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This is the time of the year when you can get
cabin fever...and some of us start thinking about getting a new
mule.\

Cimarron "getting high" in 1989 -
Photo by John Sheally III |
A lot of what you should look for in a mule
depends on your age and your experience with equine. The older you
get the more you need to look at purchasing a very, very well broke
mule. This mule should be one that won’t booger at anything or jump
out from under you. This type of mule is few and far between and
darn near impossible to buy, even if you happen to find one. Some of
the best purchases I have made of this type of mule have come up due
to a divorce or financial difficulties.
This would generally be a mule I had seen at
one time and had told the owner that if they ever needed to sell
their mule, to call me. When they would call, I could not get there
fast enough to get ahead of the proceedings. Most of these people
knew I would give a fair price, so they called me first.
Most of the mules I look for are under 15
hands, out of a smaller quarter-type mare and sired by a Spanish
jack. The jack would generally not be over 13.2 hands, or at most 14
hands, but well made. Mules with good dispositions are usually out
of mares and jacks with good dispositions.
There didn’t use to be as many mules with good
dispositions as there are now. In the past, if a farmer had a mare
with a bad disposition, he would breed her to a jack instead of a
good stallion. Years ago, for some reason, many jacks had a poor
disposition, so the resulting mule was ill-tempered, too.
So, when you are thinking about that new mule,
look for one that is quiet and has a good disposition. If the mule
is spooky when you walk up to him, or is head shy, leave it alone
and look for another.
The photo on this page is of Cimarron, a mule
I owned; she stood about 13.2 and I could coon hunt with her. She
had a super disposition and all my kids learned how to ride on her.
She was very intelligent and would stand perfectly still until the
kids would get on. They couldn’t get her out of a walk until she
knew they could ride well enough. She could sense how much they
knew. One time my wife Pat and I went to go riding with some people.
I saw that this man’s wife was very tense on the mule her husband
had given her to ride. I asked if she was uneasy about the mule and
she replied she was. Pat, who was a good rider, was riding Cimarron,
so she and the lady traded mules for the ride. We were riding along
and came to a little creek, which normally Cimarron would have loped
across, but she sensed this lady couldn’t ride well and she walked
down into the creek and back out like she was carrying a sack of
eggs.
Cimarron was very athletic and Pat heeled
steers off her. I headed off of a mule I called Cajun Miss. Irvin
Williams of Moravia, Iowa, was putting on a mule show up in southern
Iowa and he was also having a team roping at the same time. Well, I
was just starting Cajun at heading and they were having a team
roping over at Unionville, Mo., during the county fair. We decided
to take Cajun to the fair to get her used to the crowd. It had just
rained that day and the roping box was very muddy. I told Pat to get
in the heeling box and get ready, as I knew Cajun was not going to
stand good in the heading box. I told the gate man to not pay
attention to my mule and when I nodded my head, regardless of where
my mule was, to open the gate. Actually it gave Cajun a little
advantage because as I was turning her around I would nod my head
and she didn’t have time to bog down in the mud. There were 50 plus
teams entered, all horses but Pat and I. We won the first go and Pat
caught both heels on the second go, but we were out of the money. We
got third in the last go, which placed us second in the average.
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