OklahomaHorses Magazine Sept 2022
September / October 2022 • OklahomaHorses 9 COWBOY MADE. COWBOY APPROVED! OKLAHOMA CITY 4320 W Reno Ave (800) 654-6715 EDMOND 1201 S Broadwy (405) 844-4757 STILLWATER 502 E. 6th Ave Stillwater, OK 74074 405-372-2766 DAVIS 205 South A St Davis, OK 73030 580-369-2354 CLAREMORE 721 W. 6th St. Claremore, OK 74017 918-341-0933 PERRY 205 Gene Taylor Perry, OK 73077 580-336-2168 For all of your fall and winter animal needs! the ranch, but she missed her husband’s guidance with the mares and foals. She took her horses out of show training and concentrated on the broodmare program. For six years after her husband’s death, she bred mares and sold geldings, explaining that she felt she would do him wrong if she sold out and quit. But at 90 years old, she finally realized she couldn’t keep up with a bunch of broodmares. Racing into the Future A veterinarian friend and racehorse enthu- siast encouraged her to buy a racehorse, assuring her she wouldn’t need to do any of the work but could just show up and watch the horse run. She followed his advice, sold the show horses, got into the racehorse business, and began anoth- er Logan era in the horse industry. She explained, “It is perfect for me. My trainer gets them ready, takes them to the races, and I just show up for the win picture … and pay for everything, of course.” Her racing adventure paid off with AQHA racehorse EC Revenge, who made headlines in 2019 with four wins in four starts, winning the Heritage Place Juve- nile Futurity and the historic Oklahoma Futurity. She now has two horses with veteran trainer Dee Keener. Tres Crystals won the 2022 Oklahoma Futurity and the 2022 Heritage Futurity, making him the only horse in more than 80 years to win both races in the same year. He was undefeated going into the August trials for the All American, which was run during Labor Day weekend in Ruidoso, New Mexico. Her other horse, Dreamsville, won the 2022 Remington Park Derby and was also in the trials for the All American. She added, “I’m so proud of what they’ve done. I’m really just blown away by these two horses.” Mrs. Logan has two mares and two foals that live on the ranch. She also has EC Revenge, who retired undefeated because of an injury and, according to her, is her “pasture ornament.” She feeds and cares for the horses daily. With lots of help from friends, neighbors, hired hands, and the OSU staff, she plans to remain on the ranch as long as she can. The Logan property will be used pri- marily for cattle grazing, weed control, and fertilization research, according to the director of the field and research service unit for OSU.
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