|
|
Rambling 
Printable Version
In no way is this the definitive work for those thinking
of buying a mule or who have just purchased their first animal. But, hopefully,
it may be a useful place to start your knowledge building. I don’t
care if you think it’s a load of rubbish. Just be careful and safe
with your mule. No matter whom you speak to about mules, everyone’s
experiences will vary, and some more than others! From here on I am going
to share some of what I have learnt from my mules, the ones I have owned
and worked with. If at times you think some of what I have to say is politically
incorrect or just plain rude - I Don’t Care!
In Britain there is a tendency towards bullying the owners of just about
every sort of animal. There is legislation of every kind. Animals breed
naturally, but the moment a human steps into the picture, suddenly licensing
is required! I have the highest regard for the British RSPCA, but they
like almost 100% of vets know little about mules. Do not let a vet prescribe
for your mule unless he understands the difference between your mule and
a horse! Spanish mules have no evolved resistance to any kind of equine
drug. Where there is a dosage variation for donkeys and horses discuss
side effects with your vet. Vets are not infallible, your mule is not
disposable, but knowledge brings responsibility, you are accountable!
A mule and its paternal parents are tougher than oxen and as durable
as the seasons. So do not be to kind to your mule! No! I do not condone
negligence and cruelty! Hopefully with my experience and your common sense
you will find the right way forward for you and your mule. It is also
my hope that what follows will inform, encourage, and entertain you as
you move closer to buying a mule. What I have to say is based on my experience.
People who have never owned a mule are not entitled to share their opinion
on mules with me. (I’m funny that way, and it’s not just mules!).
When you have owned a mule for one day you will know more than those with
only opinion to share. You had also better grow a thick skin against the
horse snob. Your mule may even cost you a friendship or two. You will
also realise that there is more to learn about mules than you thought,
and just when you think you have cracked it, they embarrass, or surprise
you again! So often it seems authors are contradicting each other when
they write about keeping mules. They are not! Many of us could write a
book for every mule we have owned.
Remember this. If you own a mule, you must feed and care for him. He
on the other hand is no way obliged to do anything for you! If you do
not remember this, the mule will certainly remind you!
A Mule is neither Horse nor Donkey. It is an exotic and complicated mixture
of both. I currently have twenty six mules and neither is exactly like
the other in temperament and going. My own mule, Blue (that’s his
name, not his colour), has a nature a bit like all of them and a lot like
none of them. We currently have around one hundred head of horses and
only one stands out for me as having any kind of personality, but he is
brilliant!
Anatomically and physically, as well as their character, are drawn in
part from both parents. Every colour you see horses and donkeys can be
found in mules.
WHY are you buying your first mule? Try to be clear about why you want
it, and what you want to achieve with it. Maybe you fancy the idea of
owning a mule just as a pet. Rather like the way someone would keep a
dog or a cat. I call these animals Garden Mules, and that’s fine,
as long as you’re not keeping a perfectly strong and healthy animal
restricted solely for the purpose of your being able to look at it.
However if your giving a home to an elderly mule, or one that is carrying
a permanent injury then I cannot think of a better use of your money than
to home a mule like this. The Donkey Sanctuary in Sidmouth, Devon sometimes
has animals for fostering. Here in Spain hundreds of mules each week go
to premature death due to the decline in the number of active small holdings.
The sale of the traditional Spanish Fincas to foreigners, and the sedentary
attitude of the new owners, means the decline in mules and their breeding.
We at Alberts Mules are fighting back, and currently have ten mares in
foal to our Jack, and another twenty maids in waiting. So many useful
mules are sold for dog meat here and in France. It is a scandal. I would
love to see a European ban on the sale of these animals, and a UNICEF
program to provide them to impoverished third world countries. Veterinary
support like that provided in the projects of Dr Elizabeth Svendsen and
her colleagues. Now that’s the kind of human / equine action I could
support. Any mule I sell I consider a rescued animal. But we cannot buy
them all and many, because of their history, are not suitable for retraining
as saddle, or pack animals.
Maybe you want a mule for riding. Mules make a wonderful riding investment.
