Tuesday, May 8, 2012

4th Week of Employment


Michelle Deden
Mustang Heritage Foundation
Youth Employment Program
History Research Paper
4 May 2012

            Through the days of lore and celebration and joy, and through the dark days of mourning-the faithful horse has been with us always.
            Wild horses have been an important part of America’s history since the Spanish Conquistadors came to America.  It all started with Christopher Columbus on his second voyage in 1493.  Columbus brought around twenty horses including the Spanish Barb, Andalusian, and the now extinct Spanish Jennet breeds with him.  These breeds were the foundation stock for the Paso Finos, a horse breed well-known for their fine step and graceful head carriage.   The Spanish Conquistador’s called them “Los Caballos de Paso Fino” meaning the horse with a fine step.  The Spanish Barb, Andalusian, and Spanish Jennet were also the start of wild horses in America and and were later called the Spanish Mustangs. 
            These Spanish horses that were freed or escaped from early explorers soon became of use the Native Americans.  The Native Americans soon learned how to make use of these powerful creatures to hunt buffalo.  The Appaloosa, a brown and white horse with a Rosetta pattern, and Pinto horses were prized by the tribes because of their beautiful coats.  High chieftain owned Pinto and Appaloosa horses and rode them during celebrations.  After a couple decades horses that strayed became known as mestenos by the Spanish.
            In 1620, the Pilgrims arrived on the Mayflower, it is believed that the Pilgrims re-domesticated  some of the wild horses for farm use.  Nine years after the Pilgrims arrived in America, New England brought horses to the New World.  They brought larger, huskier horses meant for pulling heavy equipment.  They also brought with them tall, graceful Thoroughbreds from England and Ireland.  All these horses added diversity to the mustang population.  As each set of immigrants arrived in America, their horses added diversity to the wild horse population.  Although these horses are no longer the pure Spanish Mustangs, people still used the term Spanish Mustangs when referring to the wild horses.
            Years later many Native Americans lost or released their prizes mounts because they were forced onto unfertile reservations, leaving their horses to join the wild herds.  The Mustangs, being an invasive species to America flourished and by the end of the 19th century, there were between two to four million horses running free throughout the West.    Ranchers, cowboys, and ever fur traders put them to good use.  During the Civil War, the Northern Army needed 200,000 horses anually, so they were rounded up for military service.  Mustangs appeared to be an inexhaustible source for the people of the 19th century.
            But by the beginning of the 20th century, los mestenos became a problem.  One rancher in Nevada reflects his father complaints “They ate twice as much as cattle, and their sharp hooves cut into the land and uprooted the grass.  To a rancher, grazing land is a precious as gold, and the horses were ruining it.” Ranchers sought different ways to take care of this dilemma, driving horses from their newly claimed lands, and then building sturdier fences to keep them out.  Other ranchers reverted to killing as many mustangs as possible.  Through poisoning the water-holes.  In Utah, ranchers killed thousands of wild horses by driving them off cliffs.  By the 1940’s wild horse slaughter had hit an all-time high with the opening of the pet food companies.  Pet food companies paid ranchers ten to twenty dollars for each horse brought in.  Pet food companies giving rise to the Mustangers, people who used low-flying planes and other methods to chase the horses many miles until they could no longer run or entered a trap then forced into trucks to be shipped off to pet-food factories.  Another method of capturing them is roping the horses by having the other end of the lariat tied to two large tired which tightens around the horses neck pulling them backward and affecting their breathing.  The wild mustangs almost disappeared from America altogether because of the Mustangers.
            If it was not for one Velma Johnson, otherwise known as “Wild Horse Annie” one of Americas last symbols of Wild West would be long gone.  Velma Johnson grew up riding a mustang by the name of Hobo, who captured her heart and was Mrs. Johnsons inspiration to stand up against what was happening to these horses after she saw a stock trailer over-filled with wild horses who looked starving and dehydrated and wondered what was the cause of this.  Soon after she witnessed the capturing of the wild horses and realized how oblivious she was to what was going on.  Several times she to lawmakers suggesting it be illegal to use airplanes and vehicles to herd and trap horses, but every time the lawmakers ignored her.  But finally she gained the attention of the congress by showing them snapshots she had attained from witnessing these horrific scenes, going all the way to Washington D.C to have a court case.  Finally in 1971, the Wild Free-roaming Horse and Burro Act passed, requiring the protection, management and control of the mustangs.  Thanks to Velma Johnson, the wild horses of the American West were saved. 
            Because the Mustangers are no longer a threat to wild horses, the population has increased from the less than 10,000 mustangs in 1970 to 50,000 horses in the year 2000.  These growing herds created new problems, such as over-grazing.  This time the solution was from the Bureau of Lang Management (BLM), a government agency in charge of tending for public lands.  It was decided that the best thing to do would be to thin out the herds by capturing the horses and offering the to the public.  This program became known as the Adopt-A-Horse program. Tthe horses are branded on their neck for identification.  This ID specifies: area of capture, ownership, holding facility, and tag number.  Many horses are not sold and BLM has to keap them in holding pens and corrals.  This is expensive and some say cruel so in 1988 landowners offered to rent their land to the BLM for the horses.  The BLM and the public both like this idea and made these lands into long-term holding facilities for unadoptable horses.
            Mustangs helped us develop the land, transformed Native Americans hunting and fighting techniques, provided us with mounts for our wars, and captured the hearts of people everywhere with their strong will and big hearts.  They are truly a magnificent breed and have been an integral part of American History.




