Missouri needs a prisoner-rehabilitation program involving horse training, modeled after Wyomingâs Honor Farm and curly-haired mustangs from Wyoming would be perfect for it, a seasoned horse trainer said.
Curly-haired mustangs are intelligent, tough and extremely forgiving toward novice trainers, Candida Haasch, who runs the Warriors of the Rainbow Horse Sanctuary in Missouri, told Cowboy State Daily.
âThey are uncannily smart,â said Haasch, who has kept and trained a few curly-haired mustangs over the years.Â
If rare curly-haired mustangs from Wyomingâs Salt Wells Creek herd are rounded up this summer, Haasch said sheâd like to adopt as many as she can take.Â
Mustang advocates have filed a lawsuit to halt the round-up, and the case is pending before the federal 10th Circuit Court in Denver.Â
Regardless of how the case turns out, Haasch said that any Wyoming âcurliesâ that might need new homes will be welcome at her place.
âI canât imagine my farm without curlies. Iâve had curlies since 1968,â she said.
Rough Start To Horse Training Career
Haasch said she knew nothing about horses as a child, but she was insistent about having one. So, her father obliged her when she was six years old and gave her a horseâ that was likely captured mustang.
âHe grabbed me by the elbow, threw me into the saddle and said, âThere you go. Thereâs your pony,â and then went inside to eat lunch. Needless to say, it didnât go well,â she said.Â
Despite that rough start, her love of horses and horse training started that day, and has been a life-long pursuit.Â
Because of that first horseâs wild nature and her lack of experience, things didnât work out, and her father sold that horse.Â
Haasch was determined to buy a horse of her own and spent the next six years saving money she earned by selling her grandmotherâs tomatoes.Â

âInspector Sizemoreâ
By age 12, she had $176.12 saved up â enough to buy a low-end horse in those days.Â
She found one that nobody else wanted, a gelding named âSpeck.â
As near as anybody could tell, he was a mustang, rounded up on the range in Oklahoma.Â
âHe was a strange-looking horse,â she said. People called him âthe scruffy-looking thing.â
But she thought the horse deserved a more flattering name than âSpeck.â Â So she re-named him âInspector Sizemore,â after a good friend of her fatherâs named Wesley Sizemore.Â
It wasnât until later that she figured out that Inspector Sizemore was âstrangeâ and âscruffy-lookingâ because he was actually of the rare curly-haired breed.Â
Inspector Sizemore turned out to be highly-trainable, agile and an exceptional jumper. He went on to win competitive agility and jumping championships.Â
He became the 430th officially-registered curly-haired horse in the United States, and Haasch kept him until his death at age 29, quite an advanced age for a horse.Â
Other horse advocates previously told Cowboy State Daily that the exact origins of curly-haired mustangs are unknown â and Haasch agreed.Â
âThere was a theory for a while that they were related to a curly-coated breed from Russiaâ but that turned out to be false, she said.
âThey seem to be a mixed lot. They are a whole bunch of breeds,â she added. âNobody really knows, to this day, where they actually came from.â
Prisoner Rehabilitation
Haasch said sheâs working with the Missouri Department of Corrections in hopes of launching a program modeled after the Wyoming Honor Farm and similar operations in other states.Â
The Honor Farm, near Riverton, pairs low-risk inmates with mustangs rounded up from the range by the Bureau of Land Management.Â
The inmates train the horses â and advocates say itâs an effective way to rehabilitate convicts.
Haasch said she agrees that horse training is an excellent way to set prisoners on the path toward successful reintegration back into society.
âWhen they train those horses, they lose their hearts to them,â she said.
âI donât want my tax dollars going to have some guy sit there and watch T.V. while heâs planning how to shank his cellmate. I want my tax dollars going toward some guy learning how to tame a colt,â she added.Â
With their natural smarts and patience toward inexperienced horse trainers, Wyoming Curly-haired mustangs could be the missing piece that Missouriâs version of the Honor Farm needs, she said.Â
âNot Enough Horse Peopleâ
Haasch credits horses for saving her life, or at least making it worth living.Â
Years ago, she was left paralyzed by a benign brain tumor.Â
The visceral drive to get back to horse training is what motivated her to get her body working again, she said.
Now, she wants to spread that inspiration by getting as many people as possible interested in horses.
Sheâs not opposed to the basic principle of the BLM mustang roundups in Wyoming and other Western states. But she hates the thought of those horses languishing in holding facilities, because so few people adopt them.Â
If more âmiddle classâ realize that they can afford horses, and prisoner-rehabilitation horse training programs spread to other states, that would help immensely, Haasch said.Â
âWe donât have too many horses. We just have too few horse people,â she said.
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Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.






