Handling a full life
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Michael Matter, Special to the Independent
SHE IS
A handler of horses.
WEARING TWO HATS
Marie Keller is known around the Huntington Beach Central Park
Equestrian Center as a horse handler and day-care person.
She finds time to train horses while managing a feed store -- and
seems to accomplish both tasks each day almost simultaneously.
Keller manages Steinberg’s Tack and Feed, the only tack and feed store
at the 25-acre facility.
“I run everything in the store,” Keller said. “I order feed, product
and I sell both in person and over the phone. If I’m not there, we’re not
open.”
LOVE OF HER LIFE
Working with horses has been the realization of a childhood dream for
Keller. Her grandmother had a ranch in Oregon where she was able to spend
six weeks each summer.
“There is a saying among horse people that there is something about
the outside of a horse that touches the inside of a person,” Keller said.
“Horses will take you and carry you to places that you’ve never dreamed
of going.”
CARING FOR FRIENDS
Keller said she is able to be a trainer, while running the feed store,
because the two overlap each other so seamlessly. She is at the
equestrian center seven days a week from 6 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
“I do my own business around the feed store business,” Keller said.
“Both my daughter and my husband support me and help me whenever I need
it.”
Her time at the feed store is book ended by horse handling. Each day
from 6 to 9:30 a.m. and again from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Keller works with
horses. She is responsible for 30-40 horses at any given time. Her job
duties take her all over the grounds.
“The first thing I do is check for loose horses,” Keller said.
She feeds the horses breakfast, lunch and dinner and offers them a
“play time.” She also cares for them when the weather turns chilly.
“I blanket 30-40 horses each night between November and March and then
remove those blankets each morning,” Keller said. “I hand-walk with a
lead rope those that cannot be turned-out on their own because of injury
or sickness, and I hot-walk others by attaching their lead rope to a
machine that continuously circle walks them for 30 minutes.”
ACCIDENTAL BEGINNINGS
Keller began her career as a horse handler by accident.
“I fell into it when one of the two horses that I kept here was hurt,”
she said. “I started doing little things for other people and it just got
bigger and bigger.”
But Keller could not be happier, she said.
“The people at the equestrian center are so nice,” she said.
“Everything works really well here if we all help each other out.”
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