Teen brings home medals with Sweet Caroline
EVIE SEABERG | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 2 years, 2 months AGO
I graduated from California Baptist University in April 2021 and was ready for a change of scenery, which is what brought me to North Idaho. Currently, I’m enjoying being newly married. My husband and I spend our weekends huckleberry picking, working on home improvement projects, taking my husky Judah on walks, spoiling our kitten Opal, and making plans to travel while we earn the means to do so. I love hanging out with family, studying indigenous arts and culture, going on outdoor adventures and creating wood-burning projects. I’m also always down for a casual debate about anything from philosophy and politics to the best local coffee shops. My childhood was filled with dreams of working in almost every field — archeologist, architect, writer, historian, aviator and mathematician were just a few titles I hoped to hold one day. After my first semester in college, I found myself wondering how choosing a major was ever going to be in the cards for me. But, with a little help from friends and family, I realized that the title of “journalist” is a good title for someone who is interested in a little bit of everything. When you can’t be everything, you can always write about everything. | October 5, 2023 1:00 AM
SANDPOINT — Last week, Boston Bode and her recently trained mustang, Sweet Caroline, brought home multiple awards following a two-day trip to a meet designed to test the skills of newly trained wild mustangs.
The incentive program challenges trainers to participate in 100 days of training wild mustangs and then show the horses alongside each other. At the competition, held in Temecula, Calif., Bode and Sweet Caroline won first place for a trail class and freestyle competition, and second place overall. While Bode has participated in the challenge before, this was her first time competing in the adult division.
Trainers participate in three classes as part of the challenge: a training and conditioning class, a trail class and a freestyle class.
“The handling and conditioning class shows that the horse is tame and can be caught and pick up its feet, you can brush it and fly spray it and load it in a trailer,” Bode said.
The trail class offers trainers an opportunity to demonstrate how their horse would behave on a trail by walking through an obstacle course.
During the freestyle class, trainers are given three-and-a-half minutes to perform a choreographed routine to a song.
Bode said she credits her success to dedicating her time and going at the horse’s pace.
“Even if you start slower, they’ll have a breakthrough and everything picks up,” Bode said. “It’s better to go by their pace than push them too hard.”
In 2022, over 82,000 wild horses and burros were estimated to be on government land and in holding pens, organizers of the event said on their Facebook page.
“There is not enough land to feed and sustain this many animals,” they said. “So our hope is that with our show we can get horses and burros out of holding and into homes.”
Sweet Caroline is looking for a new home now that her training is complete. Bode said the mustang is up for adoption through the Bureau of Land Management with a training fee.
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