Chattanooga Times Free Press

Amish or not, sellers and buyers flood horse auction

- BY KRISTEN DE GROOT

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Amish men lead muscular horses across a concrete threshold, their straw hats only as high as the beasts’ shoulders, the clip-clop of huge hooves echoing loudly.

Nearby, a black stallion glistens as a boy in suspenders washes it with a garden hose. An auctioneer holds court in a sea of bridles, bits and buckets. Bay doors open and snow blows in as harness horses clamber into holding stalls.

At the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex, at the nation’s first major horse auction of the year, the activity bustles along like a well-oiled buggy.

Amish from all over the country come here to buy and sell their massive draft horses and magnificen­t harness horses. It also draws non-Amish horse fans, lured by the “Cadillac” quality of the animals, and vendors of everything from saddles to buggies to custom-made harnesses.

The public auction was held this year Jan. 16 and 17. It’s actually three sales rolled into one, offering draft horses for use in the fields, harness horses and a separate Morgan horse sale.

The first day is all about presentati­on, with sellers hitching up their animals and taking them for a spin around the dirtfloore­d arena. It gives potential buyers a sense of how the horse moves and its demeanor as the announcer describes its family heritage.

About 85 percent of the buyers and sellers are Amish, said Dale Stoltzfus, an organizer of the sale.

On the first day, potential buyers in traditiona­l straw hats chatted in Pennsylvan­ia Dutch as they took notes in the 200-page guide that listed horses. Buyers could sleep on it and come back for the auction the next day ready to bid.

About 500 horses were up for sale this year, Stoltzfus said, and the crowd was estimated at about 10,000 people. On one side of the complex was a live auction of farm and horse equipment; in the center were vendor stalls selling everything an Amish farmer could need: wagons and buggies; barn constructi­on; blacksmith­ing and horseshoei­ng services; handcrafte­d harnesses, saddles, bits and blankets; and whoopie pies, creamfille­d doughnuts, milkshakes and soft pretzels.

Included in the audience at the draft horse presentati­on was Shelley Thorne-Le Blanc, the co-owner of Butternut Ridge Belgians in New Brunswick, Canada.

She drove more than 13 hours to Harrisburg with a group of Canadians who show Belgian horses at fairs around Canada and in the U.S.

“It’s worth the drive for us,” she said. “The quality of horses is good.”

The highest price paid at the sale was for a draft horse by the name of Watersedge Flash Impressive, which sold for $25,000 to a family in Maine, Stoltzfus said. They’ll use him as a show horse, rather than plowing fields or pulling farm equipment.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An auctioneer, left, solicits bids as a draft horse is walked in front of prospectiv­e buyers at the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex on Jan.17 in Harrisburg, Pa.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An auctioneer, left, solicits bids as a draft horse is walked in front of prospectiv­e buyers at the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex on Jan.17 in Harrisburg, Pa.

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