Do you have open country around, or bridle paths? It will not matter to
your mule. He will love it! Will you be satisfied with a walking mule,
or something a little more athletic? Some have more of a trot in them
than others, and all may want to trot at some time!
Even if you have little or no experience of riding we can find the mule
for you. Do not worry! The day I bought my first mule was the day I learnt
to ride, such was my faith in that mule. He was over 16hh, and I have
short legs! You can learn to safely ride a mule quicker than you think!
There is no shame in finding a local stable and booking a few hours hacking.
This will help you break the nerves barrier and give you some useful equine
experience. Get your self some Brad Cameron training DVDs or Videos, www.muletrainer.com
. But don’t bust a blood vessel if your mules thinks Brads has got
it all wrong! Just think SAFETY!
ECOLOGY has a friend in the mule. Cheap to feed - what you put in comes
out as excellent manure. Frequently no vets bills unless you’re
careless! Little or no need for frequent farrier visits. Stronger than
a horse. Wonderful for ploughing. How about a mule to pull a mower to
cut that large lawn of yours? Cut the village green and earn some money!
Or to drag logs for yours or other peoples’ fire wood. A mule can
go everywhere a Land Rover can go, and more! If you live in a rural setting,
ride to the local shops and let your mule carry your purchases home for
you. Go on be eccentric! So many things a mule can do to save on fossil
fuels and pollution! Or what about a mule just for the fun of it.
EXPERIENCED RIDER be patient. The mule will not understand all that squeezing
you are doing with your legs unless your buying him trained for saddle.
However a mule generally will learn faster than a horse.
GAITED MULES are rare in Europe. The Mule can have between one to four
speeds, gears, or gaits. Do not let anyone tell you that an ungaited mule
is somehow devalued. An ungaited narrow hipped mule will carry its rider
safely along the narrowest track or mountain pass and not put a hoof wrong.
There has been many a horseman in the mountains of Spain and the American
wilderness that would have swapped his grand horse for a mule. Particularly
when he found himself with no room to dismount, and a horse whose width
and big feet meant they where continually breaking the edge of the track
threatening to pitch both horse and rider over the abyss. Remarkably,
if you give them their head, both mules and donkeys will invariably move
to within inches of a track edge. Quite exciting!
Most mules are Cow Hocked. That means the hind legs are rather like knocked
knees! In the majority of cases mules also have narrower hips than the
horse. It gives the mule a slight side to side action. A very gentle hula
hoop movement. Great for your hips and thighs if you ride often enough!
In ancient times mules and donkeys were the preferred mount of bishops
and gentry. The reason for this is the gentle nature and secure ride of
the mule or donkey, and it’s fondness for human company. What else
would be good enough for the Christ! It was only arrogant snobs, and louts
with swords that rode horses! These days they are called Huntsmen and
Eventers!
BLIND PANIC! When it comes to Flee or Flight! Horses generally flee.
Mules generally fight! See: www.horsegazettee.com/MadMule.html
The mule’s general resistance to blind panic, and ability to telegraph
its moods make it the ideal mount for the novice. I have only once seen
a tethered mule freak out. That was because some idiot had put a slip
knot around its neck that was rapidly strangling the animal. Normally
once a mule understands he is tethered he will not pull or resist. However,
last year I saw the result of a horse being tethered for only a few minutes.
Tied to a ring in the wall of its stable, the horse broke its own neck
thrashing around when a plastic bag fluttered by!
A mule, due to its variety of size, and its staying power, if started
early enough, offers the experienced rider far more potential for endurance
competition, and long treks,. A fit mule is around 25% stronger than a
fit horse of equal size and weight. I have exchanged many emails with
Howdy Fowler, often called Burro Bill, of Denning, New Mexico. He advocates
working his animals six to eight hours a day six days a week carrying
government and private survey groups across the deserts, and into the
Grand Canyon, often covering 40 miles a day in very trying temperatures.
