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Josh Friedrich and his favorite Section D cob stallion, Magic Marvel, exit the 2005 American Nationals show in Canfield, Ohio. Debbie Williams of Chandler, Arizona, owns the pony.

(Photo provided by the Heartland Welsh Association)
 
Lined with clean, white fences, the mission of the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Ky. is to highlight the relationship between man and horse. In 2010, the park will host one of the world's largest equine events - the World Equestrian games. This will be the event's U.S. debut.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
The Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Ky. features two museums, twin theaters and nearly 50 different breeds of horses.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
The Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Ky. was first opened to the public in 1978.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
The draft horses are among the more popular exhibits during the annual Maple Syrup Festival on the Malabar Farm near Lucas, Ohio. The horses are used to pull carts of visitors around the event.

(Jane Houin photo)
 
The draft horses are among the more popular exhibits during the annual Maple Syrup Festival on the Malabar Farm near Lucas, Ohio.

(Jane Houin photo)
 
Eric Parsons works on a horseshoe for a customer at the Equine Podiatry Center in Lexington, Ky.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
Eric Parsons works on a horseshoe for a customer at the Equine Podiatry Center in Lexington, Ky.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
Mary Lou, the pony, poses with her prosthetic leg. Mary Lou lives behind the Equine Podiatry Center in Lexington, Ky. She was brought to the center with a severe break in her front left leg.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
Ralph Umbaugh from Napanee, Ind. and his horsepulling team kick up a cloud of dust during a Michigan pulling contest.

(Cecil Darnell photos)
 
Shiny new horseshoes, belonging to the Equine Podiatry Center in Lexington, Ky., glimmer in the sunshine.

(Tim Thornberry photo)
 
The new fertilizer hub can now receive 65 railcars, like the one here, at one time.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
Co-Alliance Agronomy Manager Phil Brewer (left) stands with Gordy Barnet, manager of Co-Alliance's new fertilizer hub.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
Co-Alliance employees unload fertilizer for railcars. The new hub is capable of loading amd unloading a railcar in just seven minutes.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
The new Scircleville, Ind. fertilizer hub sits in the middle of the farm fields it will serve.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
The new $3.9 million Co-Alliance LLP fertilizer facility is located in Scircleville, Ind.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
Railcars wait to be unloaded at the recently opened Scircleville Fertilizer Hub Plant in northern Clinton County, Ind.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
A 36-inch-wide conveyor belt is used to move fertilizer throughout the Co-Alliance hub. A catwalk runs parallel to the conveyor belt.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
Only three employees are needed to operate the automated system at the Scircleville fertilizer hub. These controls are used to unload blended or unblended fertilizer into drive-through vehicles.
(Dave Blower Jr. photo)
 
Mac Donaldson has a herd of about 1,500 cattle on his Arizona ranch.(br> (Celeste Baumgartner photo) 
Mac Donaldson moves cattle across his expansive Arizona ranch by horse.
(Celeste Baumgartner photo)
 
These heifers get some extra feed on the 72,000-acre ranch southeast of Tucson, Arizona.
(Celeste Baumgartner photo)
 
The ranch uses some windmills but can't rely on them when cattle are looking for water.
(Celeste Baumgartner photo)
 
The cattle on Mac Donaldson's ranch get water from dirt tanks filled from wells with submersible pumps and generators.
(Celeste Baumgartner photo)