In a high-tech age, a handful of idled workers are trying to reinvent themselves at a school for a craft that goes back centuries.
They've enrolled in a 10-week course at the Minnesota School of Horseshoeing in Ramsey. The school for farriers -- as those who shoe horses are known -- is the only one in the five-state area and one of about 55 in the nation, according to the American Farrier Journal.
Even in a slow economy, horses' hooves still grow and need trimming and shoeing, and there are a lot of hooves out there. Minnesota's horse population stood at about 155,000, ninth in the country, according to a 2004 study, said Krishona Martinson, an equine specialist at the University of Minnesota. The nation has an estimated 9.2 million horses, according to the American Horse Council.
Their own personal job doldrums provided Kim Tiano and three of her four classmates at the Ramsey school, all horse owners or lovers, with time to learn a skill that had interested them for years. Tiano, 44, came from Albany, N.Y., for the class after losing police dispatch and fitness trainer jobs. Her classmates include a laid-off concrete
salesman, a jobless veterinary technician and a construction worker with time on his hands.
Only one student has a full-time job waiting at home. Brian Bradley, 22, was sent to school by his employer, Mackinac Island Carriage Tours. He will join two other farriers shoeing the company's 500 horses, which pull wagons, carriages and drays on the tourism-heavy island at the top of Lake Michigan.
The current course at the school began in January and is about half over. The five students show signs of their new calling: blisters, singed hands and calluses.
"I used to have fingernails," Tiano said, displaying her coal-dust-gray hands with two bandages covering blisters. Then she thrust her tongs into the glowing coals in her forge and pulled out a fiery red horseshoe. She hammered it on an anvil as slag sparks scattered.