At one point in the movie Leigh Ann Runs away, and because this is a musical, Alfred Packer does exactly what you'd expect and breaks into song; not just any song, a love song to his horse (clearly written by a non-horse person). With Valentine's day coming up it seemed like something that needed to be shared.
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Valentine's Day tribute
You all probably know Trey Parker and Matt Stone as the creators of South Park and the broadway hit Book of Mormon, but before all that fame, they made a little movie called Cannibal the Musical as a college project. The movie centers around Alfred Packer and his group of friends who are traveling from Utah to Colorado in the 1870's in search of gold. Just as the title suggests, there's a bit of cannibalism, a lot music, and tons of camp! What you might not glean from the title is that one of the main characters is Alfred Packer's horse, Leigh Ann, his best friend.
At one point in the movie Leigh Ann Runs away, and because this is a musical, Alfred Packer does exactly what you'd expect and breaks into song; not just any song, a love song to his horse (clearly written by a non-horse person). With Valentine's day coming up it seemed like something that needed to be shared.
Go riding
At one point in the movie Leigh Ann Runs away, and because this is a musical, Alfred Packer does exactly what you'd expect and breaks into song; not just any song, a love song to his horse (clearly written by a non-horse person). With Valentine's day coming up it seemed like something that needed to be shared.
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
You know those scenes towards the end of mystery movies when all the clues come together montage style, usually backed by some uber dramatic music, and by seeing them side by side you're able to determine the murderer? I recently had one of those scenes in my head, but instead of pointing towards the perpetrator of a murder, the clues were pointing towards a potentially interesting fact about my little horse.
I got lots or responses along the lines of "handsome!' and "cute!" which satisfied the dopamine feedback loop we all crave from social media. My brain was happy that people liked me... or at least "liked" me. Then one person asked "Is he turning gray? His face and tail look like they are turning gray." Again, I brushed it off thinking it must be a lighting thing, but when I got to the barn that day, I noticed his face was pretty gray, and he had little gray patches on the top of his hind quarters and on his back. I started going through all of his baby pictures to compare his color then to his color now, and that's when all the clues came rushing into my head montage style. My first thought was "is this even possible? Can a dun horse also be gray (not grulla, but actually gray)?" "Is my little dun horse actually a gray?" I asked myself.
After doing a little research and consulting with some of my very smart friends, I was able to determine that the gray gene is dominant and can be paired with any coat color, so it is indeed possible, but how to know for sure?! I could look into the colors of his sire and dam to see if he had a gray parent, but I have no clue who the sire is. I can wait it out and see what color he winds up being, but that could take years and seems incredibly inefficient. I know there is a better way. We have the power! What we can learn about living organisms from their DNA is pretty incredible these days. In fact, I spend a lot of my time looking at plant DNA, so I'm quite familiar with the options molecular biology provide in this situation.
The choice seems pretty obvious. While my horse's color mreally isn't that important in the long run, I'm curious, gosh darnit! I ordered DNA testing kits from UC Davis, and will be sending in a sample to test for the presence of the gray gene. Next week we will talk about how genes work and how a gene is translated into pigment in your horse's coat. Until then, remember, a good horse is never a bad color.
Go riding!
Clue #1 occurred nearly two years ago when a mysterious bump appeared on Helix's neck. Being the overprotective mother that I am, I had the vet out to look at him immediately. "It looks to be a melanoma," he said, "but your horse is very young and the wrong color for this to be normal." So to be safe, the vet removed the lump taking a very large margin to be sure he got all the potentially cancerous cells. Analysis of the excised tissue showed it to be benign, luckily, but officially made me paranoid about the presence of unknown lumps on my horse.
photo by Biz Stamm
Clue #2 Just like any adoring mother out, I frequently share pictures of my "children" on social media (and FYI Mom, Dad, and in-laws, they DO count as real children even though they aren't technically human). One day in August after posting this picture,
photo by Biz Stamm
a friend commented "Wow! His color is really lightening up, huh?" At the time I assumed the lighting had just made him look washed out in the picture.
Clue #3 Fast forward to January when I received a photo from Helix's "babysitter" while I was in New Hampshire visiting family telling me that aside from having an extraordinary talent for taking out his braids, he was being a good boy. He looked so handsome and grown up in the picture that I felt compelled to share it in the kiger mustang group.
Photo by Lisa Boragine
I got lots or responses along the lines of "handsome!' and "cute!" which satisfied the dopamine feedback loop we all crave from social media. My brain was happy that people liked me... or at least "liked" me. Then one person asked "Is he turning gray? His face and tail look like they are turning gray." Again, I brushed it off thinking it must be a lighting thing, but when I got to the barn that day, I noticed his face was pretty gray, and he had little gray patches on the top of his hind quarters and on his back. I started going through all of his baby pictures to compare his color then to his color now, and that's when all the clues came rushing into my head montage style. My first thought was "is this even possible? Can a dun horse also be gray (not grulla, but actually gray)?" "Is my little dun horse actually a gray?" I asked myself.
Helix now (left) vs. Helix as a yearling (right)
After doing a little research and consulting with some of my very smart friends, I was able to determine that the gray gene is dominant and can be paired with any coat color, so it is indeed possible, but how to know for sure?! I could look into the colors of his sire and dam to see if he had a gray parent, but I have no clue who the sire is. I can wait it out and see what color he winds up being, but that could take years and seems incredibly inefficient. I know there is a better way. We have the power! What we can learn about living organisms from their DNA is pretty incredible these days. In fact, I spend a lot of my time looking at plant DNA, so I'm quite familiar with the options molecular biology provide in this situation.
The choice seems pretty obvious. While my horse's color mreally isn't that important in the long run, I'm curious, gosh darnit! I ordered DNA testing kits from UC Davis, and will be sending in a sample to test for the presence of the gray gene. Next week we will talk about how genes work and how a gene is translated into pigment in your horse's coat. Until then, remember, a good horse is never a bad color.
Go riding!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)




