|
Couple dances with horses on a weekly basis, By Tom Morrow - For the
North County Times
OCEANSIDE
- As a couple, Fred and Ginger Nuthall have been teased about their
first names since they graduated in 1952 from Oceanside High School. No,
they aren't that Fred and Ginger, but they have been known to cut a few
rugs around town.
Today, they do most of their dancing with horses. Retired after 40
years in the plumbing business in Oceanside, the Nuthalls spend much of
their time volunteering at Ivey Ranch Park, a care and recreational
facility for children with special needs. The Nuthalls work with the
facility's horses and are assisted throughout the week by four other
women, Karin Sears, Candace Curlee, Marcia Martinez and Lee Littlefield.
"Fred and Ginger are simply wonderful people," says Tonya Danielly,
executive director for Ivey Ranch Park. "They and the other ladies are
so good with the horses and our kids."
Danielly said park's focus is on youngsters and adults with special
needs, but the facility is also open to able-bodied or what she
described as "typical" children and adults. Ivey Ranch Park provides
horseback riding for challenged youngsters on Saturdays. During the
week, the park uses the horses to give lessons to other youngsters, ages
6 and older.
The Nuthalls volunteer their time mostly during the week, walking and
grooming the horses, along with cleaning the corrals. Fred Nuthall is
also busy at the park on the weekends. "Ginger and I are down here
every Tuesday and Thursday," Nuthall said. "The other ladies come down
at various times throughout the week, and I come down on Saturdays and
to work with the challenged youngsters."
He says the Saturday
experience serves several purposes. "It gives these (challenged)
youngster the experience of riding, it gives parents a breather from the
constant attention they have to give their youngster, and it gives these
horses needed exercise," Nuthall said.
He said horses at the park
can't stay corralled all the time and that the program continues to
grow. "When we started volunteering here four years ago, there were
only five horses," he said. "Now we have 13."
The horses have
been donated from a variety of sources. One was a polo pony in South
America, another was injured and need a lot of recuperation. "A few
of them (horses) were owned by young girls who were going away to
college and had to give them up because it takes a lot of daily care to
keep a horse," Nuthall said
He said during the days when the
horses are ridden, none are used more than twice. On the weekends,
several more volunteers come out to assist at the park Nuthall
oversees the entire crew, making sure everything gets done properly.
"A lot of the kids who take riding lessons during the week show up here
on weekends and help with things like cleaning out corrals, walking
horses, and whatever else needs doing," he said.
Danielly said
the park really is for the entire community. "We offer horseback
riding to the public, children and adults," she said.
|