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Texans take stampede with miniature donkeys

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: July 18, 2002

Lynne and Bill Garrett’s 5,000 kilometre drive to the world miniature

donkey show at the Calgary Stampede was worth the journey when they won

the grand champion banners for best jack and jennet.

When the Texas couple is not tending their donkeys, mules and horses,

Bill is a firefighter in Dallas and Lynne works for Texas Instruments.

Their farm at Point is 105 km east of Dallas but they commute so they

can stay on the farm with their 80 animals.

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“We’re always looking to better the breed with constant improvements

consistently each year,” said Lynne, who has been in the equine

business all her life. She bought her first miniatures nine years ago.

Bill was raised in the city but has become as much of a donkey

enthusiast as Lynne.

“He knew when he married me, he married the donkeys,” she said.

Lynne has specific traits in mind when she selects and buys donkeys.

She doesn’t want highly refined, over bred animals that have sacrificed

their original structure and strength.

“I want sturdy, stout working animals that are well balanced all

around,” she said between events at the Stampede.

Their busy careers demand that they pick and choose their events. This

year they selected the national mule and donkey show in Tennessee,

where they won the champion yearling saddle mule competition as well as

the reserve junior champion jack over 36 inches tall and the champion

three-year-old jennet.

A partnership is growing with their friends Grant and Sharon Cooke of

Blackie, Alta. The Garretts were able to buy a full sister to the world

record price female sold at Cookes’ annual Circle C miniature donkey

sale July 6.

It sold for $34,500 to Cathy and Larry Van Epp of Madison, Wisconsin.

All but one of the Circle C donkeys were sold to American buyers. The

sale averaged $9,180.

This was the Garretts first time at Cookes’ sale and third time at the

Stampede. Lynne particularly likes the Calgary show because the quality

and level of competition is high.

“I did not see one bad donkey out there,” she said.

Miniature donkeys originate in Sicily and Sardinia. They weigh between

200 and 400 pounds and should not measure more than 36 inches at the

shoulder.

About the author

Barbara Duckworth

Barbara Duckworth

Barbara Duckworth has covered many livestock shows and conferences across the continent since 1988. Duckworth had graduated from Lethbridge College’s journalism program in 1974, later earning a degree in communications from the University of Calgary. Duckworth won many awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Association, American Agricultural Editors Association, the North American Agricultural Journalists and the International Agriculture Journalists Association.

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