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Emmet couple share their love of “gentle giant” Clydesdales
by Joy Richter

Kelly KloppenborgIf you'd like to take a step back in time, when life moved at a slower pace, or if you'd just like to blow some of those cobwebs out of your mind and get a “fresh air life” start on the year, I'd suggest a leisurely, open air horse-drawn wagon ride pulled by Kelly Kloppenborg's team of majestic Clydesdale horses.

Kelly, who has been employed by the Natural Resource District in O'Neill, Nebraska for six years as a water technician, is also co-owner with his brother Kirby of the Emmet Hay Company. The business was started in 1909 by the Cole family, and Don, Kelly's father, bought the business in 1970.

Kelly and his wife Terry of Emmet, Nebraska, (population 77), have been sharing the pleasure of their Clydesdale horses by providing others with a glance back at how farming and transportation was before the automobile.

Real horsepower   

“Horsepower” is the operative word here. These “gentle giants” who "have a good disposition and are well-behaved", were bred as work horses — and they know how to work. Kelly has used his horses for all facets of the haying operation; including mowing, raking, sweeping, and pulling the hay stacker up, as well as for planting and harvesting oats, not to mention a bit of dirt work.

Long before Emmet Hay's Centennial year, Don Kloppenborg had the idea of using the Clydesdales to demonstrate how the haying operation was carried out before modern farm equipment did the job. In August of 2009, 100 years after the inception of the business, the Kloppenborgs featured working demonstrations in a day long event on the outskirts of town.

Hank and Dixie

Hank & DixieIn 1999, when Kelly had bought his first horses, a mother and daughter, he decided he wanted to "let other people enjoy the horses the way I do" and began giving horse-drawn wagon rides. He had the horses bred, and the day I was taking these pictures, the brother-and-sister team, Hank and Dixie, were pulling a wagon full of laughing Kindergartners and their teachers.

Along with providing rides for school children, Kelly also provides wagon rides for wedding parties, carolers, family reunions, and non-profit organizations such as 4-H. When he donated a wagon ride to a local church's auction, it was purchased by a young engaged couple who used it for their wedding. The Kloppenborgs also enjoy teaming up with other horse owners who drive about six miles out into the country in covered wagons to have a family style old fashioned picnic lunch.

Giving back

Kelly currently has six horses that he uses together or separately. His daughter, grandson, and father also help drive the horses, so it's a "family thing".

When I've seen the horses moving down the street at a brisk trot, their bells jingling and riders waving and joyfully shouting to passersby, I'm thankful of the Kloppenborg's willingness to give back to their community in such a wonderful, fun and sharing way.

Joy Richter is the author of two blogs: www.goodmorningmarysunshine.blogspot.com and www.freshairlife.blogspot.com. She also writes articles and contributes her photographs for 'J.R.LIGGETT'S Soap Box', a monthly e-newsletter accessed through www.jrliggett.com.

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