Shadeylane Farms

Shadeylane Farms Breeders of a very select herd of registered miniature donkeys and Heritage poultry in Southern Saskatchewan.

02/26/2026
01/25/2026

“GO HOME, SOPHIE.” — The Last Promise Harry Morgan Kept

Harry Morgan was 78.
Sophie was 26.
For a horse, that’s ancient.
Her legs shook.
Her eyes had clouded over.
She no longer trotted.
She barely walked.
The vet examined her, then looked at Harry with quiet sorrow.
“She’s tired, Harry.
Her body’s giving out.
It’s time.”
Harry didn’t answer right away.
He just rested his hand on her neck — the same gentle stroke he’d given her for eighteen years.
“Not yet,” he said softly.
“There’s one last thing we need to do.”
That night he called his son.
“I need your help.”
“With what?”
“I’m taking Sophie somewhere.”
“Dad… she can hardly stand.”
“Malibu Creek.”
A long pause.
“The set burned down years ago.”
“I know.
The buildings are gone.
But the land is still there.”
He didn’t say it out loud, but his son understood.
Sophie deserved to see home one more time.
They rented a padded horse trailer — the kind used for fragile animals.
Three men helped lift her inside.
Harry rode in the back with her the whole way, whispering:
“It’s okay, girl.
One last ride.
Just you and me.”
The drive took two hours.
When they arrived at Malibu Creek State Park, the land was silent.
No tents.
No helicopters.
No cameras.
Just rolling hills, oak trees, and wide sky.
Harry opened the trailer.
Sophie stepped down slowly — trembling, uncertain.
Then her hooves touched the earth.
Something shifted.
Her head lifted.
Her ears flicked forward.
Her cloudy eyes cleared for a moment.
She knew this place.
Without being led, she began to walk.
Painful.
Deliberate.
Toward where the 4077th once stood.
Harry followed, speaking softly.
“That was the corral.
Colonel Potter’s tent was right over there.
The crew used to sneak you apples from craft services.”
He pulled one from his pocket.
She took it gently — the same way she always had.
He told her everything.
About the show.
About bringing her home after it ended.
About Eileen, who loved her until the end.
“After Eileen died… you were still here.
Every morning.
Waiting for me.”
Sophie rested her head against his chest.
A 78-year-old man.
A dying horse.
Standing on ground where television history was made.
They stayed for hours.
Harry walked her slowly around the land, pointing out memories only they shared.
When it was time to go, Sophie refused to move.
She planted her hooves.
Harry smiled through tears.
“I know.
I don’t want to leave either.”
He promised they’d come back.
They both knew it wasn’t true.
One week later, Sophie could no longer stand.
Harry sat with her in the hay, cradling her head in his lap.
Before the vet gave the injection, he whispered:
“Thank you for Malibu Creek.
Thank you for the 4077th.
Thank you for being my horse.”
Her ear twitched once.
Then she was still.
Harry buried her beneath an oak tree on his ranch.
The marker read:
SOPHIE
1967–1993
Colonel Potter’s Horse
Harry Morgan’s Friend
“She was never just a horse. She was family.”
Eighteen years later, when Harry Morgan passed at 96, his children found a note tucked in his desk:
“When I die, bury some of my ashes with Sophie.”
They did.
And somewhere beyond memory, beyond pain, there’s a field.
A man walks out every morning.
A horse waits for him — young again, strong again.
“Morning, Sophie.”
She nickers softly.
He climbs into the saddle.
Together they ride —
Colonel Potter and Sophie —
across open land that never burned down,
where the sky is always wide,
and the promise is always kept.
Rest easy, Harry.
You kept your word.
And Sophie’s still waiting —
just like she always did.
Happy trails. 🐴🕊️

01/21/2026

If You Can’t Call the Vet, You Can’t Keep the Animal

By Tim from Linessa Farms

This is uncomfortable to say — but it needs to be said.

Loving animals isn’t proven on the good days.
It’s proven when something goes wrong.

I saw a video recently of an animal with a horribly bad re**al prolapse.
The owner said she tore it to get it back in because she “had to.”

That wasn’t care.
That was panic — and an animal paid for it.

What followed was predictable: strangers online offering advice from a distance, with no responsibility for the outcome.

Here’s the reality:

– Emergencies are not learning moments
– Facebook comments are not veterinary medicine
– Good intentions do not reduce suffering

If you keep animals, you are responsible for outcomes — not just ownership when things are easy.

That responsibility means:
– Having a veterinarian you can call
– Having a plan before an emergency
– Knowing when something is beyond your skill
– Choosing treatment or humane euthanasia — not delay

This is not about perfection.
It’s not about unlimited money.
It’s not about agreeing with every vet recommendation.

It’s about preventing unnecessary suffering.

Every time this comes up, the same objections appear:

“Not everyone can afford the vet.”
“I don’t have a vet in my area.”
“I don’t like vets.”
“I do things all natural.”

None of those remove responsibility.

If treatment isn’t possible, humane euthanasia is still care.
If you don’t have a local vet, planning matters even more.
Natural management does not mean non-intervention.

Letting an animal suffer because you won’t involve a veterinarian is not natural.
It’s neglect.

And yes — in many states, knowingly allowing an animal to suffer without providing reasonable medical care can meet the legal definition of neglect or cruelty. Livestock included.

But the law isn’t the point.
Ethics are.

I have a veterinarian.
I trust my veterinarian.
I couldn’t do what I do without them.

That doesn’t make me less capable — it makes me responsible.

Keeping animals is a privilege.
That privilege comes with an obligation to act when they are in pain.

If you can’t call the vet — for treatment or humane euthanasia —
you can’t keep the animal.

That isn’t judgment.
That’s ownership.

12/25/2025
They have finally arrived!LN Morcolor, black and white spotted weanling jackAikaine’s Starbright, yearling black jennet ...
09/24/2025

They have finally arrived!
LN Morcolor, black and white spotted weanling jack
Aikaine’s Starbright, yearling black jennet
Thank you Jon and Mary, Nissen’s LN Ranch, IA and Celeste Brown, Pine Meadow Farm, TX

So proud of these two young girls!
08/11/2025

So proud of these two young girls!

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Box 11
Regina, SK
S0G2T0

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