Youth Competitors from Previous Makeover

Found this on that handy-dandy internet website called Facebook!  Didn't know there was a picture of us here too!  It seems Pictures of Pilgrim and me were pretty popular that weekend!

Since I never shared what else happened in Tennessee, this is Cohn Livingston and Teddy Bear.  The won  the Legends division in Tennessee this past year.  In their performance, you heard the phantom of the opera play all the while Cohn had removed Teddy Bear's bridle then jumping through these rings of fire!  Pretty cool if I do say so myself.

Up above was my History Research Paper for the Mustang Heritage Foundation.  It turns out quite wonderfully and my friends helped me tremendously, fixing most of my grammatical and punctuation errors.  But even after that nobody is absolutely perfect at those kinds of things!

As for the new mustangs, we pick the up in less than three days!  Excitement is starting to kick-in!  I wonder what  they will be like? Will they like to jump like Magic did?  Or will they like to climb like Pilgrim?  Will they like attention?  You never can tell what horse you're getting yourself in to until see for yourselves sometimes!  I know whatever they turn out to be, I'll be content with anything.  For if there's a will, there's a way!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

3rd Week as Mustang Trainer Representative

Well time is closing in on me, only nine days left until my my family and I meet the new mustangs.  It seems everyone is getting excited about pick-up day for the yearlings.  Although they have now made a new option to pick-up the yearlings on this Thursday, we will still be picking the horses up on Friday because of convenience and I wouldn't want to miss anymore than need be of my last few weeks as a Juinior in High School!  Those are the best ones!

Finished my history paper on wild mustangs too!  Did you know that the Native Americans didn't have horses until the Spanish Conquistadors came to America?  Oh what a wonderful research paper it turned out to be!  I can't wait to share it with you next week after it gets reviewed by the Mustang Heritage Foundation.

Carly called me this week too!  She is so sweet!  I told her all about what I'd done this past weekend at the ranch and she is just the sweetest girl in the world!  Speaking of my weekend, one of my dad's clients brought two mustangs back to our place so I tried to make them feel right at home.  And if anybody is interested in giving either of these sweet horses a new home just let me know!
This is Pershing(Left) and Blue Jeans(Right)



 Above are some pictures of what little Jennifer and Firefly did this weekend.  Firefly is a four year old mustang and look how little he is!  He's definitely the perfect size for Jennifer! She loves the little guy.  After she saddles him up and my mom led her around for a little while, she went and gave him a nice long bath to cool off from all this heat we are getting in Texas.

The ingredients to a perfect day...


I don't know if you guys remember Bucephalus, he's my four year old wild mustang I adopted last year from the Bureau of Land Management.  He's doing absolutely spectacular with me now; picking up the correct lead and stopping the second I breath words to stop.  He's really grown attached to me more than any of my horses ever have.  Whenever I go out to the field, I cluck to him and he comes trotting up to me.  That... and we did a lunging routine and when I moved his hind-quarters away from me and ran backwards he ran straight to me!  It was so cool seeing my red-roan, all his attention on me, waiting for me to tell him what to do next.  He is a magnificent horse and always tries his best to please me.  

Every horse has it's pro's and con's, Pilgrim was very lazy, but it only took him once to learn a new thing so the next time I tried doing that trick, it was a piece of cake.  Every horse has a good side and a not-so good side to them.  I wonder what my next yearling will be like?

