Image provided by: Friends of the Sandy Public Library; Sandy, OR
About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1981)
Section SANDY, OREGON THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1981 The Sandy Post News People Home & Garden Features It takes Gaylen Sundquist about I'., hours to shoe each horse They shoe horses don’t they? Gaylen Sundquist's hammer clangs An average day will find Sundquist against the horseshoe, bending it just fitting lour horses with new shoes and slightly each time metal meets metal trimm ing the hooves of three other He thrusts the U-shaped shoe into animals He travels from Ames to the fire of his portable forge In a Oregon City but most of his work is in short time it glows cherry red A leu East ( ounty and the Damascus more taps open the nail holes he Boring area earlier had pounded shut But its often not the mean horse that Gaylen Sundquist is a modern day w ill stir up trouble for theshoer Flies horseshoer can make even a mild-mannered Like blacksmiths before him, he beast grumpy, Sundquist says To uses a forge and anvil to shape shoes calm a jumpy horse, Sundquist of all sizes for horses believes the shoer’s stall-side manner Sundquist learned his trade the and personality are most important. modern way - in school Unlike early I think a lot ol getting along with farriers — the British word for horses is the shoer’s personality,” he horseshoers Sundquist went to says "They can pick up a quiet voice Clackamas Community College for or a gruff sound " six months to learn his skill The horseshoer considered going “ I was working in an office and I back to an office job He even went just didn’t like it," Sundquist says as back to his old job for an interview he prys off a shoe from a gentle But it didn't work ou, thoroughbred “ I was attracted first "Boy. I’m sure glad it didn't too." by the way the old blacksmiths used to he says ™ do it. the old hand cranked forge, the feeling of going back to using horses ’’ So Sundquist worked during the day at his office job and spent nights going to school Shortly after graduation he found himself spending evenings and weekends fitting horses with new shoes "Now I'm into it fulltime and that’s what’s been paying the hills," he says The job is fulltime for him. supporting him and his wife and two children in their home in Boring And like any craftsman, he takes pride in his work Seamstresses are proud of even stitches; chefs boast of a perfect meal For Sundquist his delight comes in com pleting a straight row of nails To get that even row Sundquist holds in his mouth the eight nails used on a shoe He gently cradles the horse's hoof between his legs and sets the new shoe on the hoof With one quick motion, he pops one nail out of his mouth, into the nail hole and ham mers it out through the hoof With another snappy motion, Sundquist nips off the exposed nml tip and begins the process again I try to take some pride in my row of nails I make it straight and even," he says "Sometimes I pull nails out because they're not in line " He s had pretty gixxl luck so far with feisty horses or mules, coming out with only a broken toe and a bruis ed arm " I was working on a mule Well, I never did finish him Anyway. I was working on his back leg and he was nasty He kicked my arm and banged it. bang. bang. bang, and even knock ed my glove off. So I relinquished that job to another fellow who wants to risk his body ” Like a circuit-riding preacher. Sun dquist visits his horses every eight weeks to trim their hooves Every other visit requires a new set of shoes Sundquist parks everything on his pickup truck and travels from home to horse Boring resident quit an office job to become a fulltim e farrier. G" ¥' r n .................. . h' m * — •« - «» Story by Lori C o llis te r Photos by K. J. Snipes Most shoes are pounded into shape while they are cold, then thrust into hot coals to open up the nail holes again.