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<blockquote data-quote="GoingNorth" data-source="post: 315578" data-attributes="member: 1963"><p>Actually, having been charged by a male zebra who thought I was paying too much attention to his mares (from behind a moat and fence, luckily)...and having been picked up like a ragdoll and shaken badly enough to crack a collarbone by a supposedly 'gentle' saddle donkey jack (breeding male)...</p><p></p><p>I'll stick with non-testosterone laden donkeys and you can keep the zebras.</p><p></p><p>There was a fellow who lived near us in Germany who had a pair of captive-bred zebra mares that he'd broken to drive. He took them out for festivals and the like. Mares or not, captive-bred or not, those mares wore muzzles and kicking straps (harness attachment over hips to prevent kicking)</p><p></p><p>For a city kid I spent a lot of time around wild life. I even got nipped and clawed by a mountain lion. Luckily, she only weighed about eight lbs at the time. My scout group got to go down to the zoo and meet the nursery animals.</p><p></p><p>She wasn't a difficult child puma, I was just too slow with the bottle and she was a hungry kitty, LoL</p><p></p><p>Since mountain lions are making their way back across the US, I sincerely hope that's the last time I get nailed by one. I visited her a couple of times over the next couple of years, and she was more than capable of eating me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GoingNorth, post: 315578, member: 1963"] Actually, having been charged by a male zebra who thought I was paying too much attention to his mares (from behind a moat and fence, luckily)...and having been picked up like a ragdoll and shaken badly enough to crack a collarbone by a supposedly 'gentle' saddle donkey jack (breeding male)... I'll stick with non-testosterone laden donkeys and you can keep the zebras. There was a fellow who lived near us in Germany who had a pair of captive-bred zebra mares that he'd broken to drive. He took them out for festivals and the like. Mares or not, captive-bred or not, those mares wore muzzles and kicking straps (harness attachment over hips to prevent kicking) For a city kid I spent a lot of time around wild life. I even got nipped and clawed by a mountain lion. Luckily, she only weighed about eight lbs at the time. My scout group got to go down to the zoo and meet the nursery animals. She wasn't a difficult child puma, I was just too slow with the bottle and she was a hungry kitty, LoL Since mountain lions are making their way back across the US, I sincerely hope that's the last time I get nailed by one. I visited her a couple of times over the next couple of years, and she was more than capable of eating me. [/QUOTE]
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