“I figured the only way to prove myself right or wrong was to get one for myself. “I’d always believed that a real spoiled horse would be harder to work with than a wild horse,” Gray said. The two have covered 30 to 40 miles of trails in the Dawson Forest Wildlife Management Area.Īlready, the training has netted the pair a second place at the recent Midway Saddle Club show. Since then, Gray has worked Johnny Cash about an hour a day, four or five days a week. And, remarkably, within the mustang’s first three days on the farm, Gray had gentled him enough to ride. Within three hours of his arrival at Blackthorn Farms, Gray had Johnny Cash wearing a halter. “The whole purpose of this deal is to try to get these things noticed and get a few more of them adopted out,” Gray said.Īnd Johnny Cash is nearly ready to … well … walk the line. “It’s a lot to cram in to 100 days,” Gray said.Īt event’s end, the horses are sold at auction with the proceeds benefiting the Mustang Heritage Foundation, an arm of the Bureau of Land Management designed to preserve and promote the adoption of American wild horses. They were then castrated, vaccinated and taken to a holding facility in Illinois for distribution to trainers across the country.īut the trainers only have the horses temporarily. Gray said the mustangs were rounded up in Clark County, Nev. Gray is also among three Georgia horse trainers selected by the Mustang Heritage Foundation to participate.Īfter completing an arduous application process, Gray, Drew Olsen of Villa Rica and Marc Chancey of Augusta received their horses June 14. Gray and his mustang are among about 200 participants from across the country in the Extreme Mustang Makeover.Įxtreme Mustang Makeover is a 100-day challenge where some of the country’s top horse trainers must gentle and train horses straight from the wild in preparation for competition Sept. They’ve never had any mistakes made with them.” “The neat part with these mustangs,” Gray said, “is once they start trusting you, they come along a lot faster than a domesticated horse, because they just read your body language and your energy level so much better. Here water, despite the drought, is, by comparison, plentiful. This wild horse Shangri-La is a place where the sun rises and sets on a North Georgia barn replete with a steady supply of grain and nutrient rich hay. Johnny Cash’s days spent with more than 33,000 others just like him foraging the American West for dried up prairie grass and a trickling stream have blown away like tumbleweeds and dust. The horse, appropriately named Johnny Cash, seems to find it easy, pleasant work in exchange for temporary quarters on Gray’s rolling, green home place, Blackthorn Farms in northwestern Forsyth County. “From what I’ve seen so far,” said Gray, a stout, 28-year-old farrier and horse trainer, “he’s come a lot farther along than the majority of horses I’ve worked. The 3-year-old gelding walks, canters, trots, backs up and, with a little instruction from Gray, could probably go rustle up a tomato sandwich and glass of sweet tea. For a horse just two months removed from the arid Nevada wild, Eric Gray’s lean, black-tinted mustang now carries a saddle as naturally as some men carry a plain leather wallet.
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