Beloved friends
welcome to another edition
of Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants!
Today we once again visit
the 570-hectare
New England
Brumby Sanctuary
in the town of Armidale
in the state of
New South Wales,
Australia operated by
Save the Brumbies,
an animal welfare charity
dedicated to protecting
and ensuring a bright future
for Australia’s
wild horses or Brumbies. Save the Brumbies’ mission is “to see humane, controlled management [of Brumbies] and the abolition of shooting of wild horses in national parks and public lands Australia wide.” The majority of the Brumbies taken in by the group are from the Guy Fawkes River National Park in New South Wales where wild horses are at risk of possibly being culled. Save the Brumbies has an active program to seek out wonderful new homes for these splendid beings. Jan Carter is the founder and president of Save the Brumbies. She is a former aerobics instructor and a retired professional musician. She has recorded an album entitled “Run with the Wind,” which was done as a tribute to the Brumbies and has also written a children’s book about horses called “The Sunflower Pony.” We are an animal welfare charity first and foremost. Our first priority is always the horse. We’re all volunteers. We feel that every horse deserves a chance at life. So horses that need a high level of care, it could be an orphaned foal, a horse that’s down in condition or an injured horse, then we care for them. Some of the most disadvantaged horses finish up just the sweetest, best horses that you could imagine; you wouldn’t know them a year or two later. So we feel that every horse deserves a chance at life, whatever the case. None of our horses are ever disposed of through abattoirs or public sales. We are very careful in our placements. We check out the people first and we make sure that the horse and the person suit each other. Brumbies are widely known in Australia as the free ranging characters in the poems of the Australian bush poet, Banjo Paterson. They descend from horses brought from England to Australia beginning in 1788 and are thought to be named after English soldier James Brumby who came to Australia in the 1790’s. When he was transferred to the island of Tasmania, he is said to have left horses behind in New South Wales, where they eventually became wild. Another theory is that the word “brumby” originates from the Australian Aboriginal word “baroomby,” meaning “wild.” Today Brumbies are greatest in number in the Northern Territory, Queensland and northern Western Australia. Lisa Burgess, a manager with Save the Brumbies, takes tender care of the horses that come to the sanctuary. Let’s now meet one of them who unfortunately has sustained an injury, but is in the capable hands of Ms. Burgess. This little girl is Aribella, a three year old filly. She had a tendon injury running around in the paddock; she jammed it between a couple of rocks. She has just been placed, but they don’t mind whether she’s injured or not, but I’m still in the process of treating her. She was never taught to lead before she injured herself. That all happened after. It was fun. Come on. Don’t worry about them. It’s alright. Come over here. That a girl. Good girl. How long does it normally take to recover from something like this? Depending on injury…. generally a normal tendon injury you’re looking at a pretty much minor eight week recovery. This injury, six months to a year. She’s hurt the suspensories, the flexor tendons, every one. The vet came out and checked her. So she’s getting there. We’ve got a poultice on her now, and this is just pretty much beaten up support bandage more than anything else, but she runs around as if she’s got absolutely no injury whatsoever. Just goes to show how tough she is. So this is a daily occurrence. It went from twice a day, to now, basically I’ve got the TuffRock poultice on her at the moment, which has been helping it. And is this just to prevent the infection from setting in? No, this one’s actually to help swelling. The TuffRock, the poultice you can use it for open wounds and to prevent infection, but this is just to counteract the swelling and to help the healing of the tendon. It’s supposed to be good. It’s the first time I’ve used it, but I’ve heard of good results. And I must admit though, the way it’s taking the swelling out, I’m quite surprised with it. Is it just a natural remedy? Yes it’s similar to clay. When Animal World: Our Co-Inhabitants returns, we’ll learn more about the fine work of Save the Brumbies. Please stay tuned to Supreme Master Television. Save the Brumbies, we’re a very practical organization. We handle up to 60 horses a year, which is a lot to handle and manage. We’ve placed, very many hundreds of horses now in good homes. So our main focus is saving horses in a practical sense and re-homing them. But we also do what we can to affiliate with governments and try to improve management