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The Horse Information lives Here! © The #1 Horse Industry Information Advertising Directory! Contact Ann to include your company.
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My PMU Horse, Dream
This article is to encourage our many horse friends to consider the PMU Horse, and the PMU
Industry to do more for PMU foals an Editorial by Robert SM Pruitt
InfoHorse.com became involved with PMU horses
a few years ago through a picture that caught my interest on our Sister site equusite.com. A PMU foal is the result of a mare that is used in making of a menopause drug called Premerin® produced by Wyeth Inc. PMU stands for pregnant mare urine, the product that is collected to make the menopause drug. Pregnant Mares mean foals will result.
There are alternatives to this drug that work for most women but in some cases premarin seems to be the only drug that relieves the symptoms of menopause. I will inform the reader here that I am pro-human as I have a Sister, a Mother, a
Wife and 2 Daughters and they come first in my world. The Drug Industry has helped our quality of life Now the other shoe can drop and I can honestly say that I know the people involved with Wyeth
Inc. at every level could do a much better job of insuring the foals produced have a productive life as a cared for horses, and do not end up at a feed lot as thousands do every year. The PMU
Industry as well as the drug industry generally has tried to improve their image by hiring Image Consultants. These Consultants have required groups working to place foals change their names
and group missions to more politically correct descriptions and references to the PMU Industry and horses. Word changes that were big last year were “Rescue” groups were told to change their
names and references to “Acquisition” groups if they wanted to be included as outlets for foal placement. Even the word “adoption” wasn’t suppose to be used for some reason. The change in name didn’t help the foals, as last year was one of the biggest loss years yet. A
combination of cutbacks in product requirements from Wyeth and the panic of many PMU Ranchers caused a very large number of foals including the Mares to end up at feed lots. Too
many horses, not enough demand. I have noticed this year many of the groups that were helping to “place” foals are no longer being allowed to help at all, it seems the PMU farms are going to place the foals directly. I find it difficult to understand how this change could be in the foals’ best
interest.
PMU horses can be almost any horse breed; the
most productive horses (most urine) are usually bigger breeds like Draft horses or draft crosses so they tend to dominate the total number. My horse “Dream” is 75 % Quarter Horse and 25 %
Percheron. Dream looks like a slightly bigger Quarter Horse and his size works for me very well as I am 6’ 3”, 230 lbs. Dream’s temperament is also better due to the the Draft blood. Celebrities
like Tom Selleck (A big man) and some Trainer/ Clinicians like Dennis Reis also tall, favor the PMU horses. Many TV and movie Westerns such as Monte Walsh and Crossfire Trail use the PMU horses. The PMU horses are larger and so
photograph well, they are more patient with the long shooting schedules and take good care of their Riders; My horse Dream works very hard to keep even the most novice rider on his back, while other
more hot-blooded horses I have owned work pretty hard at encouraging novice riders to leave.
The following is a short history of one PMU horse named by our website Visitors “Dream”.
Dream started life with the letter and number assigned at a PMU Farm in North Dakota where he was born. The formally named PMU Foal Adoption Network contacted a few of the PMU
Ranchers that sent most of their foals to auction, to encourage them try to place some of the foals in homes where they would be cared for. The price to adopt a foal was set at what the Farmer
thought he would get if the foal went to auction and the current price per pound for horse. The group set up a web site and placed pictures of foals up for adoption. At Dream’s Farm/Ranch the
Owners wife took pictures of the foals. Unfortunately for Dream his picture was taken at a strange angle and maybe in the rain so he didn’t look like the kind of horse too many people would want.
I learned about PMU horses when I bought Equusite.com and started seeing pictures of these horses submitted to the photo contest there. One picture really caught my attention so I decided to
contact the person who owned the foal and he sent me to the formally named PMUFANI rescue group. They used the words “volunteer rescue group” in 2002. I contacted them and found the
adoption season had ended but there was still 2 horses they hadn’t placed. One was a Clydesdale and the other was S-22. The picture on the PMUFANI site was so bad I couldn’t tell anything
about his conformation or color. All I knew was he was a Quarter Horse, Percheron cross and I was his last hope.
