Tuesday, June 7, 2011

JUNE 2011

A few thoughts…….
  •  I would like to thank Diana for her hard work and dedication to TDA during her time as President. Join me in giving her a great big thumbs up! I ask that you all be patient with me as I assume the responsibilities as editor of your newsletter. I welcome any suggestion you may have.
  •  Come one come all to the first annual mock show and novice day on June 11th. It will be a day of fun, thrills and excitement with something for everyone. Bring your donkeys and play with them or come and use one of the many that will be available. Lunch will be provided. This event is at Dayle and Joe Haworth’s in Chapel Hill, TN. For driving directions & layout of the day click this link, http://www.tennessee-donkeys.com/Events.html. You must have a negative coggins to participate. Direct any questions to Theresa Puckett 615-230-7260, ccrdonkeys@comcast.net or Dayle Haworth 615-504-4536,  minidonks@united.net.
  •  The 3rd annual Donkey Day Expo turned out to be a fun and informative day. Dawn Ware gave a series of informative training sessions. Lydia grilled us a great lunch complete with desserts. Dayle did a wonderful clipping demonstration, and I ended up with a body clipped donkey, pretty cool. Thanks to all for a great day.  
  • The TDA Calendars are here and go on sale immediately!!! They are $12.00 each.

   New members
Please welcome our new members.
·         Sam Alexander, Madison, AL, samalexx1@gmail.com
·         Donald Griffin, Fine Ass Acres, Rock Island, TN, justduckie1@aol.com
Current Events
For updates on current events please visit the TDA web site at www.tennessee-donkeys.com/Events.html

Equine Herpesvirus (EHV-1)

At this point everyone in the equine community has at least heard that there has been an outbreak of Equine Herpesvirus EHV-1. You may think to yourself, don’t I vaccinate for that, and you do. This is a new strain for which at this point there is no vaccine. In a brochure published by the USDA they tell us “ EHV-1: Can cause four manifestations of disease in horses, including a neurological form, respiratory disease, abortion, and neonatal death. EHM is most often due to mutant or neuropathogenic strains of EHV-1, so called because of a particular mutation in the genome.” They go on to define EHM as “Equine herpesvirus myeloencephalopathy (EHM) is another name for the neurologic disease associated with equine herpesvirus (EHV) infections. Neurological signs appear as a result of damage to blood vessels in the brain and spinal cord associated with EHV infection. Interference with the blood supply leads to tissue damage and a subsequent loss in normal function of areas in the brain and spinal cord.” You all recently received an email from Katrina with a link in to TDA’s health page where you can read this very informative piece of literature in its entirety. Please take the time to read this, here is the link again http://www.tennessee-donkeys.com/Health/equine_herpesvirus_brochure_2009.pdf . If you have further questions about this strain or any other equine diseases please contact your Veterinarian.  

Marines' Iraqi donkey headed for Nebraska

By Jessica Gresko 
 5/14/2011


It took 37 days and a group of determined animal lovers, but a donkey from Iraq is now a U.S. resident. 


Smoke The Donkey, who became a friend and mascot to a group of U.S. Marines living in Iraq's Anbar Province nearly three years ago, arrived in New York this week aboard a cargo jet from Turkey. After being quarantined for two days, he was released Saturday and began a road trip to Omaha, Neb., where he is destined to become a therapy animal.


The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals International announced Smoke's arrival in New York on Thursday.


By Saturday afternoon the trailer carrying Smoke, named for its color, had driven through Baltimore and was on its way to Warrenton, Va., for a meet-and-greet with some fans.


The donkey will live and help Wounded Warriors Family Support, an organization founded by Ret. Marine Col. John Folsom, commandant of Camp Taqaddam when Smoke showed up, the SPCA said.


"Marines aren't all tough guys with hard hearts — we're suckers for kids and animals," Folsom told reporters in December amid efforts to transport the equine.


Smoke was handed over to another Marine unit when Folsom's unit left. When the last of the Marines left Iraq last fall, they gave Smoke to the Army unit replacing them. An Army major immediately gave Smoke away, the Indo Asian News Service reported.


"The Army wanted nothing to do with him," Folsom had said.


Folsom used to walk Smoke daily and had formed a bond with the animal. It didn't seem right that Smoke was left behind, he said in a telephone interview Saturday.


The donkey, which once snatched and ate a cigarette from a careless Marine, was such a part of the unit that he received his own care packages and cards from children who grew up with the movie "Shrek," featuring a talking donkey. 


A major had given the donkey to a Fallujah sheik who reportedly passed it along to a family but offered to get it back, at first for $30,000. The sheik later dropped the charge, but logistical problems in getting the animal back the states ensued. 


There was the bureaucracy of getting Smoke nearly 7,000 miles around the world: blood tests, health certifications and forms from customs, agriculture and airline officials.


To cut through the red tape, Folsom got help from the SPCA, which has a project that transports dogs and cats from Iraq to the United States. 


The group, however, had never attempted airlifting a donkey, which is more complicated because equines can't be transported on traditional commercial aircraft and must go by cargo plane. 


The donkey's journey has provided laughter — and head scratching — along the way.


"People just couldn't believe we were going to these great lengths to help a donkey because donkeys in that part of the world are so low down on the totem pole," said the society's Terri Crisp, who negotiated the donkey's passage from Iraq to the United States. "Donkeys are not viewed as a companion animal. They're viewed as a work animal."


