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Laura Lee Brother Appalachian Heritage, Volume 25, Number 1, Winter 1997, p. 48 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1997.0017 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/435764/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 20:08 GMT from JHU Libraries I dusted them carefully three times a week. Thankfully, my father hu- mored me, because things were really starting to look the part at this point. Something else I brought to my horse barn from the state fair was the often elaborate and intricate ways in which each individual horse's halter and lead were hung on their door. We didn't even have halters and leads for all of our horses, and they were in a sorry state if we did have them. I spent a lot of money at Way-Mar—the tack store that made the rounds of all the horse shows. I wanted not only halters and leads, but matching ones. I had different ways of hanging the leads— depending on what I fancied from the latest show. For a while I curled the lead through the metal snap and hung the halters over this, but if you were in a rush to get a lead, it
Appalachian Review – University of North Carolina Press
Published: Jan 8, 2014
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