Health & Fitness
Ramona's Original Horses: The First Meeting
The first meeting of San Diego's wild horses was incredible! Read all about the time we first met and keep up with us in the coming weeks!
IΒ first met the people and horses of Coyote Canyon Caballos dβAnza (CCCDA) about four years ago. I have always had an interest in wild horses, and since owning one that interest has grown.
I saw a note about the last of the wild horses and burros being removed from the Anza Borrego desert as recently as 2003. Some reports that there were a few stragglers caught up in 2007 and removed were difficult to verify.
Well golly, I didnβt even know there were equine living freely in our very own desert state park that recently so I wanted to know more. I dug around for information on the web and found that horses and burros indeed inhabited the desert of Southern California. The horses were reported to be starving and having no water available at the time so they were removed from their longtime home.
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I was aghast to hear the newsβpartly because I never saw the horses in the desert, partly because I think the wild horses should be left alone, and partly because this was all so new to me. Right in the very state park that Cricket and I visit often were horses that I was unaware of. I never dreamed they would have been so close! I knew they were numerous in Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming, but San Diego? Wow!
After more research I found CCCDA and a name I knew came up: Kay Levie. I knew that name but couldnβt remember why. I read about the effort to get some of the horses back to this area. The only way that was going to happen was if someone adopted them from the BLM, but how would they know if the horses were indeed from here? I saw a contact name and emailed her. Kay got back to me right away.
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I must have had great timing because she said there were four stallions found and brought back to the Santa Ysabel area and the mares were being identified. I asked her how the identification was done and found out that initially through the brand markings on each horse, then DNA testing was used to be certain.
The brand markings on each horse tell where the horse is from and its approximate age at the time of capture. Cricket has such a brand on her neck. DNA is used to identify certain genetic markers to be certain they are of the same or similar gene pool.
A few weeks went by, then the email came. The mares were to arrive, so plans were made to meet them. They came in and I was at the ranch in a flash. All of the mares were covered in sticky mud, their manes and tails matted. Even the younger mares of a year or so were muddy and Kay had them separated from the older mares for their safety.
They were stunning nonetheless. I snapped pictures and asked questions during my visit. Kay told me she suspected many, if not all, of the (older) mares were pregnant. Not the breeding they had in mind, but some unknown stallion in the area they had just come from.
Soon thereafter the foals began arriving and Kay decided she would give them numeric names and those wishing to sponsor a foal could do the actual naming. Emails came with photos attached, βHere is Uno,β and βIntroducing Dos,β and as they arrived, each was given a Spanish numeral misnomer and renamed as sponsors stepped forward to assist in covering the costs of feeding and keeping the horses.
My little guy, βDos,β was aptly renamed βAlvaro,β at least to me. It seems like just yesterdayβyet here we are in 2012 and Kay is sending emails about βOcho and Patty,β Ocho being one of the fillies born some three years ago and Patty came March 17, 2012.
The horses (mare and foals) have been moved to reside in Ramona. Oh yes, and KayβI figured it outβis an amazing photographer and used to shoot the Ramona Rodeo and other events in Ramona, so I saw her all the time; and now I have the good fortune of calling her a friend and admiring her for helping our wild horses!
Kay is in Borrego working and living and continuing her amazing feats and travels. More on present-day horses next timeβ¦.. And of course Robert and Kathleen Hayden, the heart of CCCDA.
To support the CCCDA and original horses from our area, contact Robert and Kathleen Hayden, P.O. Box 236, Santa Ysabel, CA 92070, phone 760-782-3340, email cccda@znet.com., and visit the Coyote Canyon Heritage Herd Facebook page.