As frustrating as the journey sometimes was for those involved, including a week-long delay getting Smoke in to Turkey and another three weeks to get out, the donkey found friends and supporters along the way, Crisp said. They included the U.S. ambassador in Turkey, who at one point was getting daily updates.


"I think people did finally come to realize that this is one of these out-of-the-ordinary situations. Once you met him and saw what a unique donkey he was, it was hard to say no to him," Crisp said, describing Smoke as "gentle" and "mischievous" as well as a food-lover — carrots and apples in particular. 


The journey, which started April 5, wasn't cheap.


The society estimates it cost between $30,000 to $40,000 from start to finish, with expenses such as $150 to ship Smoke's blood from Turkey to a U.S. Department of Agriculture lab in Iowa, $18,890 for a Lufthansa flight through Frankfurt, Germany and $400 a day for quarantine in New York. Folsom says he recognizes some people may be critical of the expense, which was paid for through donations, but he says he considers it payback for the donkey that was such a friend to Marines. 


"Why do we spend billions of dollars of pet food in this country? Why do we do that?" Folsom said. "We love our animals. That's why." 


Folsom saw the donkey for the first time in years Saturday when he arrived in New York to transport him to his new home in Omaha. The journey to Omaha is expected to take two days, and Folsom said Smoke is already getting used to seeing big, green trees instead of desert.


"He's an American donkey now," Folsom said.


Update: Iraq donkey named Smoke now at home in Nebraska                                                          By Margery A. Beck, Associated Press    
                
Smoke The Donkey is now at his new home in an eastern Nebraska pasture after a more than 6,000-mile journey.

Retired Marine Col. John Folsom says Smoke "was a battle buddy, and you don't leave your battle buddy behind.

Smoke arrived Wednesday at Miracle Hills Ranch, where he will live out the rest of his life as a therapy animal.


Reprinted with permission of the Associated Press 2011

WILLIAMSON COUNTY FAIR


by Diana Poole
Make sure to mark your calendars for Sunday August 7th for the Williamson County (Franklin, TN) Fair Donkey Show. This show does have some Open classes. For those members that have Mammoth donkeys, there is a Mammoth show also (see link below.)
This fair show is run differently than the other county fairs we currently show at. So, I wanted to make sure everyone had the opportunity to enter if they were wanting to.
Here are some of their General Rules & Regulations. This is not the entire list; please check the Premium Catalog or website for a full list:
  1. The Donkey Show is open to all residents of Tennessee and to members of the Tennessee Donkey Association.
  2. Proof of negative Coggins will be required on donkeys 6 months and older.
  3. Entry fees are $5 per class
  4. The 2011 LIVESTOCK ENTRY FORM must be completed and postmarked along with entry fees by 7/22/2011. Entries postmarked after this date will not be entered in the show. (They will also have online entry available at some point in June – check their website at www.williamsoncountyfair.org)
  5. Fair premium checks will be mailed to winners the week after the fair. Checks must be cashed 60 days afterwards or they are void.
  6. No alcohol, firearms, illegal drugs or fireworks will be allowed on the fairgrounds.
  7. No pets except service animals will be allowed on the fairgrounds.
  8. Livestock exhibitors are admitted at no charge with their livestock at the livestock interest.
  9. TDA Show rules apply.
We have a new class at this show! Class # 13 is GREEN In-Hand Trail! This class is for anybody that has a young or inexperienced donkey for them to get their “hooves” wet! I think this will be a very popular and fun class!
Our show will be set up – under cover – in what is called the WARM UP ARENA. It is outside, but attached, on the west-side of the main building.
The Judge for this show is Mr. Lee Little from Clarkrange, TN. Some of you may remember him from Mini Mania 2010. Mr. Little was very professional and exhibitors really enjoyed and respected him.
I will submit more information as I get it, along with a map of the fairgrounds as we get closer to the event.
Here is a link to entry forms and the class sheet:

Lightfoot’s ASSpect




Donkey Day Expo

May 2011


Okay……I get that my owner is excited about miniature donkeys; especially me. And, for good reason I might add. I spoiled her by being the genius donkey of her dreams. If I had it to do all over again I would pretend to be difficult on that obstacle course and I would NEVER allow videos to be filmed let alone posted for all to see. But I could do an easy course with my hooves tied behind my back while blindfolded.

So, she goes to your little club function, Donkey Day Expo,...puullleeaase. Are you kidding me? I didn’t even get to go. Then, she comes home with all your grand ideas on how to train. (I overheard her mention the name ‘Dawn Ware’ to Dayle. Who is she anyway?) Doesn’t matter, I’m not happy about any of it. She seems to think, NOW, that she can “LOOK” at my hip and I should move away. Plus, she is talking about Snigging and I thought I had her convinced about “No harness allowed”. Look! What are you doing? You are creating a nightjennet for me! Can you people get a life?

I’m minding my own business, eating in the pasture with my friends when she appears out of nowhere expecting me to do her bidding. And, she’s way more persistent than she used to be. She actually waits until I give in. It’s ridiculous!! I forbid her to attend any more training seminars presented by the Tennessee Donkey ASSociation. Got it?

'Til Next Time,

Lightfoot Lee