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Third-grader commutes to school by
mule
North Dakota -
Saje Beard's half-hour commute to class is the envy of her four
classmates at a one-room schoolhouse just south of here.
Most mornings, the third-grader makes
the trek on Ruth the mule.
"She's called many things, but Ruth
is what we call her in public," Saje said of the 4-year-old gray mule.
"Actually, that's my dad's joke. She's really nice and gentle. And she
sure is smart."
Saje,
9, is an old hand at maneuvering mules. She's been doing it since she
was in first grade.
"I feel more safe with her riding a
mule than having her ride in a car or on a bus," said her father,
Marty Beard.
At the Manning School, about 15 miles
south of the North Dakota capital, Saje "parks" Ruth by tying her with
a bowline to a tree near swing sets and monkey bars. Ruth then gets
some leather hobbles attached to her front legs, a routine Saje began
after her other mule, Shirley, got loose and ran home from school last
year.
Saje's
classmates, who are in kindergarten through fourth grade, help take
off Ruth's saddle and tack. It's stored in the school's cloakroom,
next to basketballs and other playground equipment.
The five children then run to the
school's flagpole to recite the Pledge of Allegiance and sing the
national anthem. The mule, named Ruth, prances and kicks up dirt as
the children sing.
"It's cool," Lucas Irving, 10, said
of his classmate and her mode of transportation. "She's cool."
Saje
would ride Ruth every morning, but her dad won't let her if the
temperature is below zero -- "even if she insists."
Saje
proved just how much she's willing to endure on a recent trek to
school in below-freezing temperatures and strong winds.
"My cheeks are burning," she said,
"but that's OK."
Saje
gets up at sunup to prepare for school. She brushes Ruth and feeds her
grain, then hoists an old saddle that weighs nearly as much as she
does over the chubby mule.
"Come on Ruthie, come on mule," she
says as she leads her mount to the front yard.
Saje
raises her foot above her head to reach a stirrup, pulls herself up
and swings the other leg over. She pulls down the coonskin hat her
father made and gives Ruth a gentle nudge in the ribs.
"Let's go girl," she says.
Saje
has corn and sweet peas stuffed in saddlebags for Ruth's lunch, and
for treats during the school's three recesses. Her homework and a tuna
fish sandwich are in her backpack, tied to the mule.
Saje
and Ruth follow a gravel road and pass dozens of horses from other
farms during the two-mile trip. Ruth is fitted with special
carbide-studded shoes to make the already sure-footed animal even more
so, especially on ice.
Mules are known for protecting
themselves and their riders. Marty Beard said the mule would likely
attack anyone who hassled Saje along the route.
"She would probably implant those
special shoes on their forehead," he said.
The trip home always is a little
faster: Ruth knows she'll have some grain waiting, so she picks up the
pace without prodding, Saje said.
Kris Beard, Saje's mother, said even
some of their rural neighbors find her daughter's mule commute
unusual.
"It's not strange for us, but for
other people it is quite different," she said. "We're very fortunate
to live here." -- CNN News
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