October 2015 - Sacramento Horsemen`s Association
Transcription
October 2015 - Sacramento Horsemen`s Association
1 2 Hoofprints Newsletter of the Sacramento Horsemen’s Association Upcoming Events October 17 – Del Paso Regional Park Clean-up (See pg. 2 for details) October 18 – SHA Clean-up Day October 19 – Monthly Dinner Meeting October 24 – SHA Halloween Show November 9 – Board Meeting November 16 – Monthly Dinner Meeting December 14 – Board Meeting December 21 – Monthly Dinner Meeting January 30, 2016 – 5th Annual SHA Crab Feed Officers President: Michaela Durbin First Vice President: Michele Cable Second Vice President - Tim Durbin Secretary - Sally Parker Treasurer - Carmel Curtis Directors Greg Lloyd Melanie Mopsick Jamie Pena Kristin West Missy Worthley-Peterson ★ October 2015 Greetings From the President By Michaela Durbin Greetings! We’ve been busy here at SHA these past 8 months and we were sure you would like to know what has been taking place at your Association. Here are the highlights…to start we have reinstituted the committee structure SHA has had for much of its existence. We no longer have a Director of Operations and the office is now staffed by your Executive Committee three days a week or by appointment. We’ve been busy too giving the grounds a facelift – areas have been cleaned, flowers planted, the bleachers repaired and repainted, and thanks to a group of Eagle Scouts the judge’s booth for the main arena has been rebuilt. We continue to have a need for volunteers, so if you have an extra hour, day, or even a week we would love to have you come by SHA. There are always projects in the works and willing hands make the tasks easier. On October 24th, we will be hosting the Wild and Wacky Halloween Horse Show. The show schedule is posted on our website: www.sachorsemen.com. Come and enjoy the day with us. Should you have additional questions, you can contact Jamie Pena: 916.799.3215. Sacramento Horsemen’s Association (SHA) welcomes you to a little bit of Country in the City! Founded in 1942, SHA was established to encourage and promote horseback riding, facilitate the sharing of information about horses, and foster a spirit of good fellowship among its members. At our 14-acre facility, SHA provides the greater Sacramento area with opportunities to ride scenic trails, board Continued pg. 2, President October Membership Dinner Soups On at the Sacramento Horsemen’s Association. Join us October 19th, 2015 at 6:30 for the monthly membership dinner meeting in the SHA Clubhouse. We will be voting on the proposed amended Bylaws. They can be found on the website: www.sachorsemen.com. In addition we will be joined by Emily Halcon/Homeless Services Coordinator at the City of Sacramento, the Park Rangers who patrol the trails and Police Captain Dave Risley who will give us an update on the homeless situation around our neck of the woods. New and Returning Members Sharon Bitz Mike Boyd Jenny Bradley Ana Caraccio Robin Davis Christine Erickson Sean Gamble Betty Greene Abagail Gulden Aleatha Landry Bridgett Locken Bridgett Logsdon Continued from pg. 1, President a horse, ride in either of our two arenas, attend horse shows, hold special events in our charming clubhouse, or enjoy a picnic. Come visit our barn and paddocks, or take a walk along one of the beautiful horse trails. Join us for one of our monthly membership dinners, held on the 3rd Monday of each month, in our beautiful clubhouse and experience the warm friendship at SHA. The dinners are casual, fun, and very affordable! Hope to see you soon! Park Road Cleanup & SHA Cleanup Residents and volunteers of Park Road are meeting for trail cleanup on October 17th from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. The meeting place is the Bridge Road/Park Road and is being organized by the Park Road homeowners. Members of Mira Loma’s environmental education class will be there to help. Volunteers will be picking up trash, clearing invasive plants and cleaning out underbrush to make the trails safer. Come and volunteer. Bring your gloves and tools. For further questions you can contact Leann Carlson – [email protected] or Charles Duckworth – [email protected]. The following day, October 18th, from 8:0012:00 volunteers are needed to weed, trim, power wash, sweep, wash windows, and get SHA ready for the upcoming horse show. We are also looking for Halloween decorations. Please contact Kristin West ([email protected] or 916.747.7518) for information. Thank you in advance for all of your support! S P O N S O R Raichel Weiser Stacy Watson 2 1 The Nitty Gritty on Salt – Part Two by Michele Saylor Crab Feed 2016 Tickets are on sale now for the 5th annual crab feed. Captain Bob and his hot, fresh crab will be back for all of you crab lovers. Get your crab feed tickets early. We sold out last year well before the event. Don’t be one of those people who didn’t get a ticket. The event is Saturday, January 30th, 2016. We want to make this fundraiser for S.H.A. another successful event. This beautiful painting (above) by