SUGAR BABE IS NAHRA's HORSE OF THE YEAR
Disabled riders learn Sugar Babe is so sweet![]()
Disabled riders learn Sugar Babe is so sweet
Monday, December 4, 2000
By Kathleen Longcore
The Grand Rapids Press
ALTO -- Sugar Babe is a sway-backed pinto that is missing some teeth and
carries only small children. But no one's putting the 40ish pony out to
pasture yet.
The sweet-tempered animal -- over the hill in horse years -- was recently
named National Therapy Horse of the Year by the North American Riding for
the Handicapped Association (NARHA).
"It's a wonderful honor, considering she's just a little backyard pony,"
said Bill Schumacher, 62, whose family owns Sugar Babe.
The therapy horse association promotes horseback riding for the disabled
because it makes people feel good, said Roxanne Ayala, a spokeswoman for
NARHA in Denver. "When they're on a horse, their disability is not
apparent."
Sugar Babe is part of that mission in the Kent Special Riding Program, a
4-H program hosted by Bill and Lynn Schumacher at their Morse Lake Road
farm for 24 years.
They have 14 gentle horses and several wheelchair ramps built so the
disabled can get in the saddle. From April to October, volunteers help
riders as young as 3 and as old as 83.
Sugar Babe beat out 10 regional winners in North America. The rust-colored
pony has been immortalized in watercolor and also won a snazzy blanket and
a ton of feed from Purina Mills.
She was nominated by the Kent riding program's instructors, who say
hundreds of youngsters fell in love with horses because of Sugar Babe.
"In the horse business, she's what's known as 'a baby sitter.' That's a
horse that's good with kids," said Bill Schumacher, a retired anatomy
professor from Grand Rapids Community College. "She's so steady, and
she'll go anywhere. I'm convinced if we took her to the Grand Hotel, she'd
walk in and get right on the elevator with us."
Only one in 10 horses is calm enough to carry handicapped riders, said
Gail Broderick, a board member for the Kent program.
"They've got to be extremely quiet, steady on the job, no matter what,"
Broderick said.
Sugar Babe seems to sense her riders' vulnerability. She stops if they
start sliding off. She once carried a boy who rode laid out on his
stomach, his head on the pony's rump and his feet on either side of her
neck.
Nothing ruffles her, said instructor Sherri Faler, 45. "She's a character,
and she's got her quirks. But I've known Sugar Babe for about 22 years,
and I've never seen her spook at anything."
Marjorie Palczewski could be president of a Sugar Babe fan club.
The 41-year-old Grand Rapids woman has been in the Kent program for Sugar
Babe's entire career. Born with Down syndrome, Palczewski needed
recreation and a confidence booster, and riding gave her both, said her
mother, Louise Palczewski.
Now, even though Marjorie rides bigger horses, she still carries a picture
of Sugar Babe in her purse. "She's my favorite," she said, pulling out the
snapshot.
The Schumachers bought Sugar Babe from a neighbor when their 5-year-old
son, Jeff, was recovering from a traumatic brain injury. The pony lived
about a mile away, but she kept showing up at the Schumachers' farm.
"I don't know how she did it, because we all have fences. But she kept
coming over to be near our horses. So we bought her for $100. It was the
best $100 we ever spent," Lynn Schumacher said.
Bill Schumacher headed 4-H horse programs, until his son, Bill, and
daughters, Sue and Deb, graduated from high school. During that time Sugar
Babe carried countless riders to blue ribbons in the Kent County Youth
Fair, the Michigan 4-H Fair and the Special Olympics in Mount Pleasant.
She even appeared once in a costume event in a pink tutu.
At the same time, she was helping Jeff Schumacher recover from partial
paralysis.
The couple was so sold on therapeutic riding they offered the use of their
farm to the Kent Special Riding Program, one of more than 650 affiliates
of the North American organization.
Nobody even wants to think about life without Sugar Babe. Thirty is old
for horses and 40 is old for ponies. So Sugar Babe is a very old lady.
But she won't be retired just yet. As long as she's willing and able,
riding instructors say she's just the right horse for a small child.
"She's a cutie pie who's apparently touched everyone's heart," Ayala
said.
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