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

2nd Week of Employment

As the second week of employment I've been working hard on on digging up information about a "different" way of describing the America's free-roaming horses' history.  Don't want to spoil it for anyone so I'll just hint it has a little bit to do with Christopher Columbus and the first horses brought to America on his second voyage in 1493.

I've also gotten in touch with one miss Carly Berkman who is just so interested in what I'm doing with the wild horses.  I even heard a little bit about Pilgrim.  Turns out he's the big pet of the ranch! As sweet as can be! And the farrier loves him because he's the easiest to trim. Although they don't shoe him.  Apparently my now two year old Pilgrim has grown a bit too!  Sorry no pictures.  That and according the the ranch manager, Pilgrim is the center of attention every time Carly comes to visit.

Besides that i'm just planning my summer around the training of horse #318.  That and my sister decided on a name for her little mustang.  She's going to call him Hoof Prince.  I personally thought it was pretty cute and very suiting of the little sorrel she adopted a couple weeks ago.  I've never seen my little sister so excited about anything before!  She's even tried making her own blog!  Which for a ten year old is not an easy task!  She hasn't done much with her blog so far but it's jennifermustangmakeover.blogspot.com she is my little sister and I support her with anything she decides to do.  She truly loves her mustangs.  Just look at little Firefly and her in this picture...she definitely is one of the cutest ten year old's you will ever meet! Oh and that's Firefly, her mustang.  He never really got a growth spurt but he's actually 3-4 year old now. He's pretty cute and as you can tell by the picture she just loves him.  Maybe one day she'll be a Mustang Trainer Representative?

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

And so the job begins!

So as most of you may or may not know, I was hired by the Mustang Heritage Foundation to be one of their Mustang Trainer Representatives.  My job began on April 16th and will continue throughout my summer.  For my job, one of the many things I will be doing is keeping weekly updates on my progress with my yearling mustang & other things that I've learned during my Supreme Extreme Journey.  Except that is only one of the many things I do.  Along with the title Mustang Trainer Representative, I will be writing two papers for the Mustang Heritage Foundation, keeping up a journal, making two presentations to present in front of a youth group and an adult group, and conversing with a youth weekly about things I have learned and or experienced in training my wild horse.  And here is the best part, I got Carly Berkman to be my youth!  This is going to be so much fun!  I get to tell her about my new mustang and she can tell me all about how Pilgrim is doing!  This is going to be so exciting.
Also an update on where the yearlings are, according to the BLM, they will be transporting the mustangs on the 1st of May. They will have a 24-hour layover somewhere in Colorado and then it's off to their pick-up locations.  This will give the about 10 days until we pick them up in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma.  So excited and it's like an early birthday present for my sister.  Her birthday is May 1st so it's like they are bringing her the best birthday present a soon-to-be 11 year old could ever get!

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Supreme Extreme Adoption Auction

Today was a stressful & exciting day in Fort Worth, Texas.  Today was auction day for ALL of the Supreme Extreme Mustang Makeover horses for the competition.  The mustang went anywhere from $200 all the way up to $8,000!  I was quite the event.

We arrived at Superior Productions just before the bidding for the adult horses began.   Soon enough we had bid on a couple horses to finally get a big bay mustang for my mom.  Then we watched as the auction went on from there, mustang after mustang.  Well about 226 adult horses later it was my little sister Jennifer and I's turn to bid.  Jennifer had her heart set on a yearling #315 from the very first time she saw him online so he was her first choice.  It was so cute to see little Jennifer holding up her bidders number trying to bid on that little sorrel. To see the reaction of everyone in that room when Jennifer got that yearling was priceless; Jennifer jumping up and down as people laughed and clapped for my little sister and her new mustang.  It was surely unforgettable and I was so happy for my little sister.  But I have to admit, I think the nerves really set in when my favorite mustang went in front of the big screen.  But before I knew it, the auctioneer looked at me and said "sold!"  People clapped just as they had for my little sister as a huge grin spread across my face.  I never expected to get my first choice and know I'll be picking up #318 in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma this May!

And as many people know, every horse needs a name and I need three names for these three mustang.  So if anybody has any suggestions please leave comments on my blog because at the moment I think my little sister wants to names her's "Sparkles!" (and he's a boy...)
Jennifer's Mustang

Jennifer bidding on her mustang


Here's a link to view Jennifer's Mustang: #315

My Mustang


Here's a link to view my horse: #318

My Mom's Mustang

Here's a link to view my mom's mustang: #22

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Mustang Trainer Representative

Recently, I was hired by the Mustang Heritage Foundation to be one of their Mustang Trainer Representatives.  For this job and I quote the Youth Employment Program (YEP): " Gain knowledge on the history, plight and current issues surrounding the wild Mustang while training a yearling Mustang.  Share this knowledge with others in order to promote the awareness, training and adoption of this horse."

