°µTV

Action Jackson, Prolific and Personable, Dies at 29

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Photo: Jessica Ash with Action Jackson at barn.
Jessica Ash, as an animal science major in 2013, works with Action Jackson at the Horse Barn. Ash is now a student in the School of Veterinary Medicine. (David Reynolds photo)

The °µTV community recently lost one of its most venerable members, the 29-year-old donkey Action Jackson, who died Jan. 6 after standing at stud at the Horse Barn for two decades ā€” siring well over 500 donkeys and mules ā€” and, with his ā€œtalkativeā€ behavior, entertaining countless visitors to the barn on La Rue Road.

 Action Jackson portrait.
Action Jackson

Although Action Jackson had a serious, chronic, foot-related ailment called laminitis, his death came as a shock to staff, faculty and students, said Amy Mclean, equine operations supervisor for the Department of Animal Science.

ā€œAction was a kind, warm spirit; I loved driving in every day and seeing him,ā€ said Mclean, whose earlier doctoral research focused on mules and donkeys. ā€œThe mules that he produced have amazing dispositions, a trait which is often related to their sires, or ā€˜jacksā€™,ā€ she said.

Just a quick primer on mules and donkeys: A male donkey (called a jack) and a female donkey (a jenny) produce a donkey, while a male donkey and a female horse (mare) produce a mule. Less common, a female donkey bred to a male horse (stallion) produces a hinny.

As hybrid animals, mules cannot reproduce but they are highly valued in many parts of the world for transporting cargo and in the United States for driving, showing, packing and pleasure riding.

On loan to °µTV breeding herd

Born in 1987, Action Jackson was a light colored donkey with a rose tint ā€” what equine aficionados call a red-grey roan. He came to live at °µTV in September 1996 when Pat Downing of Tucson, Arizona, donated him to stand at stud in the animal science departmentā€™s breeding herd.

Downing had earlier donated one breeding service with Action Jackson to the department, which resulted in the July 1997 birth of a dark brown male mule. He was Action Jacksonā€™s first °µTV offspring and the first mule born on campus in 60 years. Named Actionā€™s Graduate, the young mule would go on to be inducted in 2013 to the Bishop Mule Days Hall of Fame, according to Dan Sehnert, longtime facilities coordinator for the animal science department.

 Action Jackson and bust
A bronze moment in 2004: Trent Meyer holds one of his Action Jackson quarter-scale busts, while his daughter, Eliana, sits atop the donkey, held by Dan Sehnert, facilities coordinator for the animal science department. (Debbie Aldridge/°µTV)

A campus favorite for children

Locally, the prolific donkey was perhaps best known for his outgoing personality and that sonorous brayingā€” as if he were talking to you.

ā€œHe loved attention, especially from children,ā€ Sehnert said. ā€œHe also had a sweet tooth ā€” he never saw a donut that he didnā€™t like.ā€

It was a trait that led to Actionā€™s being immortalized in bronze in 2004. Eliana Meyer, the young daughter of local sculptor Trent Meyer and UC Cooperative Extension specialist Deanne Meyer of the animal science department, frequently visited the Horse Barn in those days, bringing carrots and Starburst candies for Action Jackson.

Taken by Elianaā€™s affection for the big donkey, the artist father generously decided to create 50 quarter-scale bronze busts titled ā€œThe Jack,ā€ which he donated to be sold to raise funds to help improve the departmentā€™s equine facilities.

Esteemed among mule fanciers

Action also was well known off-campus, especially at Mule Days, held every Memorial Day in Bishop, which boasts being the ā€œMule Capitol of the World.ā€ Bishop is in the southern Sierra Nevada, on its eastern slope.

ā€œPrior to Action, Californians would look to the East Coast, South and Midwest for quality mules,ā€ said Rich Engel, a Bishop native and °µTVā€™ assistant vice chancellor of Alumni Relations.

ā€œHis presence really helped bring quality mule breeding to the West Coast and, at the same time, brought a lot of distinction to °µTV for its breeding program,ā€ Engel said.

Action Jacksonā€™s most recent offspring ā€” two foals born last spring at the Horse Barn ā€” will be offered in this year's annual June production sale. Another of his foals is expected to be born this year, according to Mclean. The departmentā€™s student equine production team also hopes to breed several mares and female donkeys using frozen semen from Action Jackson, she said.

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Pat Bailey, (530) 752-9843, pjbailey@ucdavis.edu

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