Welcome
Search: Site   Web
| Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size

Adoption Ready

Mustangs on hand for adoption at Mercedes

MERCEDES — David Quiñones glanced from afar as the shaggy, hoofed giants munched on patches of hay.
The 57-year-old ranch owner was thinking of adopting one of the wild horses to roam his 2 1/2-acre ranch in McAllen.


“I thought it would be nice to get one,” the 57-year-old McAllen resident said, shrugging his shoulders casually. “What’s a ranch without a horse?”


The mustangs were on display at the Rio Grande Valley Livestock Showgrounds, 1000 N. Texas Ave., on Saturday during the last day of an adoption session organized by the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management.


Mustangs are wild horses descended from horses first brought to North America by the Spanish. The agency is tasked with gathering excess horses and donkeys from the wild and placing them into qualified adoptive homes to avoid overpopulation.
The bureau is not offering donkeys for adoption this year since they apparently are not exhausting vegetation and water sources in the wild.


Taming a large, wild animal is no easy feat. Furthermore, caring for the animals can be costly and requires great patience. But for horse trainer Jessica Frantz, a Weslaco resident who has adopted 13 mustangs through the government program, the end result is a rewarding experience.


“If you take the time, they’ll turn out just as good (as horses born into domestication),” Frantz said. “They accept you a lot easier.”


Frantz said wild horses can sometimes be even faster to train than already domesticated animals, since they have not picked up any habits from their former owners.


“If someone trained them and didn’t do it properly, it’s a lot harder,” Frantz said. “(Wild horses) are like blank slates.”


BLM spokeswoman Theresa Herrera estimated the agency sold about 70 horses during an auction Friday, with the animals going for as much as $425. The event began Thursday with a preview of the horses offered.
Another adoption session is slated for Feb. 11-13 at the Guadalupe County Fairgrounds in Seguin.


See archived 'News' stories »
 

Click to vote
Recommend this story?
Yes
No
The online vote:



Add your comments
Please follow and enforce these guidelines:
1. No flaming. Do not be hostile.
2. No comments that are obscene, vulgar, lewd, sexually-oriented, threatening, libelous, or illegal.
3. No racial slurs or insults.
4. "Remove Comment" flags offensive comment for removal.

Verification Code:
Enter Verification:
Your Name:
Your Comment:
By submitting this form, you agree to this site's terms of service




Jobs
Autos
Real Estate
Classifieds
Today's Ads
Search for Jobs - Monster.com

   
Weather
NWS Harlingen - Fair
84.0°F
Fair and 84.0°F
Winds East at 9.2 MPH (8 KT)
Last Update: 2010-09-02 19:20:46
ADVERTISEMENT 
Poll
Officer DWI
What should happen to the Weslaco police officer who was arrested for DWI?
He should face the legal consequences. That's all.
He should face the law and lose his job
He should get a break
He should be punished harder becasue of his public role
he should be suspended until the case is settled
Enter The Code To Vote
 
Read Related Article
ADVERTISEMENT 
Puzzles
Comics

powered by
google
Search
        Search: Web    Site