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Pre 2022 material from the old website

Excavator operator rescues draft horse mired in mudslide at Aspen Lodge in Estes Park

From the Denver Post – Sept 24, 2013 ESTES PARK, Colo. – It’s an amazing, but little known September storm rescue story. A draft horse mired in a mudslide at an Estes Park resort was rescued by an excavator operator who “very gently” used a big metal bucket to scoop up the mud and the horse and move it to solid ground. The rescue happened on Sunday, Sept. 15, after torrential rains that unleashed flooding caused a massive mudslide that engulfed parts of the horse stables and parking lot at Aspen Lodge Resort & Spa on Highway 7, employee Kristina Naldjian told 7NEWS. Some parked cars were buried in a several feet of mud. There were 25 horses in the stable area and all were unharmed, except for Rosie, a draft horse who became mired in several feet of watery mud. Employees tried unsuccessfully to help free the exhausted horse, which was buried up to its hips in mud, Naldjian said. “Rosie was basically giving up, she was a goner,” Naldjian said. “The mud was very deep and she totally was sucked into it.” Fortunately, an excavator operator was working on the lodge grounds, removing debris clogging Beaver Lake, to prevent the lake dam from failing and flooding the area, Naldjian said. The heavy equipment operator, Dan Crane, extended the excavator boom and used the steel bucket to scoop up the mud under the horse, lifting Rosie with it, Naldjian said. “He very gently reached over with the crane and pulled (the horse) up with the […]

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Study: Horses Able to Stay Fit When Kept at Pasture

By Kristen M. Janicki, MS, PAS Oct 01, 2013 I found this article of interest. Hope you do also. I know it can be hard to find a place in Boulder County to board your horse that can provide adequate pasture. Boulder County Horse Association continues to advocate for land use in Boulder County. We are able to do this by your continued support thought membership, donation and volunteer efforts. Please contact us if you have time to volunteer to help us to continue supported equine-related activities in Boulder County. There are many theories on how to best manage performance horses during periods with no forced exercise (whether after sustaining an injury or just for a rest period), and owners are often left with a dilemma: stall rest or pasture turn-out? To find the answer, a team of researchers recently completed a study evaluating how well horses maintain a certain fitness level with either pasture turnout or stall confinement. Patricia M. Graham-Thiers, PhD, and a team of Virginia Intermont College researchers assigned 16 horses in light to moderate work to one of three groups: pasture turnout (P), stalled and exercised (E), or stalled with no exercise (S). During the 14-week study, horses in the P group roamed on approximately 100 acres of pasture, while horses in the S and E groups stayed in stalls during the day and were allowed access to a one-acre paddock at night. The researchers exercised horses in the E group five days per week for one to two hours per day

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A job well done on the Sage trail

I was looking for a way to give back to the community after the flood. This volunteer opportunity, organized by the City of Boulder Open Space and the United Way, was perfect! On Thursday, October 3rd I worked alongside 14 other volunteers of all ages, and four City of Boulder Open Space employees. Volunteers met at Boulder Valley Ranch at 9 AM and worked until 12 PM. It was a very well organized trail restoration project. All the necessary equipment was provided along with water and snacks (donated by Cliff Bar and Kind Bars) for the volunteers. We had a specific plan about the work that needed to be done, and an overall good feeling that all of us were involved in an activity that benefited the Boulder Community. We rotated jobs shoveling new trail material into eroded areas, moving soil filled wheel barrows, loading dirt into the back of pickup trucks, and spreading and tamping the soil to restore a portion of the Sage trail. We were all happy to be able to help, and finished the project knowing we had done a good job. Thank you City of Boulder Open Space staff, you were so well organized and upbeat. It was a day well spent! I’m looking forward to my next opportunity to work with this group, and help with the flood relief effort. Smiles…Samantha M

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