Talk about a dirty job! After you slosh around in the muck and urine to clean stalls everyday, you have to then scrub water tanks, rake up old hay from the barn, move and stack new hay, clean up after all the other animals such as chickens, pigeons, dogs and cats, clean infected wounds, administer sticky slimy medicine, feed all the animals, drag the pasture, and since we live in Central Oregon this involves one person driving and another riding on an old tire on the drag to give it weight, with manure and dust sticking to every part of your body. Since we flood irrigate, we have to muck out the canal weekly. I would love to see Dirty Jobs come and live a day in our shoes, even though we are helping animals in our area, there is nothing pretty about it. This job combines several dirty job episodes i have seen,.. all in one filthy bundle. In the summer it is dusty and sticky, the flies are everywhere and you work all day in the muck and grime with sweltering 100 degree weather and in the winter you waddle around on snow and ice, trying to break the frozen manure from the ground. The rain is the worst though, Central Oregon ground does not soak it up well so you splash in the mud, digging ditches from the stalls and runs to drain them of urine and manure filled flood water. And all of this is on a good day. support@hoovesandhalos.com