Something he has found he is unable to do with horses. Here in Spain mules
have been used for thousands of years, and their strengths, and their
weaknesses are well understood. A mule has smaller nostrils, and larger
lungs than a horse. It breathes slower and longer than a horse. This is
what helps the mule function so effectively in hot temperatures. Here
in southern Spain it is the humans that cannot cope with the temperatures
in excess of 40 degrees not the mules. A visitor challenged me in an accusatory
way one day “Why do you make your mules stand out in 40 degrees
plus?” I told him,” Well if you can get them to go into the
stable and stay there I will give you ten euros (10 dollars)!” He
thought I was being cruel. I had to point out that mules love sun bathing.
In the open they were free to catch any small breeze that might happen
along, turn their thick rumps to the sun, and drop their heads in the
shade their bodies made. Mule logic often evades some quite intelligent
people!
WATER should always be available, and a big mule can drink up to 45 litres
a day when it is hot. If you live in a really cold climate you could mix
hot water to warm up their drink. Your mule will really appreciate that.
It’s not really pampering, it’s more compassion, or dare I
say? Love for your mule. That’s easier to do if you have a daily
routine. I take my mule out in the morning on a lead rope. He rolls, shakes
himself and I put him back in his enclosure. He eats straw for ten minutes
then drinks. Mules like routine!
BUDGETS are easier to fix for buying a house than a mule, or horse for
that matter! Buying a house first time around you usually know what you
want. But the first mule, well it’s hard to know what you NEED!
A working man will not buy a mule because it’s pretty, has lovely
ears, or has a good nature. It will be made to work! They buy a mule from
the feet up. Good natured mules can have a premium on them and are often
ideal for western leisure riding.
SPAIN has an extremely long way to go when it comes to animal protection
and animal rights issues.
No I am not an “activist” in the current sense of the word.
In fact any kind of extremist usually scares me. However I am actually
more worried that the British are going to apply the same laws they have
for horses, to mules as they become more popular in the UK. I know some
folks who have a passion for a certain type of equine. I stopped visiting
them as each time I went there I saw animals in extreme distress. One
time I visited, and was told an animal we had talked of previously was
dead. Within minutes I saw an animal with hoof holes (the result of being
feed to high protein food stuff). The next time I visited the first animal
I saw was exhibiting signs of colic (same cause). This animal later died.
When I was offered the opportunity to read a current and some back dated
issues of these people’s news letters. They were full of long drawn
out descriptions of the passing of one animal after another. But it was
all to clear to me why the animals were dying. They were being killed
with love. These folks worked themselves into the ground all day making
sure there was food in front of their animals. There was always a jolly
good reason why the animals could not be exercised! These people were
so fixed on their goal to save the animals from the knackers; they were
blind to their own mistakes. I know in my heart that the last thing these
people wanted to do was to do harm to the animals they clearly loved.
But harm they did! I hope the British mule owner will be free, and intelligent
enough to ensure that the animals they buy from Spain and France are not
overly pampered. Does your local RSPCA know the difference between mules
and horses?
MY MULES never receive exactly the same amount of grain each day if they
have not worked! Unless they need building up. Blue gets around 28lbs
of straw (Not Hay) a day. Usually pretty rough stuff. Plus around 2 or
3lbs of mixed cereal. Around two odd days a month he gets only the straw,
and water. Alternate days he gets selected vegetable peelings. Occasionally
he gets a whole lettuce, or bamboo. Only feed a mule small amounts of
whole or flaked corn, or alfalfa hay or grass, or pellets. These and some
other cereals are extremely high energy and protein foods. As a staple
diet they will drive a mule crazy. Turn him to horse, as we often say!
However if your mule has worked hard today, and will be expected to work
hard tomorrow then 2-5lbs (depending on his size and the length of the
day) of corn soaked in a bucket of water for 12 hours will set him up
fine for work. Put a lid on the bucket (flies)! We also use soaked beet
in the same way! Mules need less protein than a horse. Only around 11%.
But they need more Grease or Fat. For this reason all the Ganaderos (horse
& mule dealers) I know, feed their mule stock, stale bread and beet!
However it has to be extremely dry bread. Blue gets a loaf or two a week.
I always microwave it till it’s hard! Grass hay is good but be careful
not to over feed if you combine it with flaked or whole corn.
