Holiday for a horse, of course
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Alicia Robinson
Local horse lovers will celebrate all things equine today with an
event recognizing the statewide “Day of the Horse.”
Santa Ana Heights residents who are members of the Back Bay
Equestrians will gather by the Delhi Channel this morning to mark out
where a future horse arena will go, give riding demonstrations and
snap pictures of people with horses.
The U.S. Senate in November approved a resolution declaring today
the Day of the Horse, and President Bush is expected to issue a
proclamation declaring a national Day of the Horse, said Jayne Jones,
a member of the Back Bay Equestrians, who organized today’s event.
“It’s a big day for us, and what we’d really like to do is share
it with people who don’t understand or don’t know much about horses,”
Jones said.
“Horses built this country right along with the rest of us,” she
said. “They’ve plowed our fields; they’ve fought our wars; we’ve even
based motor vehicles on horsepower.... I think a lot of people just
kind of forget that this animal deserves respect.”
At today’s event, horse lovers will read a Day of the Horse
proclamation, which state legislators passed in 2002, and give riding
demonstrations. People can have their pictures taken with horses and
see where the arena -- a fenced riding area -- will be built.
The Back Bay Equestrians have between 75 and 100 members, and the
East Santa Ana Heights community houses about 175 horses, Jones said.
The city of Newport Beach gained these four-legged residents when
it annexed East Santa Ana Heights in July 2003.
The city and equestrians have been working on how best to clean up
manure, which the city worries will affect water quality. Horse
manure now gets cleaned up regularly by volunteers with the Back Bay
Equestrians Adopt-a-Trail program.
“I think they’re doing a great job with their Adopt-a-Trail
program, but I don’t know that we can yet change the ordinance that
says if you have control of an animal, you have to pick up its
waste,” Newport Beach assistant city manager Dave Kiff said.
The city and the equestrians have discussed allowing horse manure
to lie when it is on nature trails, he said.
The equestrian group is pursuing nonprofit status before it moves
forward with the arena, which will fence in a cleared area so riders
can work with horses safely, Jones said. The arena will be a public
facility paid for by Orange County but now requires city approval.
The Back Bay Equestrians Day of the Horse celebration lasts from
10 a.m. to noon today. Those who want to attend should park at the
Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive Center, 2301 N. University Drive,
Newport Beach, and walk to the Delhi Channel.
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