Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, March 31, 1984, Image 20

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    East meets West and get together in York
BY JOYCE BUPP
Staff Correspondent
LEWISBERRY Blonde and
petite, the 12-year-old leaned
against a feedrack at the Wild
Horse and Burro Center near
Lewisberry, never taking her quiet
eyes from the cluster of horses
cautiously moving about the pen.
Already, Chris CorMe had made
her choice. It would be the young
horse with the big white blaze over
the nose, in stark contrast to the
rust-hued coat.
Chris lives just up the road from
the Bureau of Land Management’s
Wild Horse and Burro Center,
operated by Frank and Doris
Goodlander. Last year, Chris’
mother, Betty Trout, had selected
a horse with strikingly similar
features. When she learned, last
"Wildfire" is wild about people. The former wild horse begs
for attention as Wild Horse and Burro Center operator Frank
Goodlander chats with visitors inquiring about adoption.
WAV mmmmmmmmm^
Attn P E Hess
P O Box 337, Oxford. PA 19363
Dealer Inquiries Available m Pennsylvania Counties Berks Schuylkill
Armstrong Indiana Erie Crawford Warren Elk Cameron McKean
Clinton Lycoming Sullivan Wyoming Lu/erne Columbia Bradford
Susquehanna Adams Cumberland York Potter Tioga New Jersey
Counties Sussex Morris Passaic Atlantic Cape May Monmouth Mid
dlesex Somerset Maryland Counties Talbot Dorchester New York
Counties Orleans Genesse Monroe Livingston Allegany Steuben
Yates Seneca Cayuga Tempkins Schuyler Tioga Chemung Broome
Chenango Madison Lewis Oneida Herkimer Fulton Montgomery
Otsego Delaware Schohaire Sullivan Orange Ulster Greene
Chautauqua Cattaraugus
(No Dealers Fees
Name
Address
County
City
Phone
Friday morning, that the first
horse shipment of the year had
arrived, Mrs. Trout obtained
permission for Chris to leave
school early, in order to have one
of the first choices from the new
arrivals.
The 50 horses shyly investigating
the pens had been rounded up from
the barren public ragelands of
Nevada. For the three previous
days, they’d been traveling across
the country in a shiny, double
deckered tractor-trailer rig, and
rested, fed and watered
periodically through each day as
the law mandates. Even while
Chris watched “her” 10-month-old
weanling the hauler had donned his
wide-brimmed cowboy hat after
catching a couple of hours rest and
headed back out the road west.
r r ~
\ V A
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JACKET *
* Participating Agri-Builders Only
butler
State
- **
- 1,
She hadn’t settled on a name yet.
That could wait until later, after
she’d gotten to know the animal’s
personality better. Of one thing she
was certain. Hers was the frien
dliest in the lot.
<**•
“I picked mine, last May,
because he was the friendliest of
that shipment,” relates Betty
Trout. “His name is R. 8., but
everyone around here just calls
him Mr. Friendly.”
R.B. was 13-months-old when he
was adopted. The gelding is one of
about 20 horses boarded year
round at the Center’s facilities.
FREE
CAP
AND
Bethlehem
C & M SALES INC
R D HI
Honesdale, PA 18431
PH 717 253-1612
WEETER CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
P O Drawer V
Knox, PA 16232
PH 814-797-5122
■*>:
■>
Chris Corkle picks out the wild horse she wilt adopt. She selects friendly equine and
one that has similar facial markings to one that her mother adopted a year ago.
/
/ ■'
' ,1 nr
EH
20 YEAR WARRANTY
NA w WM? U iNr ING 0 A NEWTON
SYSTEMS, INC. & son CO.
k. Bndgeville, DE 19933
Nazareth, PA 18064 pu oao 017 ooi 1
PH 215-759-1331 PH 302 337 8211
LEROY E. MYERS,
INC.
Route ffl, Box 163
Clear Spring, MD21722
PH 301-582-1552
- *
, V ' 1
“In no time at all, we could
handle him,” she adds. “He’ll be
broken this summer; already he’s
halter broken and I can lunge him.
We practically live here on
weekends now and help out with
whatever we can.”
While small groups of visitors
view the pens of available adop
tees, it soon becomes evident
which animals are new arrivals
and which ones are the old-timers
at the Center.
Newly-arrived horses shy away
from strangers, hovering a bit
nervously back away from the
AG MASTER 2:12
D. E. SMITH. INC.
Mifflmtown, PA 17059
PH 717-436-2J51
t '~****£Z*4'
racks stuffed full of hay, waiting to
nibble until after onlookers move
on down the long feed alley to other
pens.
By contrast, horses that have
been at the center for a few weeks
either ignore or seem to outright
enjoy the company, busy instead
burying their noses in the ever
available supplies of hay that
constitute their diets.
Studying the horses nearby is
Sandy McLaughlin, R 2 Felton,
York County. The mare Mrs.
TO QUALIFY
CAP & JA
YOUR AGRI-BUI
Show You A Butlffl
Take You On A Bil
Tour
Make A Bonafide
Proposal
(Be sure to ask your Agri-Bofl
Discount From Butler)
FOUR COUNTIES
CONTRACTOR
R D , Box 249
Coalport, PA 16627
PH 814-672-5751
GOMPF CONSTRUCTION Tm-STATE^ 1
CO. INC. DIST. NC.
1841 Jerry’s Road ?° U un2o7!
Street, MD 21154 .^67
PH 301-692-5350 PH 301 86
(Turn to Page A 25)
PROGRAM ENW
—-
TRI-COUNjj
AGRI-SYSTEJS
rd " iß niS«
Swedesboro, NJ
PH 609-467 3l«