1963-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1963 February Voice | Page 21

Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse Having Reporter (Continued from page 3) Mrs. J. Glenn Turner, Dallas, Tex.; Third, Midnight Shining Sun, Mrs. H. Fiskind; Fourth, Sun’s Oomph, Dr. and Mrs. H. Fiskind; Tied for Fifth, Go Boy's Hurricane, Evergreen Ranch, Midway City, Calif, and Lovely Midnight, Mrs. Ada B. Dickey, Worthington, Minn. Odd Horse Personalities A recent letter from G. Slott of Pass- A-Grille, Florida deals with “Odd Personalities Found in Horses.” Here is what friend Slott had to say; Do horses have personalities and idiosyncrasies like people? They sure­ ly do I A breeder with a band of brood mares and among them a barren mare, or one not expected to foal this season, will remove either of these two mares just before the foals are expected. If he does not, he is taking the chance of losing a foal for either one of these two mares might steal a foal from its own mare. They keep between the foal and mare, fighting the foal’s mare off. This could go on until the foal dies from lack of nourishment. The barren mare does not reason beyond the fact that she wants a foal. Then there is the horse that de­ velops attachment for one person. During the time such a horse is in the ring the person must hide, for if he does not the horse, seeing him will walk up to him and stand, thus com­ pletely ruining its ring performance. A breeder told me about a colt he had which was always getting into some kind of difficulty in the field all the time. Whenever this happened he brought the colt into the same stall in the barn until his cut or lameness or whatever he was recovering from was corrected. He sold him because he was so prone to injury. Several years later he made a trade with another breeder for a mare and colt, sight unseen. After the horses were delivered right into the field, he heard some squeals and hurried to check. He was amazed to see a horse going over the fence into the barn­ yard. He ran into the barn. Yes, you guessed it—there was his accident- prone colt standing in front of his favorite stall waiting to be admitted! 19 Several years ago we purchased a weanling colt. We put him in a small field with a stream running through it. He began falling off in flesh. We took more grain in a bucket to him. He had not eaten the grain he had. Yet, when he saw the bucket he would run up to us, smell the grain and walk away. So, my daughter went to the stream and filled the bucket -with water. This was what he wanted. He had been right there with water, but he want­ ed it from a bucket. Evidently his mare had never taken him to a stream to drink. We let him into the stream then, he pawed the water, and had a grand time. Whenever he ran to us when we had a bucket from that time on, it was for grain. meeting young lady horses, the boys are wearing tail coats, the girls wed­ ding gowns. IT ALL LOOKS pretty inviting, to a horse. And there is no mention of surly waiters and bellhops with their hands out for tips. If the idea works for horses, maybe they will try it for people. Is Dobbin Draggin’? Send Him to Florida The following is a clipping from St. Petersburg Times: Is your horse hurting? Is he frett­ ing, pawing his little stall, off his oats? Is he shivering these cold mornings, generally run down, kind of peaked looking, and running like he’s got an anvil tied to each hoof? Have you caught him reading travel folders lately? Do vou have a horse? IF YOU DO, and his symptoms are showing, a neat brochure that tum­ bled out of today’s mail might have the answer. Why not send your horse to Florida for the winter? The people at Farmsworth Farms, Ocala, say they have just the place for tired horses. It looks like a better deal than people get. There are doctors for old horses, teachers for young ones and recreation directors for them all. For girl horses, the brochure says there are plenty of single boy horses around, and a social director on duty. YOU MIGHT try some of these glowing promises out on your horse: “Rest, rehabilitation and retraining for older horses to move many a breadwinner along to a successful comeback:” “Breaking and training for younger horses, plus year round nutrition of good grass, good water and healthy sunshine. ...” Cartoons show happy horses run­ ning and'-they’re wearing track suitj, playing tennis in nifty spofts togs, arid "Your Complete Apparel Headquarters" "Tennessee Walking Horse" • • • • Riding Habits Accessories Special Orders Novelties tElje (Qmtlitg #ltop 613 Central Ave. St. Petersburg, Fla. Phone 825-8131 Free Parking in Rear of Store" THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR EXPERIENCE MORE THAN THIRTY-* YEARS I HAVE PROMOTED, SUPPLIED AND SERVICED THE BEST INSURANCE FOR SHOW HORSES AND REGISTERED LIVESTOCK ■ 'i M - AVAILABLE^ ’ REST AT EASE WHEN YOU INSURE THE "RICHARD WAY" SEE, CALL OR WRITE C. C. RICHARD FU 9-6123 WARTRACE, TENN.