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So was the horse drunk? no!

I don't see the problem.

Many is the time I have fallen asleep on a horse, elk and deer hunting, and the trusty steed would walk 6 or 7 miles down the trail, crossing streams and negotiating rock-slides, and deliver me to camp. With a loud snort, and a good horse-body shake, I would wake, dismount, unsaddle and feed the critter, and stumble into the tent.

The horse has control here, not the man.

I call B.S.

Those cops need something better to do.
 
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RiverRat said:
So was the horse drunk? no!

I don't see the problem.

Many is the time I have fallen asleep on a horse, elk and deer hunting, and the trusty steed would walk 6 or 7 miles down the trail, crossing streams and negotiating rock-slides, and deliver me to camp. With a loud snort, and a good horse-body shake, I would wake, dismount, unsaddle and feed the critter, and stumble into the tent.

The horse has control here, not the man.

I call B.S.

Those cops need something better to do.
Seems like the other occurrences listed in the article (riding a bike and operating a lawnmower) are significantly different than riding a horse (give the horse some credit here :nodlaugh: )
 
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