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ENLARGE
Hope and Courage this week after two months of recuperation at Cis Kemps Fish Springs ranch.
It looks like a pair of abandoned horses will live out their golden years on a small ranch in Stagecoach.
Tracy and Mark Humboldt, who are retiring as firefighters, plan to make Hope and Courage a permanent part of their family when they move in November from Brookdale, Calif., to Nevada.
Tracy Humboldt said in a telephone interview Tuesday that she and her husband were inspired by the story of Cis Kemp who found two starving horses wandering near her Fish Springs ranch on May 20.
When Kemp and her brother Kit Pearson rescued the horses, the animals were literally skin and bones. She believes they were brought to Fish Springs in a trailer and abandoned. No one ever came forward to claim the horses.
I just cant believe someone would have treated them like that, Humboldt said.
Marks mom sent us the article and it just touched us. We told Cis we would like to help pay for some food. We were not thinking about adopting. Weve been calling her every once in awhile and told Cis were interested if they came around.
In two months, Hope and Courage responded to love and care and a steady diet.
Ive always wanted horses, ever since I was a little girl, Humboldt said. But we lived in a residential neighborhood and my mother said absolutely not.
Humboldt said since she and her husband were retiring and moving to Stagecoach in Lyon County and living out in the desert, horses can be my life.
Shes not sure Hope and Courage, both in their 20s, are rideable, but that doesnt matter.
Let them live out their lives as pasture horses, she said.
The Humboldts visited Kemp a couple of weeks ago and met the sorrel mare and red roan gelding. Having seen pictures of the horses from May, the Humboldts didnt know what to expect.
They looked 100 percent better to me, Humboldt said. Theyre like big giant dogs, and we dont care if theyre rideable or not.
Humboldt said she has ridden horses, but never owned one. She and her husband have 10 acres in Stagecoach.
Im kind of worried, but you live and learn. It cant be that difficult. Cis even said to call her if we needed some pointers or help. We just want to make sure for those horses that their last days on the planet are good ones, Humboldt said.
Kemp said she was grateful to the Humboldts for helping support Hope and Courage and agreeing to take them.
Its like a storybook ending, Kemp said. It will be bittersweet when the Humboldts come to pick them up. I will miss them, but theyll live out their lives being pampered. They deserve it.
Tracy and Mark Humboldt, who are retiring as firefighters, plan to make Hope and Courage a permanent part of their family when they move in November from Brookdale, Calif., to Nevada.
Tracy Humboldt said in a telephone interview Tuesday that she and her husband were inspired by the story of Cis Kemp who found two starving horses wandering near her Fish Springs ranch on May 20.
When Kemp and her brother Kit Pearson rescued the horses, the animals were literally skin and bones. She believes they were brought to Fish Springs in a trailer and abandoned. No one ever came forward to claim the horses.
I just cant believe someone would have treated them like that, Humboldt said.
Marks mom sent us the article and it just touched us. We told Cis we would like to help pay for some food. We were not thinking about adopting. Weve been calling her every once in awhile and told Cis were interested if they came around.
In two months, Hope and Courage responded to love and care and a steady diet.
Ive always wanted horses, ever since I was a little girl, Humboldt said. But we lived in a residential neighborhood and my mother said absolutely not.
Humboldt said since she and her husband were retiring and moving to Stagecoach in Lyon County and living out in the desert, horses can be my life.
Shes not sure Hope and Courage, both in their 20s, are rideable, but that doesnt matter.
Let them live out their lives as pasture horses, she said.
The Humboldts visited Kemp a couple of weeks ago and met the sorrel mare and red roan gelding. Having seen pictures of the horses from May, the Humboldts didnt know what to expect.
They looked 100 percent better to me, Humboldt said. Theyre like big giant dogs, and we dont care if theyre rideable or not.
Humboldt said she has ridden horses, but never owned one. She and her husband have 10 acres in Stagecoach.
Im kind of worried, but you live and learn. It cant be that difficult. Cis even said to call her if we needed some pointers or help. We just want to make sure for those horses that their last days on the planet are good ones, Humboldt said.
Kemp said she was grateful to the Humboldts for helping support Hope and Courage and agreeing to take them.
Its like a storybook ending, Kemp said. It will be bittersweet when the Humboldts come to pick them up. I will miss them, but theyll live out their lives being pampered. They deserve it.


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