My job will be starting sometime this March and will continue throughout my yearling mustangs training.  I'm super excited and decided to share what I doing at the moment in preparation for the adoption March 31, 2012.  

Lately I've been looking though all of the prospective yearlings and picking out which ones I like best.  I've now narrowed it down to twenty-one yearlings based on the conformation and mobility.  I know these things by looking at the videos of the mustangs (click here) and the pictures of them (click here.)

But to give you a little taste of what I'm looking at in my next mustang, here are some pictures of the yearlings for the competition. 






I also found this old picture of Pilgrim and myself from our training days.  He was such a wonderful horse and I've only heard wonderful things about him from the Berkman family.  I'm so lucky to have such a sweet young girl like Carly to fall in love with my Pilgrim's Pride, I couldn't have asked for a better life for my mustang.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Mustang Magic 2012

Me with Scarlet & Wylene Wilson
One of My Role Models
Well this years Mustang Magic was absolutely fabulous!  There was never a moment when I wan't impressed by these amazing wild horses.  In the Mustang Magic, the top ten mustangs and trainers do a freestyle performance to decide who's the winner and this year it was Logan Leach and his pain mustang Kiowa.  In their routine, Logan led Kiowa out by a rope holding her bridle and then started putting the bridle on, then he had second thoughts, removed the bridle and threw it behind him.  Before I knew it I was watching Logan and Kiowa running around the arena doing flying lead changes and spins everywhere just like the Rain and Little Creek (from the movie Spirit.)  Logan definitely put on an unforgettable performance for all of us in the Justin Arena on Saturday night.  
Scarlet & Wylene Wilson

But they weren't the only pair that didn't use a bit...
Including Teryn Muench the Reserve Champion, who also won fan favorite with a little help from my sisters. This year's mustang magic horses were amazing and I hope to see even more fans coming to cheer great trainers and horses like these at the Supreme Extreme Mustang Makeover.  Who knows, you may even decide to adopt one of America's Living Legends...

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Mustang Magic 2012

So as some of you may or may not know, in Fort Worth, TX this weekend the Extreme Mustang Makeover and the Mustang Heritage Foundation will be hosting the Mustang Magic.  The Mustang Magic is an event similar to the Extreme Mustang Makeover Events in which trainers are given 90 to 120 days to train their wild mustang and compete with them.  And this year approximately 20 colorful mustang mares were selected along with their trainers to compete at the Forth Worth Stock Show and Rodeo.  If you would like more information regarding the Mustang Magic click here.  All of these mustang will be available for adoption after their finals performance!


Teryn Muench with his mustang Jade riding bridleless.
Here's a picture of the mustangs while they were still wild, it so amazing to see how far they've come!

Wylene Wilson and her magnificent mare "Scarlet"


Little Roan Riding Hood trainer J-Dub



Tracie McVay and her gray mare Magic

Below is a video of what went on at last year's Mustang Magic!

Friday, December 30, 2011

Forth Worth Supreme Extreme Mustang Makeover 2012

As you all know Pilgrim's Pride's story has been shared throughout this blog, but now I have new new story to tell you about.  On March 31, 2012 I will be adopting a new mustang, this time he's mine to keep.  In this adoption, it will be a competitive bid starting at $200 for the yearling division.  I'll pick up the wild mustang May 11th or 12th and will compete with him the following September in Forth Worth Texas. So if anybody out there is interested in adopting a wild mustang apply here. And to view the prospects for the next mustang makeover click here. I can't wait to see what this next batch of yearlings will turn out to be! Here's a link to an article written by Quarter Horse News about the Supreme Extreme Mustang Makeover!