WORMING your mule is important. If you’re not sure how much wormer
to give him, you will need to know his weight. You can try looking at
www.ruralheritage.com. Within this site they have a programme that will
calculate your animal’s weight for you, and instructions on how
to go about it. It works for horses too! But you will have to decide how
much to use.
MULES MATURE a year later than the horse. This should not interfere with
halter and handling training. 18 months is a good time to start lunging
and long reining.
At two years a mule should stand to be groomed, saddled and have its feet
trimmed. It should load and clip easily. The weight of an adult rider
should not be applied to a mule’s back until it reaches or exceeds
its third year. We have some good three year old mules.
MULE BACKS are generally flatter than a horse, and some mules have almost
no wither at all. Flat backed mules can be hard to keep a saddle on! English
saddles are not made to fit flat backed animals EVER!
Natural mulemanship do’s not support or encourage you to attempt
to ride your mule English style, unless your mule is breed for it, and
started right. The mules’ action is wrong for it!
The English saddle is wrong for it, (don’t pad it out with blankets
to stop the rocking effect)! If you want to bob up and down like a flea
on a hot tile, buy a pony! Putting an English saddle on a mule is like,
greasing the road in front of your Land Rover! In my search for the right
seat for my four legged all terrain vehicle, I have used English, Portuguese,
Spanish Classic, Spanish Vaquero, Australian, and Western Saddles. Due
to the Americans appreciation of the mule and the huge leisure industry
that has evolved around the American mule, western saddles are easily
available to fit your mule. A western saddle gives the rider more flexibility,
and security. Natural mulemanship and the western saddle (suitable for
mules backs) have evolved together. For my own safety and comfort I would
only ever use a western type saddle on my mule. Although breast breeching
is standard on a western saddle a tail crupper is not. For this reason
western saddles are often rigged to take two belly girths. These are what
are called Cinchas on a western saddle. (If you really want a crupper
on your saddle, email me and I will tell you how to make and fit a ‘D`
ring to take one). If your animal complains or refuses a crupper the second
cincha behind the animals belly does the same job real well. I can also
make you classis mule saddle breechin. The other advantages that the western
saddle offers are what are called the swells at the front of the saddle,
which keep you in the seat going down hill, and the horn, the piece that
rises out of the swells at the front. As well as being a great place to
hang stuff on, the horn makes a great hand hold.
Western saddles also offer a wider padded seat with good lower lumber
support. I broke my back thirty years ago, and have several frozen vertebrae.
Western saddles give me the comfort and confidence to ride! ‘Down
Under’, an Australian company operating in the northern hemisphere,
from Colorado, USA, also produce a saddle that will fit a mule. It’s
called the Easy Rider Poley. It’s all leather and weighs around
24lbs. I have purchased several times from them, and found them reliable.
Try www.downunderweb.com I can also provide you with a saddle to fit your
mule. Email me at mulesspain@yahoo.co.uk I will try and put some examples
on our web site for 2005. I can also recommend Reed Tack of Iowa, USA,
for breast breeching and other tack. Buying by ‘Visa’ is safe
with them at www.reedtack.com.
SADDLE BLANKET: Always use a nice thick saddle blanket, not one of those
twee numnahs so often used on the horse. I have purchased every type of
numnah, and shock absorber on the market! Waste of money! These days when
I want a new saddle blanket I visit the local Car Boot sale. You can often
find pure wool or Marino wool blankets for sale for only 5 euros (5$)
about four quid! Trim the blanket so that when it is folded into four
it shows below the skirt of the saddle up to 6 inches on both side, and
2 inches at the front and rear of the saddle. Around 80 X 70cms is fine.
Fold the blanket into four and use it under the saddle. Perfect! If you
want it to be really posh blanket stitch all pieces into a rectangle.
MULES’ HEADS are often quite big and even a mule of 14.2hh will
generally need a full size bridle or head collar. You can virtually use
any kind of bridle you like on your mule. Many people also use a bit.