Daphne Stammer will be one of the silent auction items that can be yours! S P O N S O R Continued from our last newsletter: BLUE - The blue salt is ‘COBALTIZED’. It contains salt, cobalt, and usually, a little iodine. The science: The microbes in a horse’s gut transform cobalt (co) into vitamin B12. This vitamin works with copper and iron in the formation of blood cells. Period. Says science. Most horses get enough cobalt from a quality diet. The requirement has been set at 0.1mg/kg dry matter. Cobalt toxicity in horses has never been reported and is thought to be impossible, especially through licking a cobaltized salt block. Therefore, most veterinarians will tell you that your horse does not need cobalt supplementation, but will tell you it won’t hurt him, either. The reality: I started offering the blue block about 8 years ago. My mare was being bred to a stud at a farm down in Oakdale. I observed that their salt stations all included the blue salt. I asked the owner about it, and she told me all about the wonders of cobalt for strong feet. I observed that her Appaloosas had hard, lovely feet, and even her TB/Appy cross appendix mares had good feet - and nobody wore shoes! I immediately started offering the blue salt. My own TB/Appy appendix mare’s feet had never been anything but shelly and soft even on the best diet I could provide including mega doses of biotin, etc. I must say that within a year of adding the cobalt block, her feet were much, much harder. She will always wear shoes, and will always be on biotin, but her feet have been 90% better since adding the blue blocks. The best part is - the next spring after learning about the blue blocks, my mare delivered yet another gorgeous, healthy foal, but this time, she had had access to the blue block during gestation, and the only difference in the birth was the size and quality of the gelatin “baby booties” - I have never seen such completely hard and firm yet completely coated baby feet, ever. The 80% thoroughbred Continued on page 5, Salt 3 Big News at SHA It has been in the works for some time, to get a family living on site again. The perfect scenario is someone who is employed by SHA and can keep an eye on things when nobody is around. We felt that we found that perfect someone in our employee, Marquise. He and his wife Tatiana and their two children are moving into Trailer 2 and will make SHA their new home. Marquise is our Lead Barn Technician and takes his job seriously. In the short time he has been with us, he has made a huge effort to get to know everyone and learn as much as he can about horses and their care. We feel confident that he and his family will make a great addition to this equestrian facility. We would also like to thank all of those who have donated items to the trailer and to his family to make their transition to life here at SHA a success. There are a lot of very generous people that have donated household items, furniture, cleaning supplies and other miscellaneous items. It has been heartwarming to see people helping a young family get started with so many donations. Thank you! ★ MEMBERSHIP DUES REMINDER ★ All S.H.A. memberships will renew January 1, 2016. Don’t forget to pay your dues so that your membership is not interrupted. S P O N S O The 2015 Lake Crawford Memorial Golf Tournament By Janice Bachelor On September 11, 2015, the Foundation of the Sacramento Horsemen’s Association held its 3rd Annual Golf Tournament. This year however, we renamed the tournament to: The Lake Crawford Memorial Golf Tournament, after the man who started this event. Lake was a wonderful friend and equestrian, who rode one of the most spirited horses at SHA, Chelle. He was fun, kind and left in his wake a great feeling of friendship to all he encountered. We lost Lake, last year, to cancer and wanted to remember his contributions to SHA for years to come. The past two years the money raised helped SHA through the winter months. This year, however, due our wonderful Board of Directors, SHA has thrived and the money from this year’s event will help pay for some much-needed repairs to the property. We will help with the remodeling of the trailers and still have extra money for whatever unforeseen issues may arise. R We want to thank all of our wonderful sponsors this year and volunteers. We could not do this without all of you. We hope to see all of you at next year’s tournament. 