OUR SHARED PURPOSE

Sharing knowledge and support so future generations can choose to work with draft animals in order to fuel livelihoods, promote land stewardship, and grow community.

A working community of  people and animals.

OUR STORY

We are draft animal practitioners of all ages, teaming up to share support, resources, and learning opportunities for everyone interested in the timeless traditions of training and working with draft animals. Founded in 2011, we are preserving wisdom and advancing new solutions to caring for the land, producing food, enlivening communities, and earning a living. 

Together, we can create the gentle path to a more human, natural, animal-powered world.

Timeless ways still work

WHY DRAFT POWER?

APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY

Live power is both applicable and viable  today.  Be it through draft horses delivering broadband infrastructure to rural areas, agritourism keeping small farms viable, or oxen providing both power and fertilizer to CSAs, working animals are still a  feature of our  working landscapes. 

ECOLOGICAL CONCERNS

Animals are a applicable source of power for human beings. Although, unlike many common sources of power, consume annual and perennial plants and therefore are naturally solar powered engines. A well oiled relationship between human and beast can provide many if not all the ability of a small tractor.

QUALITY OF LIFE

Working with draft animals offers the opportunity to truly be part of a team developing a relationship built on trust and mutual respect unlike any other.  Humans have cultivated these relationships with horses, oxen, and dogs for thousands of years, and they still offer satisfaction and joy to modern teamsters.

SCALE

Live power is more than hand work and less than industrial production. Workmanship, quality and precision becomes inherent when working with animals. This is due to live power being a finite power source that takes patience to capture on a daily basis. This forces human to live in the now and make the best decisions always for efficiency and effectiveness.

ENGENDERS COMMUNITY

Working animals and animal husbandry as a whole is a craft that books will only take you so far. Many of the old timers would elaborate or suggest that it is in fact an art, impossible to quantify nor value. This makes the knowledge of working animals simple and plain a shared knowledge and by definition word of mouth. Or in this case word to leather-in-hand.

ACCESSIBILITY

Draft animals, especially cattle and donkeys, can  provide a lower barrier to entry for reducing human labor and increasing productivity  in places where motorized equipment is unfeasible or unavailable. 

Our Board

We are an incredible group of volunteers. Above and beyond our daily work with draft animals, managing farms, livestock, and forests; board members put thousands of hours into organizing, educating, and building a community around animal power and sustainable land use. Meet us here. . .

Daphné Rose Courtès

Woman farmer plowing field with two draft horses. Maggie Smith  is an independent part-time farmer, growing edible dry beans on borrowed land with the assistance of borrowed horses

Maggie Smith

Forest worker with hard hat and ax. IanMcAfee Snider is a Mountain Silvicologist, Regenerative Rancher and Forestry Educator at Clemson University. Also, a mountain guide, carpenter and Eagle Scout!

Ian McAfee Snider

Smiling farmer with draft animal teams. Raymond Ramsey grew up farming. He’s the Farm Manager at Sanborn Mills Farm where they grow vegetables, livestock, and grains using oxen and horse power.

Raymond Ramsey

Woman driving carriage pulled by draft horses. Emily DeYoung  is instrumental in Draft Animal Power Field Days. She’s worked as an Assistant Barn Manager, managed log yards and her Kunekune pigs.

Emily DeYoung

Woman farmer with draft oxen team. Cindy Nickerson was introduced to horses at a young age in 4-H and Pony Club and now has her own team of milking shorthorn oxen living in Edgecomb, Maine.

Cindy Nickerson

Young farmer with draft horse team. Ben Retberg studied at Sterling College, North Branch Farm, and works with Belgians to harvest firewood, cultivate a market garden, and make hay for the dairy.

Ben Retberg

Rachel Bower

Rachel Breeden

Ruth Burke

Matthew Schofield

Ariana Auger

Anna Knapp-Peck

The Draft Animal Power Network is a 501(c)3 non-profit registered in the state of Vermont. You can download the organization’s bylaws below and view our 2025 annual report here.

Carl Russell created Animal-Power Field Days. He devoted his life to the earth and living power. His ecological stewardship was unmatched. He was a natural teacher, sharing with eloquent words.

IN LOVING MEMORY OF

CARL RUSSELL

February 1st, 1960 — June 9th 2022

It's with heavy hearts and somber minds that we announce the great loss of our co-founder and member Carl Russell. He started this organization with his wife, Lisa McCrory in Bethel, Vermont when they created the event, the Northeast Animal-Power Field Days. Carl devoted his life to the earth and to living power, his ecological stewardship was unmatched and has inspired many. If you have been to a forestry demonstration at a Draft Animal-Power Field Days, you have probably heard Carl speak. He was a natural teacher and shared his knowledge with purposeful and eloquent words. We know Carl was very proud of the network of teamsters that DAPNet has become and all of our volunteers are committed to continuing his vision forward.