AGRABILITY HELPS COLLEGE STUDENT IN RIDE OF HIS LIFE ‘Just because you have a brain injury, it doesn’t mean you can’t perform at your full potential.’ Zane Volkmann
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ane Volkmann always wanted to be a horse trainer. A serious accident weeks before his senior year of high school slowed his gait, but it didn’t throw him. He cinched up his saddle and began the ride of his life. “You just pick your lip up off the ground and go ride,” he said.
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olkmann fell 9 feet on his head at a livestock center in August 2012. Young riders working cattle there enjoy riding horses under overhead pipes jutting from the barn and swinging from them. He’d done it dozens of times before, but this time the momentum propelled him into the air and hurled him to the ground. He suffered three brain bleeds and a broken back.
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aren Funkenbusch, University of Missouri Extension specialist and director of the Missouri AgrAbility Project, began work with his family immediately. AgrAbility connects injured farmers and ranchers with resources so that they can remain on the farm or in the saddle. Resources include referrals to and coordination of services with other agencies, financial assistance for adaptive devices, and ongoing moral support and education.
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olkmann stayed out of the saddle for six months – “the longest six months of my life” – as he and his family learned to adapt to the “new Zane.” (Continued on next page)
Source: Karen Funkenbusch University of Missouri Extension 573-884-1268 FunkenbuschK@missouri.edu Story by Linda Geist University of Missouri Extension Photos by Kyle Spradley University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food & Natural Resources