As Spanish mules almost always start their live as pack animals they have
no experience of a bit. Introducing a mature mule to a bit can be distressing,
both for the mule and the owner. For this reason I use either a German
or English Hackamore which I adapt with a steel nose bar attached to the
nose band. This is quite similar to what the mule is used too. If you
want to know how to make one up easily, email me. But, if bitting your
mule works for you, then do it. What ever you find the safest for you.
Be in control! Be Safe!
SHELTER of some kind is important. Despite their hardiness it is only
right to protect our long eared friends from the extremes of weather.
We are blessed with quite short winters in southern Spain, with barely
two weeks of hard rain a year.
While it is easy for a hot mule to cool down, it is extremely hard for
a wet, cold mule to warm up! For this reason Blue is stabled for winter
nights. He also has a fenced covered area outside the stable for winter
days. Due to the sun’s low southern, east, west, arc, he gets the
sun on a clear day, but none of the rain on his back on a bad day. Be
sure to give your mules shelter from extreme winds. Despite their hardiness,
if you are buying a Spanish mule for life in a much colder climate please
think! Today, 25th January 2005 it has been around 75-80°F at my stable,
and below freezing in some parts of the UK. Do be sensible!
STABLING INFLUENCES: If you purchase one of our animals, I suggest you
keep it stabled for two or more days. Limit the animal’s visual
stimulus while you and he bond (Shut It In The Stable). After three days
of travel the animal may be dehydrated and have diarrhoea (not always,
but sometimes). It will find a dark stable a comforting and restful experience,
and the mule should de-stress more quickly, so you have a clean pallet
to start with yours, and your mules training. So just ensure it has water
and food on demand. The sooner your new friend begins to eat and drink
the better! Some mules seem to bond to a person quickly. Hand feeding
encourages this process. Those first few days, open the stable half door
and just stand there. Talk to your mule (about anything), it wont matter!
Just use a soft tone. Hand feed! If he tries to crowd you, just raise
your tone a little and say No! Firmly. Put your hand flat on the front
of his nose. Push him away from you and say ‘Back’! If you
have had enough just shut the door and go for a cup of tea.
When approaching the stable always let your equine know you are coming.
Begin talking to him, let him hear the keys. But what ever you do, do
not! Creep Up, throw the door open, and burst in. One, or both of you,
could end up smudges on the ceiling! Your mule may be standing. That don’t
mean it’s awake! Even if a mule is looking at you it can often take
several seconds before the mule responds to you. There is a kind of ‘Hang
Time’! So be careful! He is not slow witted. He is sometimes just
pondering on your importance! Mules are far more tactile than horses,
well ours are! You should see very quickly if your mule is enjoying your
company. We only sell mules that do not like people, to people we do not
like!
SAFETY: You must always put your safety first. Do not let some show off
idiot rush you, or show you how to cut corners. You may have to put yourself
in harms way to rescue them. Put yourself in the mule’s position.
It always helps me to think of my mule as 800lbs of 4 year old child.
Only the most bestial person would lack compassion, and patience, for
any 4 year old moved from place to place as mules so often are. As soon
as you feel comfortable but, hopefully not longer than three days, you
should be touching, stroking, and petting your mule. Show him his brushes.
Let him sniff at everything you have for him. Start to brush him, begin
very gently, but just stick to the neck and shoulder areas to start with.
Always brush head to rump. As with everything mules appreciate routine.
Do not rush it. Let him think it is his idea. Remember you are both supposed
to be enjoying the experience! But stay alert to his mood changes. As
you progress you will eventually be more at ease.
HELMET: I always insist my daughters wears one. I never do! But you should!
Nuf Said!
FEET: All mules have them! The Mules’ Feet are often small and
seldom require anything larger than a number 1 shoe. Three quarters of
a mule’s weight is carried over its front legs. Because of this,
and the very steep terrain, and for economic reasons, Spanish mules are
usually only shod on the front. Mules’ feet can range from soft
like a horse, to extremely hard like a donkey.
I have had mules that have needed trimming and re-shoeing every six weeks,
and mules that only needed trimming after 12 weeks and never needed shoeing,
even for the roughest going!
Only experience will enable you to know what type of feet your mule has.
Your farrier will tell you if they are hard, you’ll hear him grumbling!
