The Wild Horse and Burro Adoption Sale is Coming to Abilene 1470kyyw.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 1470kyyw.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
It was doggone awful.
But what if your business was touring the country with a dog show?
Thinking you still could do that amid a pandemic was, well, barking up the wrong tree.
Outside dogs
But Chris Perondi is on the road again, and he s unleashing Chris Perondi s Stunt Dog Experience in Abilene on March 27 to start the long-delayed Children s Performing Arts Series season.
CPAS has not had a show since mid-February 2020, a month before COVID-19 stopped the entertainment industry in its tracks.
In planning its 2020-21 season, CPAS Director Hollye Jaklewicz first chose to delay the start. Then, seeing the success of other productions outdoors, moved the dog show to the H-E-B Pavilion at the Taylor County Expo Center.
Head out to the wild horse and burro event in Abilene, Texas
NORMAN, Okla. – The Bureau of Land Management will hold a wild horse and burro adoption event in Abilene, Texas, March 26-27, at the Guitar Arena at the Taylor County Expo Center. The two-day event, featuring 110 wild horses and burros, will begin at 10 a.m. on Friday, March 26. Adoptions will be held from noon-6 p.m. on Friday, March 26, and from 8 a.m.-noon on Saturday, March 27. Animals are eligible for adoption. Inquire with BLM staff onsite for more information.
As part of our efforts to find every horse and burro a good home, the BLM now offers up to $1,000 to adopt an untrained animal. This adoption incentive will be offered for every animal in Abilene.
Kiwanians are for kids, and that s no kidding
Tim Adcock
Kids need Kiwanis!
For more than a century, Kiwanis has created opportunities for children to be curious, safe, and healthy regardless of the community in which they live.
The defining motto of Kiwanis International is “Serving the children of the world.”
In 1921, the Kiwanis Club of Abilene was organized to serve the children of the Abilene community. Some of the first service projects were starting a milk and ice fund for children, placing “Drive Carefully” signs at school entrances at a time when automobiles were just coming into being and delivering used clothing to indigent families at Christmas.