Monday, March 14, 2011

Schooling at Ramtap

For our pony club meeting we went to Ramtap, a wonderful facility that offers a chance to ride cross country, stadium, and dressage. Of course I was just there for the cross country. We got a chance to walk around and find all the baby cross country jumps and hop over them, carefully avoiding all the prelim and Training level jumps.
Wow look at his tail! It looks like a broom.
Ramtap seemed to be trying to spice up their selection of jumps and had added this rocket.
After we became bored of the dry jumps we headed over to the pond to get wet. Boeagle jumps into water in the weirdest way. He seems to resemble the horses in those old paintings, before they had cameras and could figure out how horses actually move.  Its quite uncomfortable to ride, and once we start going thorough the water it feels like he's wading through cement. It was only Bo's second or third try and cross country and I'm very happy with him.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Graceful Dismount

           When you fall of your horse you don't want it to hurt, but you want it to look good, especially if there is a camera on site. You can't boost about you cantering lazily toward a 2'6 jump and your horse just not feeling like jumping it, and you are too lazy and inattentive to dig your heels in and make them, so you decide to try to jump it by yourself, so when your horse ducks out, you lean forward and pitch yourself over the head of your horse and over the jump or on top of it. This type of dismount usually results in a front flip in mid-air and landing on your back. So when you have a picture of such a dismount all you can do is shudder and hope nobody else has seen it.
Such a picture probably looks similar to this

          But you can boost about your horse galloping toward a 3'2 oxer, flying over it, landing, and your horse is so overcome by its sense of accomplishment that it starts bucking and you only fall off because a pigeon chooses that moment to dive toward your horses head, resulting in a huge bronco buck and you fly into the air, and of course the camera man has waited for this moment and the camera flashes. This is a picture I know any of you would hang on the wall, and in-till they fade you would show off those bruises of yours too, of course if you had managed to STAY on it would be legendary.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Mule Cloning

Eleanor Roberts-Caudle


Biology MT 5 Level four





Mule Cloning

Cloning is a quickly developing field in science. It has opened many doors which had been previously thought to never open. Horses, Rats, dogs, camels, ferrets, and other normally reproducing animals have been cloned. However no hybrids or unfertile breeds had ever been cloned until the mule. Mules are hybrids, and are a cross between a horse and donkey, which are unfortunately unfertile. Unlike a horse or donkey, they cannot give birth to their own due to the amount of chromosomes. Horses have 46 and donkeys have 62, resulting in the offspring of their breeding (mule) having a total of 63 chromosomes, 32 come from the stallion/ mare, and 31 come from the donkey/ jack. This odd number of chromosomes prevents them from producing offspring.

Mules have been becoming a steadily more popular animal to breed, and mule racing is one of the recent sports that have started in California. Regrettably the fact that they are infertile inhibits the ability to single out a well-bred mule and try to develop a better bloodline, as has been done with other animals. Cloning represents a unique opportunity to mule enthusiasts; it would enable mule breeders to expand their attempts to create a bloodline of good mules. The first cloned mule, Idaho Gem and the other identical mule clones have been a success. They were created using the cells from the mule fetus of the sire and dam that produced the champion mule racer Taz.

This is done by taking the cell of the given animal, in this case the cell from a mule fetus that was created in 1998 with the sire and dam of Taz. They then transplanted the cell into the egg of a horse that’s nucleus had been removed. The egg was then fused with the mule cell using electricity, and then stimulated with calcium which activated the egg causing it to divide as an egg would if fertilized as in reproduction. Scientists had had difficulties cloning equines and the scientists doing the mule cloning had deducted that if they increased the levels of calcium it would increase the cells growth; this was shown to be correct. The egg was then cultured until an early stage embryo formed. The mule egg would have then been transferred into a mare.

Only 21 pregnancies in the mares were successful, and three of them were carried to term, Idaho Gem, Utah Pioneer, and Idaho Star. Some have shown concern that the mules may age more rapidly than normal, as they believe Dolly the sheep might have. However the fetuses did not show any abnormalities, and so far the cloned mules have displayed only a healthy vigor in the racing world.