If in doubt, shoe!
KICKING: Someone coined the phrase, some mules kick all the time, and
all mules kick sometimes! I have been kicked by a horse! A few mules have
tried, but I have never been kicked by a mule! If a horse is going to
kick you, you get little warning! Mules and horses do telegraph their
moods, a mule telegraphs if it is going to kick. If mule’s ears
are forward, he’s listening intently in the direction his ears are
facing. If his ears are slightly back, he is seriously considering if
what’s going on around him is ok, or he is listening to his rider,
often with ears flicking alternately, back and forwards. If he is angry
(likely to kick) his ears will go back, virtually flat against the back
of his head. Just before the kick, he will swish his tail. DO NOT wait
to see the tail swish, or you’re already nailed! The ears can also
flop around independently as if they are about to fall off. This displays
a kind of `Zip Pittee Do Da!’ I am enjoying myself, kind of attitude.
Or occasionally he is walking, but has fallen asleep. Do not let the eyes
being open fool you. The shutters may be up, but the house is empty. Careful
how you wake him!
FEEDING is obligatory; spoiling your mule is not! The biggest problem
that mules face is over feeding! Traditionally Andalucian mules are not
grazed on meadow. It is to rich for them! Anyway we do not have any! Even
an hour a day can be too much for your Spanish mule! It is not a horse,
so take your time. If you have to buy commercially prepared sacks of mixed
grain with pellets - do not feed goat pellets to your mule. This feed
frequently contains urea to assist sheep and goats digestion. It can kill
your mule! Read the labels, keep the protein down, or cut the high protein
feed with a lower energy grain. Our working mules spend their lives walking.
If you let your mule run with horses, it will think it is a horse. If
you are not an experienced rider, you can kiss your walking mule good
bye! I have had two of the nicest walking mules I ever owned go horse,
due to them being stabled with horses while I was on holiday. The stable
owner ignored my instructions. They were stabled, and fed with the horses
what the horses ate, and far more than the mule needed. They were just
like children allergic to ‘E `numbers when I got back. For the stable
owner they were just as silly and sensitive as her horses. Hyperactive,
hypersensitive, and just plain hard to handle compared to a good working
mule I had left her with. Often it can be less stressful to sell it on
and buy another! They were both out of quarter horse mares and had great
fast walks that would out pace most horses. I am aware that some people
in the UK who lack a background in working mules, but bought a mule that
was put with horses, have wasted their opportunity to learn just how interesting
and rewarding it can be to bond with a mule. Do not get me wrong! I ride
with horsemen. If I wanted to ride at the front, the horses would have
to continually trot to catch up. So it’s better to ride at the rear.
If the horses then want to gallop off, I am happy to carry on walking.
That way your mule and you do not get caught up in a flurry of horses,
and your mule will not get carried along with the herd, or get kicked
as they sort themselves out on the trail (Just a week ago a friend of
mine had his horse put down when its leg was broken after being kicked
by a stallion in a melee of horses)! When you stop on the trail, I advocate
you tying your mule away from the horses. If a horse spooks he can go
mental. A scared horse tied firm can break its neck thrashing around.
Or stampede. If your mule is tied with it, it may become injured, or run
with the horse. A startled mule may jump a little. It may even trot off
a meter of so, but seldom go much further. Thanks to the donkeys inquisitive
nature passed on to the mule, they usually want to stop and see what scared
them, (before killing it)! See www.horsegazette.com/MadMule.html
If your mule is getting a little hyper and you think you may have over
feed it, put a saddle or a couple of sacks of cement on its back and make
it work. If inclement weather prevents this, leave it on a water and straw
diet for two days. Handle it and brush it as often as you can during this
time. You will soon know if its problem is too much rich food.
PEDIGREE is not something you automatically think of when it comes to
European mules. But surprisingly the quality of working mules here is
very high. The Spanish, as with the Americans in George Washington’s
time, found that the quality of their mules was diminishing. This was
in the main due to the success of the mule in both countries. But for
quite different reasons. George was a farmer and he knew the benefits
of a good Draft animal. He also knew America was not going to be mastered
and farmed by mules sired by the average small European Donkey Jack! So
he got the King of Spain to send him some giant Catalan Jacks. In a nut
shell, that’s how the west was won! In Spain the mules and donkeys
were so successful as riding and driving animals, that everyone and his
neighbour was breeding them. Quality animals were few and far between.
