Home ‘The salt of the earth’: Corolla Wild Horse Fund mourns Raymond the mule
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‘The salt of the earth’: Corolla Wild Horse Fund mourns Raymond the mule

Rebecca Barnabi
Photo courtesy of Corolla Wild Horse Fund.

The Corolla Wild Horse Fund announced on Facebook Wednesday morning the death of Raymond the mule because of a small scrotal hernia which obstructed his small intestine.

The Fund made the decision on the morning of October 30, 2024, to humanely euthanize Raymond, who was believed to be in his late 20s and the offspring of a wild Banker mare and a donkey who lived among the herd before a domestic livestock ordinance was enacted. Raymond was actually Raymond Jr. or even Raymond III and locals called him Jack, Rebel, Burrito and other nicknames.

“Raymond spent most of his life in the wild and lived just like the horses – he had a harem of mares, raised foals (even though they weren’t biologically his – mules are sterile), and fought other stallions for territory. He had a reputation for being fierce, and most of the stallions gave him a wide berth. Because he was a hybrid, Raymond did not have all of the physical adaptations we see with the Banker horses and as a result had issues with his hooves throughout much of his life. When he was younger, they would grow out and break off without any intervention, but as he got older and less active he was unable to self-trim. Late in 2017 we sedated Raymond and trimmed his feet in the field, which helped him for a while. But by the following year they had grown back out and he had become severely lame, so we made the decision to take him to the farm where we’d be able to provide him the care he needed,” The Fund wrote on Facebook today.

The Fund was worried how he would adapt to life on the farm he soon showed them that they should underestimate him.

“He settled right in and figured out how to wrap us around his hooves, and for the next five years our lives would revolve around him. We were able to correct many of the issues with his hooves and keep him sound and comfortable, he was put on a diet more appropriate for a mule his age, and he even agreed to being halter trained. We built him his own pasture where he didn’t have to worry about other horses challenging him (turns out he really wasn’t all that fierce, he was just very defensive) and we did our best to accommodate and indulge in all of his many quirks and idiosyncrasies. After we rescued Blossom last year she and Raymond lived together at the farm as they had in the wild, and they were both so happy to have each other’s company.”

The Fund’s goal in the last year was to keep Raymond content and comfortable.

“Quality of life was the most important part of his care plan, and he was definitely a very happy mule right up to the moment he passed away. It doesn’t make the loss any easier or less heartbreaking, but there is certainly a lot of comfort to be taken from that.
Finding the words that fully encapsulate Raymond’s extraordinary life and his place in our history is proving to be quite difficult. There will never be another one like him, and his death is the end of an era. He is the closing chapter on a way of life that does not exist here anymore. He was everything a Banker is supposed to be – resilient, adaptable, smart. He was truly the salt of the earth.
We will remember him fondly and miss him dearly. It’s way too quiet around here without him hollering at us.”

The public is invited to share memories, photographs and condolences about Raymond online in order to celebrate his life.

“Rest well, Raymond.”

Rebecca Barnabi

Rebecca Barnabi

Rebecca J. Barnabi is the national editor of Augusta Free Press. A graduate of the University of Mary Washington, she began her journalism career at The Fredericksburg Free-Lance Star. In 2013, she was awarded first place for feature writing in the Maryland, Delaware, District of Columbia Awards Program, and was honored by the Virginia School Boards Association’s 2019 Media Honor Roll Program for her coverage of Waynesboro Schools. Her background in newspapers includes writing about features, local government, education and the arts.