Justice goes to Washington

8 01 2009

It’s official! Justice, a now-6-year-old buckskin mustang from Spring Creek Basin, Disappointment Valley, West Slope Colorado, USA, leaves Friday with his U.S. Border Patrol unit from Washington State headed to Washington, D.C., for the parade that celebrates the inauguration of our new president, Barack Obama.

I’m stunned. I’m thrilled. I’m ecstatic!

Fran Ackley, Wild Horse and Burro Program leader for BLM in Colorado, based in Canon City, told me this morning that Justice – originally one of two alternates – will definitely be in the parade.

Justice, named there at the prison when they thought he might make a good candidate for the Border Patrol, was a star student – “pretty mellow” is how Fran described him. The inmate who trained him thought he had so much potential, in fact, that he rode Justice with a Colorado flag to get him used to that flapping, waving thing above him should he actually go to the Border Patrol. Do you think he might have had some inkling that one day the horse he trained would end up smack dab in the middle of the festivities of a country celebrating its new president? Inmate X, my hat is off to you.

Think of all the intersecting lines of fate … The inmate – a non-violent offender – goes to Canon City and gets into the program training wild horses. A wild buckskin stallion, which Fran laughingly called a “renegade” that had to escape the herd area to “get the girls,” gets aged incorrectly and because of that and his escapist tendencies, the decision is made to remove him – but BECAUSE of his perceived age, he’s not sent to the local adoption, he’s sent to Canon City. There, Colorado Correctional Industries officials see his potential and put him into their saddle training program with the inmates, where he meets Inmate X, who sees his potential (interesting, huh? I hope you realize your own potential, guy!). The Border Patrol comes calling – just 10 months after Justice was removed from the wild! – and picks him (among a few others) from the dozen horses the facility has in training at the time. Now, Justice is headed to Washington, and Inmate X has served his time and been released from prison, where, in my heart of hearts, I wish him all the best.

Wow, huh?

I have seen some pictures of Justice via e-mail not sent directly to me, so if I get permission from the original senders, I will post them here on the blog. At least one might be sensitive because it shows the inmate on Justice, carrying a Colorado flag (but what a great photo!).

What better testament to the temperament and resiliency of mustangs!? I’ve talked to and heard from a lot of people who have adopted a mustang, and the common refrain is “I wouldn’t sell my mustang for a million bucks.” As much as we hate to see them removed from the wild, many of those that have been removed and have found homes have found forever-homes, I think.

They all have stories. Some are just a little more star-studded than others. 🙂

Justice prevails!!

P.S./This just in: According to information from Ann Bond, the horse Kootenai (“kooten-ee”) shown in the December 2007 issue of Western Horseman about “Project Noble Mustang” (Page 78 ) might be the horse from Sand Wash Basin – the one that’s also going to Washington, D.C.! On her list is a horse named Kootenai, from Sand Wash. Double dose of “wow” for our Colorado mustangs!


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10 01 2009
water_bearer's avatar water_bearer

Have you seen this guy’s photos of mustangs in Nevada and Oregon? Wow. Someone on the Kiger board posted the link and I sat through the whole show. Click to turn the comments on up top and there’s a tidbit here and there about some of the horses.

10 01 2009
TJ's avatar TJ

Wow is right. Those are lovely photos of beautiful horses. I’d like to transplant the lake in one of those photos to Spring Creek Basin – and then get enough rain to keep it full!
TJ

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