╌>

US Space Force hires a horse to boldly go where rockets can't.

  
Via:  Split Personality  •  3 years ago  •  11 comments

By:   Brandon Specktor (livescience. com)

US Space Force hires a horse to boldly go where rockets can't.
The United States Space Force has a new recruit in their mission to keep planet Earth safe. His name is Ghost, and he likes to go clip-clop on the beach.

Sponsored by group SiNNERs and ButtHeads

SiNNERs and ButtHeads


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



The United States Space Force has a new recruit in their mission to keep planet Earth safe. His name is Ghost, and he likes to go clip-clop on the beach.

Ghost, a 5-year-old mustang, is the newest addition to the Conservation Military Working Horse program, which the Space Force recently inherited from the U.S. Air Force. According to a video tweeted by the Space Force, Ghost just joined a stable of four Military Working Horses at Vandenberg Air Force Base — a 99,600-acre (40,306 hectares) chunk of land on the California coast. (That's roughly 100 times the size of Central Park in New York.)

Let's just get this out of the way: No, Ghost is not going into space. Horses are notoriously bad at operating computers, and NASA has had enough trouble sizing their space suits for bipeds lately. Nor is Ghost being trained for combat, despite his cool military credentials.

So, how does Ghost spend his workdays, if not dreaming of the stars or distant shores? According to Staff Sgt. Michael Terrazas, manager of the Military Working Horse Program and one of Ghost's handlers, Ghost is sort of a quadrupedal conservation cop. Ghost and his equine colleagues help the human members of the Working Horse program traverse the vast hills and beaches of Vandenburg, keeping an eye on the area's many protected species and any intruders that might pose a threat to them.

"We enforce fish and game laws, and the horses help us walk off the beaten path to complete our mission," Terrazas said in a 2019 news release (before the Space Force took ownership of the program). "We have even responded to lost hunters and hurt animals."

According to the Vandenburg website, 15 endangered or threatened species live within the base's borders. When patrolling the base's far corners with motor vehicles proves too difficult, program members turn to the horses. Ghost has a smaller ecological footprint than an ATV, Terrazas said, making the horses crucial to accomplishing environmentally friendly patrols.

Like an astronaut, Ghost is undergoing rigorous training before he can go full-time, currently riding three times a week with a personal trainer. Cleaning up beaches and writing citations for hunters might not be as romantic as exploring the Horsehead nebula, but it's arguably even more important work. Way to go, Ghost! That's four small steps for horse-kind.

 


Article is LOCKED by moderator [Split Personality]
 

Tags

jrGroupDiscuss - desc
[]
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Split Personality    3 years ago

Sorry I couldn't resist.  I found a much more sarcastic article last night which I will post

if I can relocate it.

As in the case with most CBP horses, Ghost is a product of the wild mustang project that has BLM turning mustangs over to the

Colorado Correctional Institute  mustang training unit known as WHIP ( Wild Horse Inmate Program )

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
1.1  Ed-NavDoc  replied to  Split Personality @1    3 years ago

Must be a slow news day. Just kidding...

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
1.1.1  seeder  Split Personality  replied to  Ed-NavDoc @1.1    3 years ago

Following the bread crumbs of how much it costs the CBP with their 334 horses and who actually cares for them.

Too funny to pass up

and not hateful politics religion or partisan purity.

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
1.1.2  Ed-NavDoc  replied to  Split Personality @1.1.1    3 years ago

Agreed.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
2  seeder  Split Personality    3 years ago

The Space Force Has a Horse. Of Course.

The horses used to belong to the Air Force, which makes only slightly more sense.

In space, no one can hear you neigh.

800

It remains somewhat unclear exactly what purpose the newest branch of the American military, the U.S. Space Force , is supposed to serve , but you probably didn't expect this to be part of their duties:

That's right: The U.S. Space Force has horses . No, they're not going onto orbit—or attacking an enemy spaceship —but the actual explanation for why the Space Force has them is almost as absurd.

Are you ready? They used to be the Air Force's horses.

As the video posted to the Space Force's official Twitter account on Friday explains, the "military working horses" are part of the 30th Space Wing based at the Vandenberg Air Base in California. Prior to the creation of the Space Force, they were part of a conservation program run by the Air Force.

"We are able to go through creeks and water with the horses, high hills that we wouldn't be able to get through with off-road vehicles," U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Michael Terrazas explained in a 2019 profile of the program .

Yes, yes. If only the Air  Force had the means of getting to places that are difficult for earthbound troops to access, right?

When the Space Force was created last year, the Air Force conservation program was spun off to the new branch. But the horses will continue to do the same work as before : helping enforce decidedly earthbound matters like fish and game laws.

Whether they're air horses or space horses, the real question is why any branch of the military is doing this. Would America's national security be weakened in any measurable way if the Space Force horses were put out to a privatized pasture?

The last successful cavalry charge in military history occurred more than a decade before the first man-made satellite went to space. The number of horses that have exited the atmosphere is exactly zero. And yet somehow, within the bizarre labyrinth of bloat and waste that is the Pentagon, it made perfect sense for the Air Force, and now the Space Force, to have horses.

Maybe the military doesn't really need $738 billion a year after all.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
2.1  seeder  Split Personality  replied to  Split Personality @2    3 years ago

Protecting our access to space involves many unique aspects, including welcoming @30thSpaceWing 's newest Military Working Horse to their Conservation Military Working Horse program. Ghost is a 5 year old @BLMNational Mustang.

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
2.2  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  Split Personality @2    3 years ago
The Space Force Has A Horse. Of Course.
A space horse is a horse of course of course
And no one can talk to a horse in space of course.
That is of course unless the horse
Is the famous Mister Ghost!
Go right to the source and ask the space horse.
He'll give you the answer that you'll endorse
He's always on a steady space course.
Talk to Mister Ghost!
People yakkity-yak a streak
And waste your time of day,
but Mister Ghost will never speak
Unless he has something to say!
A space horse is a horse of course of course
And this one'll talk 'til his voice is hoarse.
You've never heard of a talking space horse?
Well, listen to this...
"I am Mister Ghost!"
 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
2.2.1  seeder  Split Personality  replied to  Dismayed Patriot @2.2    3 years ago

The Ghost of Vandenberg...

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
3  Kavika     3 years ago

I love it, I've been to Vandenberg a few times and the area is stunning in its beauty. Ghost is a welcome addition.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
3.1  seeder  Split Personality  replied to  Kavika @3    3 years ago

Passed by on 101 a few times, lol.

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
4  charger 383    3 years ago

protecting and taking care of horses is a good and worthwhile thing

 
 

Who is online






Mark in Wyoming
arkpdx
CB


40 visitors