What was explained in the article was that Dean Singleton, publisher
of The Denver Post and chief executive of MediaNews Group Inc.,
reportedly threatened to yank financial support from the media
welcoming party scheduled the Saturday night before the convention
begins on Aug. 25.
The reason? Some organizers, including U.S. Sen. Ken Salazar, a San
Luis Valley rancher, want to have a Western-style cattle-drive parade
to kick off the event. Singleton evidently objects because he does not
want the media's first impression of Denver to be of a cow town
(although he declined to comment about the matter in his own
newspaper).
Something for Mr. Singleton to consider: The Rocky Mountain
News, the other Denver newspaper that has a joint operating
agreement with the Post, put up $500 and a trophy for the first
pack-burro race in 1949.
How times have changed.
Oddly, this animation of the political process and its collision
with Western culture coincides with a number of other talking points in
relation to donkeys and our culture.
FOR INSTANCE, while Fairplay is gearing up for its big event with
additional prizes and incentives for entrants, Cripple Creek has
canceled its Donkey Derby Days. Meanwhile, a book simply titled
Donkey has received national attention and outstanding reviews,
including some from people who admit they have absolutely no interest
in the long-eared animals. And the movie Grass: A Nation's Battle
for Life -- a black-and-white documentary filmed in 1925 that
features literally thousands of donkeys and other animals -- has risen
from cinema history to receive excellent five-star reviews from viewers
at Netflix, and clips are available for viewing on, of all places,
YouTube.
The news from Cripple Creek was hardly a surprise for someone whos
been on the pack-burro racing scene for as long as I have, which at
last count was 28 years. The basic problem: Pack-burro racing is a
sport with soul and Cripple Creek is a town that sold its soul when it
embraced casino gambling. Burro racing was born out of the idea of
striking it rich through adventure, hard work, and independence. Low
stakes casino gambling allows rich people to strike it rich by stealing
from poor people. That race won't be missed by me.
Meanwhile, in Fairplay where the sport was born, Dale and Kathy
Fitting, owners of the Hand Hotel where the world championship race
starts and finishes, have put up some of their own money to make the
race more enticing to entrants, calling it the Hand Hotel Purse. First
off, they've offered three $500 prizes to be awarded by drawing among
all finishers of the 29-mile course. In addition, they are offering
$250 to the winner if he or she breaks last year's time. Lastly there
is $500 for a long-course winner who breaks the record of 3 hours, 44
minutes and 18 seconds set by Tom Sobal and his burro Maynard in 1989.
This last prize will be increased by $500 yearly until the course
record is broken.
Dale and Kathy have been huge supporters of the Fairplay race since
they bought the Hand Hotel several years ago. They provide a room for
racers to shower after the race, host the postrace awards banquet, and
give away special prizes every year. Their generosity shows not only
their dedication to this event, but also an understanding of the
Western culture represented by this peculiar sport and event.
I DO HAVE TO SAY, however, that I will be surprised if Tom's record
is ever broken. I was there the day he and Maynard ran 3:44, and I have
several reasons to believe nobody will ever run that race that fast
again. For starters, Tom and Maynard were a team we may never see the
likes of again. But they had help -- there were at least four other
runners and burros in 1989 capable of staying in the same ZIP Code as
Tom and Maynard on that course, and this level of competition surely
helped push them to the record. I also believe changes to the course
have added length and difficulty at the beginning and end. Lastly, the
upper section of Mosquito Pass road has become increasingly rugged due
to lack of maintenance and more vehicular travel, especially ATVs and
motorcycles, making for a much more rugged -- therefore slower --
descent.
The authors of Donkey, Michael Tobias and Jane Morrison,
probably would not appreciate such a race. Though they pay homage to
the working donkey in its more than 6,000 years of domesticated
history, the authors' view seems to be that this time has passed and
employing donkeys as work animals amounts to abuse. Despite this
mischaracterization of the species in general -- I have found that some
donkeys like having a job -- the book is interesting from a perspective
of history, biology, literature and especially artwork. However, the
strictly petting-zoo image is quite different than the view I have
gained over nearly three decades of working with the animals. The book
struck me as a well-meaning attempt to educate the public about this
fascinating animal written by people who spent a lot of time
researching donkeys but not enough time really getting to know
donkeys.
One disappointment with the book is that it ignores a growing modern
appreciation for these animals not only as good pets, but also as
sturdy backcountry packers, cart-pullers, and saddle animals.
WHICH BRINGS US TO Grass, a film that should be required
viewing for anyone with the misguided view that war in Iran is a good
idea. The movie was made in 1925 by explorers Merian C. Cooper and
Ernest B. Schoedsack, and chronicles the annual 48-day migration of the
50,000-member Bakhtiari tribe of Persia (which is now Iran) -- and
their 500,000 animals -- through deserts, icy glacial rivers and a
snow-covered 12,000-foot mountain pass that is scaled barefoot because
cotton shoes don't work very well in the snow.
The migration captured in Grass makes Fairplay's pack-burro
race look like a 5K walk on the beach. When the grass runs out for
their animals, the tribespeople simply fold their tents, round up their
animals and trek hundreds of miles in a search for greener pastures.
There is no 16-week Runner's World training program or special diet.
They don't even give up smoking, though one wonders what exactly is in
those pipes, especially given the film's title.
This black-and-white story is supported only by storyboards between
scenes and a traditional Iranian music score. Horses, mules, cattle,
goats, sheep and donkeys -- thousands of donkeys -- are shown being
driven over some of the most rugged terrain on Earth. On many of their
backs are the tribespeople's belongings, including some live cargo such
as chickens, dogs, young goats and even children in cradles. It is an
amazing documentary and one of the most incredible films I have ever
watched.
The irony of all this, of course, is that no donkey cares about any
of it. Truly a Zen animal, the donkey lives in "The Now,"
focusing simply on the task at hand, whether it's grazing, packing a
load, defending its territory, or simply basking in the spring
sunshine. The past is gone, and the future does not exist. There are
more than a few people who could take a lesson from these
oft-misunderstood animals.
Hal Walter cultivates burros and prose from the ghost town of
Ilse in the Sierra Mojada of Custer County.