cc` !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> My Dragon's Lair Sharing is the reason for my being...: Adopt a Mustang (Wild Horse) or Burro!

My Dragon's Lair Sharing is the reason for my being...

Altered and added new content 10-4-07 Important 5-4-07 No longer Child safe because of the links inside sites included here. Adult Humor is posted here. Template errors still. E shows wrong, and Netscape shows mostly correct. Activly learning HTML to correct and improve. Be it fun or serious I hope you enjoy and take away with you what I find to share. LI

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Adopt a Mustang (Wild Horse) or Burro!

This website is owned and created by Nancy Kerson, a private citizen. Information about BLM adoptions is offered as a service, to help mustangs find homes.

Please direct adoption questions to the BLM, not to me.

This website:
Copyright 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
All Rights Reserved.
I am happy to share, but please give me a credit when you "borrow" things off my website! Thanks! Just say, "author, Nancy Kerson http://www.mustangs4us.com/ "



Sparky: from First Touch to First Ride To First Show And Wilderness Trail Riding!

Q. WHY WOULD YOU WANT
TO ADOPT A MUSTANG?


Ladybug & Janet Tipton

A. THE REASONS ARE MANY!

Click on each underlined item to read more:


Photo: California BLM
One man's experience:
For the last ten years, I have been using my Mustangs as Mounted Posse horses, and they just work out great. Once a year, our Posse takes a 150 mile ride across the old Mojave Trail. Each year that I have gone I have taken a Mustang. I even brought along another one for the Drag rider. After that trip, he was purchased by one of the riders, as she no longer wanted to ride her Arab. She has ridden him ever since.

I have been a big advocate for these horses, and believe in them. When I used to buy, sell and train horses, I would buy mustangs from herds in New Mexico and Texas, and even Mexico. These horses have proven to alot of unbelievers that they are worth having.

I recently took a non believer to Nevada, and we got a mustang for him. He, too, has changed his opinion.

The real reason I chose these horses was the price, and the fact that they are part of our western history. It wasn't until I owned one that I found out what great horses they are. I can truly say that my horse Dot, a white leopard appaloosa mustang, is my best friend. Once you own one, they hook you!

- Doug
Gorman, California BLM Volunteer

Pages in this section:

Gallery Of HMA's (See what horses from each Herd Area look like)

Also of interest: BLM government statistics about each HMA: http://www.wildhorseandburro.blm.gov/statistics/index.htm

Sound Feet, Sound Minds
"Mother Nature Breeds A better Horse"


Wells Fargo Bank uses three mustangs in their stable of horses to pull their famous stagecoaches! They appreciate the mustang's soundness, never needing shoes, and their quiet minds.

Experienced horse people like mustangs because of their sound feet and sane minds. Horses on the range, growing up in a functioning natural herd structure, are socialized in a way that few domestics can even come close to. They know their manners! They know where their feet are. They are masters of body language communication. They respect their leaders. They are wise and sure-footed in uneven terrain. And they know the difference between a mountain lion and a piece of debris in the wind. They don't waste calories, tending to be less "flighty" than domestics, and thus have incredible endurance.


Chance, a mustang mare owned by Arizona Lindy, illustrates the versatility of the hardy mustang - she excels in both endurance and arena competition

Char Antuzzi competes each year in the Tevis Cup Endurance Ride, riding a mustang named Sir Galahad who was rounded up with other wild mustangs by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.

"I like the mustangs because to me, the day they are born they do an endurance ride," Antuzzi said.

Many horseback riders pick Arabians because they are born in the desert, but mustangs have survival skills that allow them to expend the least amount of energy possible and stay alive, Antuzzi said.
"Because they always have a reserve, they'll never run themselves into the ground," Antuzzi said.

They can also recognize danger faster than many other horses, she said. On one trail ride, Sir Galahad stopped, his ears perked up and he started quivering. Antuzzi did not understand why he would not go anywhere until she saw what lay in their path.

"Around the bend there was a pack of coyotes," Antuzzi said. "And the horse behind me was clueless."

These equines stay aware of the dangers in the wild and sustain themselves water hole to water hole, she said. Nine-year-old Sir Galahad has covered 1,000 endurance miles, finishing 15 minutes past the cutoff two years ago and earned his buckle last year. Riders earn a Tevis Cup buckle if they complete 100 miles in the time allotted.

