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Have a Clydesdale-Sized Thanksgiving!
TAKE YOUR THANKSGIVING TO A CLYDESDALE-SIZED LEVEL
Turkey, football, shopping & … CLYDESDALES!
Sounds like the perfect holiday tradition to us.
Join us at JFP Equine for either a CHORE TIME Clydesdale Experience or a Clydesdale ‘Backstage’ Meet N’ Greet this weekend. Limited spots remain.
Here’s our current availability (subject to change):
CHORE TIME Clydesdale Experience (2 hours)
Friday, Nov. 24: 9:00am - 11:00am (1 spot open)
Saturday, Nov. 25: 9:00am - 11:00am (2 spots open)
Clydesdale ‘Backstage’ Meet N’ Greet
Friday, Nov. 24, 11:15am - 12:00pm (2 spots open)
Saturday, Nov. 25, 12:30pm - 1:15pm (4 spots open)
WHO’S IN THE BARN THIS WEEKEND?
If you’re coming for a CHORE TIME Clydesdale Experience or one of our Meet N’ Greets, these are the three resident all-stars you can expect to meet:
ACE
DEX
WYNDHAM
DO CLYDESDALES EAT TURKEY?
Nah, turkey isn’t really their thing.
But extra oats and maybe some apples and carrots to help celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday?
Now you’re talking!
It’s kinda funny … just like people are different in what treats they like, Clydesdales can be that way sometimes too.
For example, ACE and DEX love apples … Wyndham, nah, not so much.
Here’s to a happy Thanksgiving to you and your family and whatever specific treats help you celebrate just a little ‘extra.’
Thanks so much for LOVIN’ Clydesdales … see you soon (hopefully this weekend!) at JFP Equine!
ABOUT JFP EQUINE
JFP Equine was established in 2011 by Jim Poole following a 25-yr career in the management of the Budweiser Clydesdales. Prior to Budweiser, Poole worked with, and actively managed, several top-quality draft horse hitches in competition throughout Canada and the U.S.
Tucked along the outskirts of Waterloo, IL (just outside St. Louis, MO), JFP Equine's headquarters is a small but MIGHTY working farm home to best-of-breed Clydesdales (and occasionally other breeds of draft horse).
*IMPORTANT: The Activity is potentially dangerous for reasons that include but are not limited to the propensity of an equine to behave in dangerous ways that may result in injury to the participant; the inability to predict an equine’s reaction to sound, movements, objects, persons, or animals; and the hazards of surface or subsurface conditions.