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The Looking Glass

Pilgrim's Pride and I have shared many memories through out our journey together, but our paths have parted now.  Pilgrim now lives in Fredricksburg TX with the Berkman family, I loved him very much and I hope to hear from them soon but there was one more thing I would like to share, about a month ago I wrote a personal essay for school.  It's a story about Pilgrim and Me before I had to say good bye to him, I hope you guys enjoy it:


The Looking Glass
By Michelle Deden
            I never thought I would fall in love with anything else the way I did with Sue, the way we went together.  The second I had laid eyes on her it was love at first sight.  She was me, I was her, and we were one sole entity working together.  I couldn’t see it any other way.  Sue may just be an old bony nag to you; but in my eyes she’s something different.  When you meet somebody for the first time, you have this barrier; kind-of like a wall to pass, or as I sometime’s call it a first glance judgment.  When I first met Sue, I reached my hand out to pet her and she did something unusual in my mind for a horse.  She pinned her ears back to striking mode, and spun her age-old head in circles.  My first reaction was to flee my hand from her before she took a chunk off of it.  But when the same head motion occurred over and over again, I just could resist.  Something about Sue struck me right then; what caused this? I didn’t know, she was getting into her geriatric age so it could’ve happened years ago or mere weeks but what really mattered was once she learned to trust me.  After that I couldn’t keep my hands off her.  Whenever my mind would travel, it would always take a pit-stop on Sue.  She was my horse, my love, and everything about me shined through to the heaven’s when I was around her.  I cherish every moment with her, my old nag.  But this story isn’t about this horse, it’s about another horse who I considered a nag.  Who, at first glance was “a mule-brained and mule-lookin’ mustang.”  But every horse has a story, and here’s Pilgrim’s.
            Pilgrim was one of twenty yearling selected to be trained for an Extreme Mustang Makeover; in which the trainer’s have roughly ninety days to train them and then they get adopted out into new homes.  Pilgrim was a brown little gelding with black mane and tail or in horse-talk, a bay.  Pilgrim, meaning he’s traveled a long way, became my horse for the competition.  And I could tell you right-off-the-bat I was not happy about this.  Out of all the mustangs I could’ve gotten, I managed to get the one that reminded me of “Uncle Sam.” This was nothing like the relationship I had with Sue.  With Sue it was love at first sight.  With Pilgrim…”you mean I got him?” But you would be surprised what a little time can do to you. 
            Pilgrim took all of twenty minutes to learn to lead and let me pet all over him.  And by the fourth day I had a saddle on him.  But something inside me just wouldn’t like this horse.  Not until now, Day 67 when I’m looking over all the pictures of me and him; and we are doing all these cool things like laying down and standing on his back.  I found a picture of him jumping a fallen over tree, his legs tucked underneath his and his eyes closed shut.  That’s when it hit me like a lightning bolt, this horse really trusts me.  And I didn’t even notice, sixty-seven day’s for me to see the light.  To see Pilgrim’s light glowing in the darkness; lighting up my path to victory.  Sixty-seven days later…
            But don’t get me wrong, this horse wasn’t always the perfect little angel. I remember days when he drug me around the ranch because he didn’t want to jump the barrel outside the pen.  And just a week ago when I was cleaning out his feet, the horse stepped on my foot and just turned his head as if to say “well aren’t yah gonna move that? It’s kind-of under my foot…”  But the worst of all things was the electronic shaver…Pilgrim’s worst enemy.  You see for show horses, you shave the whiskers from their nose and around their eyes, under their chin, and a bridle notch so that the halter with lay flat.  And about the first month in I decided it was time for him to get his nose shaved…he had other ideas.  He flung his head behind a tree where I couldn’t reach his and when that did work, he would just back up until the shaver’s plug become taught and fall out.  He wasn’t scared of it either, he was just being belligerent!
             Pilgrim’s had his good days and his bad days, but something about him is making it really hard to let him go. With Sue we have this bond because we are alike. But with Pilgrim, we have this connection that’s irreplaceable, something you look at and say “Wow! Did we really do that?”  I’ve never had another horse like Sue, and Pilgrim will never be just like Sue. But the two horses have one very special thing in common; they both have a very special place in my heart that nobody could ever replace.  I just don’t know how I’m going to be able to say good-bye to him…My Pilgrim…

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Pilgrim's Freestyle Performance & Carly's new horse...

Youth Competitors Finals Performance

Me standing on Pilgrim's Pride in my freestyle performance.

Pilgrim's Pride jumping over the barrels in our freestyle performance.

Pilgrim's Pride with his new family Carly Berkman (the girl sitting on him) I know she'll love him as much as I have. Carly loves her new horse...
Here's a link to a clip of my finals performance, although we didn't win it, Pilgrim's Pride gave a horse and a half out there I couldn't have asked for a better horse and he's got a great horse now with Carly daughter of Lance Berkman, the guy who plays for the Cardinals that won the World Series yesterday.  I know she loves him as much as I do and I know he'll never be lonely with her by his side.  They make a perfect pair.