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    Record Courier

    2.0 (2 reviews)
    Closed 7:30 am - 4:30 pm

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    15 years ago

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    9 years ago

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    Horse Tales Publications - I recommend.

    Horse Tales Publications

    5.0(1 review)
    2.4 mi

    If you want a stable friendship, get a horse…read more Some joys can't be digitized. Horse Tales has got the write stuff. It's in print, and it remains free at several locations. I read Horse Tales for its hyper-subject news which is All Things Horse in Northern Nevada and Northern California. I enjoy its local interviews, singer / actress Lacy J. Dalton's performance schedule, local opinions, local lore, horse lore, as well as Horse Tales' local advertisements. Yes, advertisements. Any business that will advertise here is usually a business that I'll want to support. Horses are like shoes - you need one in every color. "Horse Tales Publications is a monthly newspaper that is devoted to all breeds of horses and all styles of riding. The 36-year-old newspaper is diverse and features articles on horsemanship, training, safety, equine health featuring up-to-date vaccine and medical advancements information from UC Davis Equine Research." No philosophers so thoroughly comprehend us as dogs and horses. I see Horse Tales as a good source of relaxation. Then, I come from a family of voracious and obsessive print readers. The print version of a newspaper is more successful at capturing and keeping my attention for longer periods. Academic studies have shown greater retention and comprehension from print than electronic reading. I like the scent of a newspaper, I like the rustling sound of a newspaper, and I like the tactile experience of holding it. A horse will change your life. Some will even define it. On my couch, green hot tea with fresh lemon for sipping, Horse Tales in hand, I read not bombarded from a digital page that isn't glowing at me with bright ads blinking like Times Square. Horse Tales is easier to navigate than the internet. It's nice to read. It's pleasant to read. Versus on my laptop I am beckoned incessantly to click on one link or another or still another, boxes of irrelevant video appear and disappear, audio screeches out unbidden, ads scurry across the screen obstructing the paragraphs I'm trying to read. There there's those internet comments. I'm not terribly interested in what people I don't know or respect post in their internet comments. Internet algorithms push me toward internet stories and ads that they reckon must be of related interest to me, as though my having seen an internet story about some celebrity's clothes I will now be desperately eager for a post of the latest developments in that celebrity life --I'm not. The computer generates heat, which on a hot day is just not cool. The Horse Tales newspaper could never be so noisy or presumptuous or raising the temperature in the room. The Horse Tales newspaper page holds still. The Horse Tales newspaper is not the echo chamber of my own interests that is amplified by a software algorithm into absurdist, creepy and on-steroids interpretations resulting from my deliberate internet searches and my random web site visits. That Horse Tales is in print is another review star and free at many locations is another review star totaling a High-5 star rating. Then I feel concerned about trees being chopped down to produce print and vehicle pollutants and them clogging up the motorways to distribute the print. Then I remember the tremendous cost to store all the digital stuff which all have their own staggering ecological impacts as they draw power from dirty electricity grids. A single data center can consume the equivalent electricity of 50,000 homes. To date there are some 10,000 data centers globally. Data centers now have a greater carbon footprint than the airline industry, which itself has a huge huge huge carbon footprint. Collectively, data centers are among the top-ten water-consuming industrial or commercial industries in the US. A lot of that water is potable--that is drinking water coming straight from the utility. Why aren't data centers required to have their own rain water harvest systems? Whoever said a horse was dumb, was dumb. There's no substitute for print for me and it turns out that many people agree. Long live Horse Tales. Among some of the more visible horses adopted from Nevada origins are the mounts of the US Marine Corps Mounted Color Guard. The Guard appears in parades throughout the West, including the Rose Parade in Pasadena. Four of the Guards' palominos are adopted wild horses. The United States Army uses adopted wild horses in its Commanding General's Mounted Color Guard. Adopted wild horses are used for everything from pets to work horses such as mounted police horses and entertainment industry horses to ceremonial horses like President (only one to date awarded a Purple Heart) US Navy disabled Veteran Lt. John F. Kennedy's State Funeral, even for use as handicapped riding program horses. When a horse greets you with a nicker and regards you with a large and liquid eye, the question of where you want to be has been answered.

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    Horse Tales Publications - I recommend.

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    Record Courier - printmedia - Updated May 2026

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