"Mustangs are consistent," Antuzzi said. "They don't go fast, but they trot up a hill, down a hill, over logs, through creeks. They just maintain this forward momentum."

by Tanya Roscorla, who can be reached at tanyar@goldcountrymedia.com. http://www.auburnjournal.com/articles/2006/08/01/news/top_stories/03tevis1.txt

The US Marine Corps Color Guard uses palomino mustangs exclusively
Genetic Vigor

Contrary to the commonly held opinion that mustangs are inbred, Mustangs actually enjoy the highest level of genetic health of all horses. This could change in the future, but for now, however, this is the case. The Mustang gene pools are healthy and vigorous, with excellent genetic variability. No HYPP here. No Doc-O-Lena Disease.

Good Health, Easy Keepers

Range-hardened mustangs are tough and inclined to good health. Countless adopters can relate tales of mustangs surviving terrible injuries and illnesses that would surely have killed the average horse within a short time. Due to hundred of years living in harsh conditions, they are "easy keepers" - seldom requiring expensive supplements or rich feeds. Living on the range, mustangs have learned, generation after generation, not to waste calories. In this way, they tend to be level-headed, calm, easy-going animals - not the skittish, flighty creatures often conjured up by the word "wild."


Horses that can look this good when they live HERE will thrive with regular feed, water and shelter and vet care

Adventure & Personal Growth & Satisfaction

Jacqui Crews of Virginia, with one of her mustangs


Efren's new mustang from Calico Mtns can already perform tricks!

Many people, like myself, find that the experience of earning a wild horse's trust, and then training it to become a wonderful saddle horse is an exciting and meaningful experience that enriches their lives tremendously.


An adventure begins: A newly-adopted mustang is loaded into the trailer

Low Entry Price to Horse Ownership

You can't beat the price! (starting at $125)

But BEWARE! That's barely even the deposit, let alone the down payment, when you consider everything you will need to put out over the years for feed, housing, fencing, training, veterinary care, hoof trimming, tack and equipment, etc. If price is the main attraction, think hard about whether or not you can actually afford a horse.

On the other hand, the low price is not necessarily a bad thing! Since I was not already a "horse person" when we got our first mustangs, and not at all in a mindset to pay thousands of dollars for a horse, it is unlikely we would ever have adopted in the first place - and certainly we would not have gotten as many as we now have - had the price been higher. Of course, once we got them home, we fell in love and are deeply committed to providing the best feed and care and training for them.

Many people report that the low price originally attracted them to mustangs, but what really hooked them was how great the horses turned out!

Historical Connection - Living Legends

Many people find a thrill in owning "a Piece of History," "A Living Legend." From the Spanish Conquistadores, through the Great Native American Horsemen, explorers like Lewis & Clark, Mountain Men, pioneers, homesteaders, ranchers, "Buckaroo" and "Vaquero" cattlemen, and the Military Remount Program, as well as the Dust Bowl-Depression Era tragedies, and the coming of the tractor, with its concurrent decline in horse-ownership during the 1930's, 1940's and 1950's - IT'S ALL THERE - coursing through the blood of America's wild horses.

NEXT: Click here for Owning a mustang is truly a link to History!

Use the following links to explore wild horse adoption topics:
ADOPTION SECTION LINKS:

Horses & Burros for Adoption at Palomino Valley
Horses & Burros for Adoption at Litchfield, California, BLM Corrals
Horses & Burros for Adoption at Burns, Oregon BLM Corrals (Andi Harmon's website)

Use the "Gallery of HMA's" to see the types of horses that are produced in each HMA, grouped by state and BLM district. Adopters are encouraged to submit their own pictures, to add to this information base.

197263 vistitors to site at this time. Go to their site to see all they have offered. LI

OUR HERD:
Ruby (mustang) Sparky (mustang) Benny (mustang - formerly Kingsley) Silver (Belgian X QH) Bert & Dawn (Burros) Max (Mammoth Jack) Eleanor (Mustang Mule) Lewis & Clark (Older Sale Mustangs)

ADOPT A MUSTANG OR BURRO!
WHERE TO ADOPT l HMA GALLERY CHOOSE THE RIGHT ONE STORIES I ORPHAN FOALS

BURNS RIDER SALE LAW I
CARSON CITY-WARM SPRINGS CORRECTIONAL FACILITY WILD HORSE ADOPTIONS

MAIN SECTIONS OF THIS WEBSITE:

HORSE COLORSGENTLING & TRAINING MUSTANG HISTORY GALLERY OF HERD AREASVIDEOS

OUR HERD:
Ruby (mustang) Sparky (mustang) Benny (mustang - formerly Kingsley) Silver (Belgian X QH) Bert & Dawn (Burros) Max (Mammoth Jack) Eleanor (Mustang Mule) Lewis & Clark (Older Sale

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