plans. Welcome back to Animal World: Our Co-Inhabitants on Supreme Master Television, as we continue our chat with Jan Carter and Lisa Burgess of Save the Brumbies. Could you tell us about the horse in the very background, how they came here. Did they just come here recently? Okay, the ones right over the back, a little bay fellow just walking away, he's a yearling. They came here five o'clock Wednesday afternoon. The mother, the pale, light color, I don't know whether you can see her, just over the back, she's about a four year old mare and she's got a little filly foal. They came in as a family group, in a mob sort of trapped together. They are very quiet. It's yes, very, very rewarding to be able to just sort of go in there amongst them and just feed them out and, they’re following around already. We asked Ms. Burgess about the diet of the Brumbies. They are naturally vegans! They’ll forage on anything. But the Lucerne hay here, is a supplement feed. Lucerne is very rich. And these Brumbies don’t need much of it because they’re used to out in the bush where it’s tougher and poorer quality. And, they’ll graze on herbs, they’ll eat, chew a bit of bark occasionally if they need a bit of roughage. They’ll eat stone and gravel just to sort of to wear down their teeth. When people find out about the work that you’re doing and when people learn more about the brumbies, do you find that more people want to support what you’re doing? Definitely. I think we’ve grown a lot. And we’ve also been instrumental in assisting other groups now to start up. We helped the Victorian Brumby Association start three years ago. A lovely caring lady in Queensland who adopted two of our horses some time ago, has now formed a re-homing group in Queensland, and we have people in the Hunter Valley. We have people down in Western Sydney. There’s a group in Western Australia; through our network we had a call recently about an orphaned foal, on an outback property in Alice Springs. We were able to put that person in contact with Darwin who knew somebody in the area and that foal was able to be rescued. We couldn’t do it ourselves because we were too far away, but through our network of contacts, were able to possibly help that foal. Several years ago we established the Australian Brumby Horse Register, so the brumbies are now a registered breed in this country, similar to the Mustangs in the (United) States. We asked Jan Carter for her opinion as to what the future holds for the Brumbies. Within possibly five years, I think, we will see some form of protection for them in our own state, New South Wales. Our patron is Andrew Stoner, who is leader of our National Party here, and he has signed a memorandum of understanding that if elected to power next time around he will see the Brumbies of the Northern Tablelands and the Snowy Mountains protected. He would like to see prison schemes set up where the prisoners can learn to work with horses and bond with them and get a lot of psychological benefits from those sorts of programs. He wants to see this sustainable management. He agrees totally with us that the Australian Brumby is part of our heritage. In sustainable numbers they belong in non-threatened areas of our national parks. We hope eventually that will come to pass. I think it’ll be probably a little bit longer before this is applied to the rest of our country, but I do sincerely hope the work that we’re doing and other affiliated groups like us are doing, we are raising awareness, we are getting the message out there. To close, we have some final thoughts about saving these magnificent wild horses. Give them a chance! Basically, that’s the biggest one, is give the Brumby a chance; let them surprise you. I think for me animals generally have so much that we don’t even begin to comprehend or understand. I think animals are extremely close, obviously, to nature. They were put here for a purpose, they were not put here for us to use and discard in any way that we want. Animals, all living creatures, deserve our respect. And in our case with the wild horses, definitely they deserve our respect and our love and they deserve the right management. And I think that’s why we keep going forward. For their protective and loving care of the wild horses, Supreme Master Ching Hai is honoring Save the Brumbies with the Shining World Compassion Award and a donation of US$10,000, or approximately AUD$11,500, to help further their work. Our sincere thanks go to Save the Brumbies for all they are doing for Australia’s wild horses. May the organization continue to help many more Brumbies find loving homes! For more details on Save The Brumbies, please visit Jan Carter’s “Run with the Wind” CD is available at the same website Thank you marvelous viewers for your kind presence on Animal World: Our Co-Inhabitants. Coming up next is Enlightening Entertainment after Noteworthy News. May your spirit run freely in the fields of eternal love! |