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The equiworld.net magazine
Online Magazine
January 2001
This section will keep you up to date with all the changes that are taking
place. Please let us know what you think, your feedback is always appreciated,
email info@equiworld.com
Equestrian
Shopping Online
|
31st January
2001 |
Armathwaite Hall Strongid-P Horse Trials & Cumberland
News Country Fair July 20th, 21st & 22nd, 2001
|
17-year-old Ian Clark wins
Armathwaite Hall Rider of the Future £2000 Scholarship
Ian Clark from Didmarton, Badminton in
Gloucestershire is the winner of the 2001 Armathwaite Hall Rider of the Future
Scholarship, which provides £2000 to be spent on agreed training
opportunities during the 2001 eventing season. |
17-year-old Ian, whose competition successes
during 2000 included wins and placings at intermediate and junior regional
novice level, and a 24th placing at Weston Park three-day-event, was nominated
by junior regional co-ordinater Celia Gough. She particularly praised his
very real flare at getting horses to enjoy jumping, also confirming
that Ian is already a very mature cross country rider.
I cant quite believe Ive won
yet! said Ian, Im already planning where we want to take the
horses this season and this is going to make such a difference to the amount of
training I can look forward to.
I want to benefit from working with some
different trainers and learn as much as I can - one of my main ambitions is the
Junior team this season and more, regular training makes such a difference to
the horses too!
Armathwaite Hall in the Cumbrian Lake District
holds an annual advanced event each July. As part of the organising teams
support of eventing, the organisers have committed to an initial five year
sponsorship of what is known as the Armathwaite Hall Rider Of The Future
Scholarship, to provide £2000 annually for funding approved training to a
junior rider.
Please click here for
further details |
31st January
2001 |
Prize money increases to $60,000 for 2001
American Paint Horse Association pays out $45,000 in first year of Gelding
Plus incentive program
FORT WORTHThe American Paint Horse
Association paid out $45,000 in prize money in 2000, the inaugural year of its
innovative Gelding Plus Program.
Designed to give horse owners and breeders of
Regular Registry and Paint-bred geldings an added opportunity to earn prize
money and increase the value of their horses, the program paid the
highest-advancing registered Paint geldings in both the open and non-pro
divisions of select futurities $5,000 cash awards from APHA.
Please click here for
further details |
30th January
2001 |
|
Stallings Farms Quarter Horses Wish
Upon A Star Fundraiser for Terminally Ill Children.
Stallings Farms Quarter horses owned by Richard M.
Stallings of Carmi, Illinois has donated a reg. red roan yearling filly to
raise money for terminally ill children through Wish Upon a Star |
. Wish Upon A Star is a non profit org. that
grants wishes to terminally ill children.
This is our 2nd. annual fundraiser for Wish Upon A Star.
The filly "Miss Wish Upona Star" will be on display at the Illinois
Horse Fair March 3rd and 4th in Springfield, IL at the State Fair Grounds, then
at the Indiana Horse Fair April 6th -8th at the State Fair grounds in
Indianapolis, IN and then at Equitana USA June 14th-17th with the drawing there
in Louisville, KY at Freedom Hall on June 16, 2001.
Please click here for further
details |
30th January
2001 |
|
Stars of "Gladiators" take
on roles at National Countryside Show
Three of the four biggest stars from the movie of
the moment, Ridley Scott's Gladiators, have accepted roles at the National
Countryside Show, Earls Court, London (2nd-4th February
2001) |
In the film, the great hero Maximus (Russell
Crowe) is destroyed by a young, degenerate emperor called Commodus (Joaquin
Phoenix), who slaughters the general's wife and child.
Part of Gladiators was filmed in a forest near
Farnham, England, where the battle between the Roman Legions and the Germanic
army was staged.The battle involved the shooting of 16,000 flaming arrows and
10,000 non-flaming ones.Playing vital roles in the mêlée were
three of the films biggest stars.They were responsible for ensuring the safe
passage of Commodus and at over one ton each, "big" is definitely the
word to describe them.They are, of course, the gigantic Shire Horses, Lingwood
Majestic, Lingwood Earl and Lingwood Henry all three of whom spent nine weeks
on the set of the film!The Shires will be playing an integral part in the main
arena performances and will be at the entrance to the show to welcome visitors
as they arrive.
Please click here
to learn more |
30th January
2001 |
|
Horse Shows in the Sun
Richard Spooner Takes First, Second, and Fourth in Two-Man
Jump-Off to Win the $50,000 EMO Grand Prix at Indio |
INDIO, CA (January 28, 2001)--Richard Spooner
rode four horses in the $50,000 EMO Grand Prix at the Indio Desert Circuit in
Indio, California, today, and qualified three for the jump-off. The 31-year-old
rider from Burbank, California, placed first, second, and fourth, winning the
class with Southshore, a 10-year-old Thoroughbred/Holsteiner. Will Simpson of
Westlake, California, was the only other rider in a field of 23 to go clear
over Course Designer Leopoldo Palacios' Round One course, making the jump-off a
two-man contest. Simpson was clean in the jump-off with El Campeon's Ado Annie,
and had the lead over Spooner's Robinson by almost a full second, but was
nearly two seconds slower than Southshore, placing him third. Spooner's take
for the day was $15,000 for Southshore's owner, Eldorado 29; $11,000 for
Robinson's owner, the Half Moon Bay Investment Group; and $4,000 for Bradford's
owner, Tracey Kenly and Kenly Farms. When asked how he liked competing against
himself, Spooner quipped, "I have a lot better shot at winning."
