Cox buys mustang
Gerry Cox, owner of the Mountain House Stables Arena in Arden, recently competed against 45 other horsemen from the western states of Washington, Idaho, Oregon, California, Montana and NeÂvada in the Extreme Mustang Makeover horse trainer’s chalÂlenge.
Each contestant picked up a randomly selected wild horse from the Bureau of Land ManÂagement wild horse corrals in Burns, Oregon on March 30. Each horseman had 90 days to gentle and train their horse, then return on June 30 to show how much they had acÂcomplished with their selected mount.
Cox said he was “very humÂbled” to be up against some very experienced and accomÂplished horsemen, including the previous two-time NorthÂwest champion, last year’s secÂond place winner, a competitor from California who has won several Mustang Challenges and another who has been competing in Mustang ChalÂlenges since 1996.
Each of the 45 competitors rides their horse through an obstacle course, the judges then select the top 10 performÂers. Those 10 then return to show during a four-minute freestyle performance of their choosing.
Cox’s mount this year was a five-year-old mustang mare they named Little Annie Fanny.
“I cannot say that I am at all disappointed with a third place showing,” Cox said. “I continÂued to tell everyone that there were 45 trainers, so I hoped to place at least 45th. Making the top ten and ultimately finishing third made me feel pretty good.
“Our final run was kind of fun--we had a Teeter-Totter, Fire, Cracked a Whip a few times and had the horse Lay Down. We had a couple of glitches, and I’m not too comÂfortable showing in front of a large crowd.”
At the end of the competiÂtion, the horses are sold at competitive auction to the public and any trainer wishing to keep their horse has to bid like the rest of the crowd.
When asked to describe his horse to the crowd, Cox said she was a “mean, biting, kickÂing, bucking, bolting, dog-chasing, barn- busting, dirty rotten scoundrel “and so is anyone who bids against us because we want to take her home!”
The high auction horse went for $5,000, some for as little as $200. Cox convinced “most of the crowd” not to bid and $550 later Little Annie Fanny was a permanent resident at MounÂtain House Stables.
Cox won $1,850 for his efÂforts.
You can see Little Annie Fanny at www.YouTube.com/gcoxalaska.
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