," he said.
And people need to learn how
to handle the gentle giants.
Nels Nelson of Jefferson,
New Hampshire and John Crater of Long Valley, New Jersey braved cross-country
air travel to participate.
"I've worked draft horses
a long time," Crater said. "I didn't think I could learn any more about
them, but I have been surprised."
Proving that learning never
ends, Clarence Stancil, 82, of Tenino, Washington, came to watch and listen.
An artificial knee prevented him from driving, but the sparkle in his
eye showed his delight in the workhorse world.
"I've been working horses
most of my long life," he said. "There's always something new that a horse
can teach you."
Terry Jacobsen calls Wales,
North Dakota, home. He doesn't farm his organic farm with horses, yet.
"Being here adds a depth to
the experience," he said. "I wanted to start out right. I've enjoyed being
in Sisters, and learning a gentle way to handle horses." |
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