The quality of animals bred was so poor that it eventually started to
effect the economy. Disease also became a real problem. Eventually the
Government stepped in and decided that they would authorize the military
to rear horses and donkeys of the highest calibre. They would then invite
the ordinary people to bring their best mares and jennets to their friendly
local military stables. Their animals would be inspected by a military
vet, and if considered suitable, having paid an extremely low fee (today
around 100 euros), a stallion of the appropriate type would be put to
the mares. You could choose horse, mule, or donkey. Today the same system
exists, and has benefited the entire blood line of all Spanish bred equines
to some degree. Many of our mules carry the coronet over a lazy E brand
showing its royal assent (if you can see it through the mud!)
The
white mule I’m riding here (Abbe) has one speed, (SLOW), boringly
slow! But she would get you to the pub and back, or anywhere else you
want to go, eventually! She carried a lot of donkey characteristics 80%
donkey, 14.2 hh Had very small hard feet, and extremely mild mannered
and sweet and quite flat backed.

The photo to the left shows Ana. She had a moderate walking pace, and
would trot when requested. Ana was 14.2hh and had a reasonable wither.
She had been a ploughing mule until we acquired her. She went on to be
a good saddle and driving mule. 40% donkey.
This
photo shows Blue on his first outing saddled. He is around 15.2hh and
has a good walk. He is out of a quarter horse mare. He showed little personality
at first, apart from biting every mule he meet. He clearly had had a hard
life and was extremely suspicious of everything and everyone. This is
a sure sign of heavy handedness on the part of previous owners! With TLC
and firmness he is coming good! In just a few weeks he now shoes like
a gentleman, has great steering and brakes. Anymore I can’t tell
you as I’m still trying to get to know him. He is a 50/50 mule.
Note the small feet.
At
the other end of the scale Ruby (pictured above) had a lot of quarter
horse in her and is typical of the saddle mule preferred in the USA as
a trail mule. Always wanting to be at the front of any trail ride, she
had all the gears to get you anywhere you wanted to go! But only for the
experienced mule packer / trail rider. She was so affectionate she was
a pest! ,She carried the Royal Brand! She was 20/80.
These days almost all my sales are handled over the internet. I work
hard to match you to the sort of mule that will deliver for you. Something
my colleagues do not have to do for a local sale! I know that most of
you folks new to mules and riding will automatically improve, and gain
confidence. The mule and you will become a team and you will be a little
more adventurous. Do not ask me for a PLODDER, if you think applying the
title plodder to a mule some how makes it cheaper. Don’t be silly!
When I use the term plodder for a mule I am describing a mule that will
walk ALL DAY! All mules will walk. Most will go faster if you ask them
to. I have only ever owned one real slow walking mule and she was a pain,
but adorable! As working mules carrying a load, that’s all they
ever did, WALK! I can get 3.000 euros for what you might call a good plodder!
I have paid 3.000 euros more than once for my own walking mules, and I
had to train them myself for the saddle and bridle! But we get a better
turn over, and hopefully keep more mules in circulation if we keep the
prices as low as is practical! However that part is up to you!
Why is one mule more expensive or cheaper than the other? It can depend
on size, age, experience, manners, variations in the market. Sometimes,
really mean ones can be the same price as really gentle and respectful
mules. Tough farmers here don’t care! I just try to select the easier
mules for the internet before my colleagues ear mark them. Obviously what
we pay for an animal also affects its sale price. Having an animal a long
time will not make it cheaper. It’s eaten more, we want our money
back! If you really have a fixed price, then pick one that price from
the selection on show, or phone me on 0034 620150605 or email me at the
address above. I may have a special offer. As of November 2004, the average
sale price of an individual mule is 1.800 euros.
Ride with Pride. Albert, the Mule Man!

Printable Version
Back to the top
|