To Leo Krebs, 89 year old North Logan native and former USU dairy herdsman, Utah State University is the heart of Cache Valley. He has a lot of memories of watching the campus change over the years as most of the barns and animals were removed and newer buildings, like the nearby Nelson Fieldhouse and the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum, were constructed.
Many of Mr. Krebs' memories are of the horse barn. He used one of the university's Persian work horses, a dapple gray mare named Lucy, to haul hay to the other animals. He remembers that USU grew its own hay, but it also bought hay from local farmers. The hay would be loaded into the loft of the horse barn with a Jackson fork. To feed the hay to the horses, they would shove it down through holes in the ceiling.
Many young people getting an education at USU had learning experiences at the horse barn. Mr. Krebs remembers one young man in particular. "I asked him to unharness her [Lucy] one night and he unharnessed her. The next morning when I went to put the harness on her, he had undone all the buckles. I had to put the harness back together." Mr Krebs laughed at the memory, saying, "He was a very good boy but he was just learning how to put a harness on a horse."
In addition to the two teams of work horses, USU also kept stud stallions that were "outstanding horses" meant to improve the quality of horses in Cache Valley. Mr. Krebs explained, "They [the university] were the only ones that could afford a good horse or a good stallion like that and so they would have them there for breeding services for a very cheap price." This allowed Cache Valley farmers to improve the quality of their own stock.
Mr. Krebs has witnessed a lot of changes at USU, and he looks forward to seeing the historic horse barn rehabilitated as the new USU Museum of Anthropology and Welcome Center. He says, "Tell them to hurry up so I can see it."
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
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