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So I went through the adoption process and a couple of weeks later a truck and trailer rolled into the Horse Stable and to the stall we rented and a un-handled and scared foal ran off the trailer into
our quarantined stall. When I saw Dream that first night it almost broke my heart. He had on a nylon halter that was so small it was beginning to cut him and was covered from head to foot with
caked on mud and manure. He was so tired his legs were shaking from the long trip and so I spent a few hours with him trying to help him settle in. He had a soft muscle look that reflected the fact
that he was held in a small pen after weaning. Dream was headed to the auction and the feed lot if no one had intervened on his behalf. Lucky for Dream and lucky for me fate stepped in. He was
now standing on ground in his own stall filled with the soft wood shaving several inches deep and his water was fresh and clean as was his food. I left when I was sure the exhausted little colt
would be O.K. on this first night.
Early the next morning I started the process of helping my little horse understand that I was there to help him. I was mainly patient and he was curious enough to look my way and with
more time approach me to take hay from my hand. He was small enough that I wasn’t nervous about removing the old halter and running my hands over him. By the after noon I have used a bucket and rags to knock off
enough of the mud and manure to see his buckskin color. The other thing I could see was his feet were so badly overgrown that he had got used to moving in a way that gave him a slight club foot. (see front feet this picture)
The following day Dream had his first real bath and I found a great lady Farrier with a soft spot for my little foal to give him his first trim.
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That was a real Rodeo but Dream was for the first time in his life clean and standing on his feet like a horse should. He even had a new fancy halter. Dream’s name was given to him in a contest
supported by our Advertisers and Visitors at our websites. It would take a year of very talented Farriers working on Dream’s front feet to get them very nearly normal again. All is well now.
I am sure the Rancher/Farmer family where Dream was born like to see the horse babies every year. I was told that Dream was the favorite of the PMU Farm Owners Daughter. My conclusion
regarding the fact that Dream was in such poor condition is simply the Farmer didn’t know any better and considered Dream livestock. His concern is feeding his family and the PMU business is
a large part of his yearly income. He has bills to pay and money to put away for his children’s college fund, wedding and a million other things. He is no different than most of the people I know
in that regards. I want to make it clear that I don’t consider these people or what they do as bad. I am only pointing out that this Industry could stand some improvement for the sake of the horses
caught up in the making of this drug.
Dream’s 4 years with us have been eventful as he learned his job of being my saddle horse. I am in a unique position as the owner of InfoHorse.com as we were swamped with
training tapes and books to help us keep Dream on the right path. The California horse Trainer/Clinician Richard Winters put the first ride on Dream and gave him several hours of training to start him correctly. Dreams
next Trainer and my Riding Instructor was Patrice Thompson of Ojai California. She was amazing with both of us and Dream and I will never forget what I learned from her.
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In 2005 we relocated our offices to Fort Worth Texas where Dream now has his own arena, barn and 5 acre of pasture he shares with our 19 years young Morgan Mare “Splendor”. Splendor has
been with us for 18 years and will always be with us as will our PMU representative and my personal horse “Dream”. I couldn’t imagine a better horse for me than my big buckskin. Every
cowboy we meet goes on and on about how impressive Dream is under saddle.
My purpose in writing this article is to encourage our many horse friends to consider the PMU Horse; you will find
a steady partner and friend. My other purpose in writing this article is to encourage the PMU Industry to advertise the virtues of the PMU Horses at every Horse Exposition and major horse event. Find Big
Name Trainer/Clinicians to take the PMU horse to the horse world at large through television and print. Admit that in the past you didn’t do as
good a job as you should but now the PMU Industry is going head to head with the general horse industry and buying the best Stallions and Mares as some PMU Ranches are doing now, so the
production of foals becomes a primary value of the PMU Industry. Some impressive and very positive effort is being made by the North American Equine Ranching Council (NAERIC) to get
the PMU Farmer/Rancher on the right track being responsible Horse Industry Members. More pressure from Wyeth Inc. on all of the PMU Farmers that supply them to support their group,
NAERIC would help. When the foals are placed they need to be cleaned up, hooves trimmed and somewhat halter broke. Training adds value as does registration paper work Last of all, for now
accept help from any sincere group to help get the PMU foals placed with good people. Lets work together. |
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