Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Late-season nitrogen may improve soybean meal used in livestock feed
Lack of broadband funds from BEAD could impact  Illinois farmers
New invasive Asian copperleaf weed detected in Illinois fields
Farmers need to understand farm water usage prior to data center talks
2026 World Pork Expo just around the corner at Iowa State Fairgrounds
Ohio Wine Producers Association launches Thyme for Wine Herb Trail experience
Mounted archery takes aim at Rising Glory Farm
Significant rain, coupled with cool weather, slows Midwest fieldwork
Indiana’s net farm income projected to drop more than $1 billion this year
Started as a learning tool, Old World Garden Farms is growing
Senator Rand Paul introduces Hemp Safety Enforcement Act
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
llinois woman finds fame through horse bit interest
By CINDY LADAGE
Illinois Correspondent

QUINCY, Ill. — Marvin Huber said his wife is famous. “Bits are what she is known for across the country,” he said. “Horse bits are her passion; and if people have a question about a bit or how to work with a horse on a bit, they call her.”

Cathy McKinley Huber said, “Ever since I was a little kid, I was fascinated with horse bits.”

To earn money to buy horse bits Cathy would hunt for mushrooms and sell them. The selling paid off and now she has a large collection of bits and a head full of knowledge.

Horses are a family passion passed down from her mother, Joyce McKinley. For years, Cathy trained primarily Arabian horses. These days she and her husband run Show Horse Tack, Inc., a high-end horse supply company that caters to society horse show clientele. From the first of March on through the summer the couple is on the road attending horse shows and setting up to sell their wares.

While they offer a bit of everything for both the horse and the rider, Cathy always has her bits with her and those seeking information about horse bits seek her out first thing.

At home in Quincy, Ill. right outside her business is her father Don McKinley’s passion, the 1930’s Preserving Agriculture Museum. While the museum is filled with agricultural items from equipment to buggies to what a farm wife in the 1930s would use, one wall is filled with what else but horse bits.

“When Dad built the museum, I asked if I could have a section for my horse bits, he said just a section, but I ended up with a whole wall,” Cathy said.

With more than 1,300 horse bits on display at las

3/14/2007