Mule Racing Enthusiast, Businessman
Played Major Role in Research Project
May 29, 2003
POST FALLS, Idaho – Don
Jacklin is a businessman with a passion for
mule racing.
His best racer, Taz, inspires
that sort of passion in a lot of race fans.
Last year, the rivalry between Jacklin’s
Taz and Black Ruby, another racing mule, won
the
TVG television
racing channel’s Viewer’s Choice
Award for the top rivalry in horse racing.
Jacklin,
who joined his brothers Doyle and Duane
in building Jacklin Seed into a national
force in grass seed production, was the
major private sponsor of the University of
Idaho-Utah
State University project that cloned the
first member of the horse family, a mule. The cloned
foal, born May 4 and named Idaho Gem, is
the full brother of Taz.
A mule is the
offspring of a male donkey, a jack, crossed
with a female horse, a mare.
Mules are almost always sterile, although
five reports have been verified of female
mules producing live foals in the last two
decades.
A
donkey has 62 chromosomes and a horse 64.
A mule has 63. It is that basic genetic difference
that is thought to make mules sterile. Cloning,
as a result, is the only feasible way for a
mule to reproduce.
Jacklin has long supported
the work of Gordon Woods, a University of Idaho
professor of animal
and veterinary science and a veterinarian.
Woods directs the Northwest Equine Reproduction
Laboratory
on the Moscow campus. Jacklin donated
funds to directly support Dirk Vanderwall,
a UI assistant professor of animal and veterinary
science. Woods said Vanderwall’s expertise
was essential to the project.
In 1994, Jacklin
and Woods represented the UI program when
it was chosen grand marshal
of the Bishop Mule Days Parade in central
California. The focus of the program then was
using pioneering
embryo transfer techniques to produce four
siblings within months of each other. Mule
racing is gaining popularity throughout the
country,
and in particular in the West
where it began, Jacklin said.
California race
tracks such as Los Alamitas, Pomona and Del
Mar have scheduled mule races
with strong fan support, including a daily
record turnout at one track.
The TVG vote was
exciting, Jacklin said, because it showed
broader interest.
“
They picked up eastern fans who didn’t
even know that mule racing existed,” he
said. “Seeing the Taz-Black Ruby rivalry
attract so much attention was surprising because
they were up against the best races, the best
horses and the best jockeys in the world.”
That
strong will that makes mules famous makes
them intense competitors, Jacklin said.
“ People were amazed these two mules would compete
so hard.”
Mules are fast, although not as fast a thoroughbreds.
They can beat some horses like paints, Arabians
and Appaloosas but typically run in the middle
of the pack for quarter horses.
Mules typically
race their best over short distances of 300
to 440 yards.
Jacklin makes clear that he is proud to have
been a sponsor of the research that led to
the first cloned equine, and proud that it
produced a mule.
The University of Idaho honored
Jacklin and his brothers at its May 17 commencement
with
honorary doctoral degrees to recognize their
contributions to the institution and the state.
The
businessmen led the drive to establish the
university’s Post Falls Research
Park and provided major support for the new
Jacklin Science and Technology Building there.
“
Even though the animals are important, what
this is really about is the opportunity to
work with quality people like Gordon Woods,
Dirk Vanderwall and other members of the team,” Jacklin
said.
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CONTACTS: Bill Loftus
or Kathy Barnard, University Communications,
(208) 885-6291, bloftus@uidaho.edu or kbarnard@uidaho.edu
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