<Tr> <Td> Unknown </Td> <Td> Unknown </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Td> Unknown </Td> </Tr> <P> By 1968, Bamboo Harvester was suffering from a variety of health problems . In 1970 he was euthanized with no publicity, and buried at Snodgrass Farm in Oklahoma . However, a different version was given by Alan Young . Young wrote that he had frequently visited his former co-star in retirement . He states that Mr. Ed died from an inadvertent tranquilizer administered while he was "in retirement" in a stable in Burbank, California, where he lived with his trainer Lester Hilton . Young says Hilton was out of town visiting relatives and a temporary care giver might have seen Ed rolling on the ground, struggling to get up . Young said Ed was a heavy horse and he was not always strong enough to get back on his feet without struggling . The theory is that the caregiver thought the horse was in distress and administered a tranquilizer and for unknown reasons the horse died within hours . The remains were cremated and scattered by Hilton in the Los Angeles area at a spot known only to him . </P> <P> A different horse that died in Oklahoma in February 1979 was widely thought to be Bamboo Harvester, but this horse was one that posed for the still pictures of "Mr. Ed" used by the production company for the show's press kits . After Bamboo Harvester's death in 1970, this horse was unofficially known as Mister Ed, which led to him being reported as such (including sardonic comments on Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update) following his own death . </P>

Where is mr ed the talking horse buried