4 2 SHA’s Grounds Committee Chair Kristen West is beyond self-motivated, focused, and tireless. She has gotten the job done to clean up and improve the grounds at the Sacramento Horsemen’s Association. Kristin is the Grounds Committee Chair who organizes the volunteers and works along with them digging, raking, pruning and attending to much of the deferred maintenance at SHA. She has spent many hours repairing and painting the bleachers surrounding the arenas. She has organized a thorough cleaning of the Kozy Kitchen, the clubhouse and surrounding areas as well as the show office. She has addressed countless items on a very long list of things that have needed attention. And when she is not attending to the deferred maintenance at SHA, she is getting the grounds ready for a horse show with organized parking and signage or planning the next project to address. Kristen boards her horse, Goldie, in the barn and has a long history with the Association. She is part of a family that has spent many years boarding horses at SHA and volunteering their time. Her sister Deborah is a Past President and her mom has been an active member for many years. We congratulate Kristin and thank her for all of her efforts in making our Association a better place and on a job well done! Continued from page 3, Salt foal is now 7 yrs. old, and has never, never needed shoes. I am a fan of the blue block for life. RED The red salt is ‘IODIZED’. It contains salt, iodine, iron and iron oxide. The iron oxide provides color only and is harmless. The presence of the red block allows a horse to obtain a strong iodine or iron source if they need it - without taking extra minerals of other types. This is especially important for mares or any horse that is highly emotionally charged. Too little iodine in the diet causes the thyroid to secrete too little thyroxin, (a hormone which regulates metabolism), which can render a horse nervous, irritable and uncooperative. More About IODINE A full-sized horse is thought to do best on a diet providing 3 - 6 mg of iodine daily for thyroid health. Grasses do not contain iodine in measurable amounts. Most prepared feeds and supplements contain just a bit. Too much iodine can damage the thyroid gland, so it’s very important to be sure the diet is adequate for maintenance, but that the horse can take in additional iodine if it needs it (thus, the inclusion of the red block at the salt station). One teaspoon of pourable, iodized table salt contains 0.4 mg of iodine. (3 Tsp. = 1 Tbs. = 15 ml). If you have a mare who is highly emotionally charged, (like mine), adding a teaspoon (for a pony or small horse) or a tablespoon (for a full sized horse) of pourable, iodized salt to the grain ration daily (even if your horse always has the five different bricks available to her at all times) will help support her mental well-being. It really helps! S P O N S O R 5 Barn Chatter-n-Things By Michele Cable We have a great bunch of folks and creatures that reside at SHA. Sadly, however, we are saying good-bye to two great boarders and their four horses. Tim and Bri Martin are moving along with their growing herd to a property they will call home. We will miss them. And as we say good-bye, we say hello to two new boarders. We welcome Christine Erickson and her gelding, Jack. We also welcome Donna Corey and her mare, Beatrice. With these new people, and Janice Bachelor bringing in another horse, Cheyenne, the barn will remain full. Yay! The other thing that has been happening around the barn is a new Boarder’s contract. Carmel has been working to get everyone Bijou, the kitten who had her tail amputated having a nap. updated. It has been long overdue. If you haven’t updated your contract, come in and get current. It has been a tough several months with people dumping animals or abandoning them at SHA. Over the summer, two dogs and two cats were dumped. One of the dogs was in such terrible condition; it had to be humanely euthanized. The other dog had to be trapped by the City and has hopefully been re-homed. Of the two cats, one was a female that had a litter of kittens before we could trap her. She along with the kittens were eventually spayed, neutered and vaccinated by the SPCA and El Camino Veterinary Hospital. The momma cat was re-released back on the property. Carmel Curtis took home the loveable orange male kitty that now goes by the name, Chile. The kittens ended up at my house. Fieldhaven Feline Rescue in Lincoln, CA, took three of them, where they will be re-homed as barn cats. Another kitten went to a caring friend. One went to live with my daughter, and the two sickly ones remain at my house. With the support of Daphne Stammer, one kitten received surgery to remove her infected tail. The other kitten was emaciated and had an upper respiratory infection. Dr. Kennedy at River City Cat Clinic, helped with her treatment and the kitten is now healthy and has doubled in size. I am always astounded by the behavior of some people. Mostly, the people who take animals they have no business owning. They can barely feed themselves yet feel compelled to own animals and are often then faced with not caring for the animal properly by spaying or neutering and the animal either ends up pregnant or homeless or both. It is the responsible and compassionate people that end up carrying the burden. In this case, it was the same group of caring folks at SHA who always step up for the sake of our beloved creatures that saved the day. I am grateful for all of your assistance, support, help and concern. I am proud to call you my “barn mates”. Sacramento Horsemen’s Association 3200 Longview Drive Sacramento, CA 95821 6