Please click here for further
details |
29th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Loading the Scared Horse
Loading a horse into a trailer is a test of how
accurately the horse responds to the step cue you put on him by heeding.
Trailer loading isn't a separate skill you and your horse must learn. It's just
applying the step cue you taught your horse with basic heeding to a specific
task. |
When the horse understands your step as an cue,
meaning he is to follow each of your steps with a step of his own, you can use
that cue to ask him to enter the trailer with you.
Horses that have had bad experiences remember trailers as scary things. If your
horse is scared of the trailer because of previous bad experiences you must
treat it like a new piece of equipment. All new equipment must be presented
slowly and in a calm working environment. You reintroduce the trailer slowly,
in a relaxed manner, with rhythmic use of your heeding cues.
If your horse is very afraid to even go near the trailer, do calm and familiar
things beside it. For example, you can heed the horse in large circles next to
the trailer because the circle is a familiar shape and you always want to be
directing the horse what to do.
Please click here to continue |
29th January
2001 |
1-2 Finish Makes It A Super Sunday For Katie Prudent
WELLINGTON, FLORIDA -- January 28, 2001 - It was a
Super Sunday for three-time AGA Rider of the Year Katie Prudent of Middleburg,
Virginia, who finished first and second to capture the $35,000 Farr Legacy
Grand Prix presented by Western Hay Sunday at the Palm Beach Polo Equestrian
Club. The 47-year-old Prudent, who won titles in 1988, 1986 and 1982, earned
first-place honors aboard Landato, an 11-year-old Oldenburg bay mare, with a
clean ride over 13 obstacles in 36.406 seconds in the sudden-death jump-off
round. She earned $10,500 for finishing first.
Prudent finished second aboard Belladonna, an
18-year-old Dutch-bred bay mare in 36.976 seconds and earned $7,700. Meredith
Michaels-Beerbaum of Germany placed third aboard Concetta in 37.733 seconds and
earned $4,500.
Please click here for
further details |
28th January
2001 |
|
Do Magnets Hold Power of Healing?
HORSE lover Gail Rawlings was in tears when vets
advised that her champion mare April would have to be shot after breaking a
leg. |
She said no-and April is once again winning
showjumping competitions at the grand age of 25, thanks to a pair of magnetic
boots! Gail, 34, of Whitchurch, Bristol, tried the boots in desperation after a
friend came up with the bizarre idea. She said: "Quite frankly I was
flabbergasted by the results. On the day the vet came I literally had the local
abattoir on standby to come and turn her into petfood.
She could barely move. "Yet I put the boots
on her on Monday evening, and by Wednesday morning she was walking around her
stables. A week later she was running around in the fields and soon after that
she was back jumping fences like a filly.
"It's like a 70-year-old woman with a broken
hip who couldn't walk suddenly making a full recovery and running the London
Marathon."
Please click here to learn
more |
28th January
2001 |
Ward at the Top of his Game
Wellington, FL -- January 27 - '98 AGA
Rider of the Year, McLain Ward of Brewster, NY was once again in the winner's
circle at The Nutrena Open Jumper Classic course built by '84 Olympic Gold
Medalist, Conrad Homfeld. From a field of 40 competitors, Ward advanced to the
jump-off with his bay gelding, All Saints and crossed the timers in 34.87.
Olympian, Markus Beerbaum of Germany has returned to Florida to compete in the
Cosequin Winter Equestrian Festival and is giving everyone a run for the money.
Beerbaum turned in double clear rounds and the second fastest time of 36.74
aboard the German bred, Leena. Beerbaum and Ward both had two mounts place in
today's event and will both be competing in tomorrow's Grand Prix.
Please click here for further details |
28th January
2001 |
|
Horse Shows in the Sun
Richard Spooner and Robinson Win $25,000 Ariat Grand Prix at
Indio |
INDIO, CA (January 26, 2001)¾Richard Spooner,
31, from Burbank, California, riding Robinson, won the $25,000 Ariat Grand Prix
in Indio, California, today--the first Grand Prix of the Indio Desert Circuit
and the first of six Ariat Grand Prix classes to be held at the six-week
circuit. Leopoldo Palacios from Caracas, Venezuela, designed the course. Mr.
Palacios was the course designer at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney.
Twenty-seven riders made up the field for Round One; four had clear rounds and
moved on to the Jump-Off. Spooner was one of two riders to go double-clear, and
won by 0.875 seconds. Spooner was awarded the blue ribbon, an embroidered
cooler, an engraved silver trophy, and $7,500 for Robinson's owner, the Half
Moon Bay Investment Group.
Please click here for further
details |
27th January
2001 |
|
Horse Lover's Tour of Peru
See the wonders of the world and tour horse
breeding farms in Peru! April 2001 will find us at the Peruvian National Show
in Lima, Peru -- with optional trips to Northern Peru and the incredible Inca
cities of Cusco and Machu Picchu!
Please click here for further
details |
|
27th January
2001 |
Cheska and Merit Dominate Power and Speed
WELLINGTON, FL -- JANUARY 26 - US
Equestrian Team Veteran, Donald Cheska of Waukesha, Wisconsin, was in the
winner's circle with Merit in the Power and Speed competition at Palm Beach
Polo Equestrian Club. 40 year-old Cheska and Merit were one of only three
double clear rides out of 23 competitors over the Conrad Homfeld designed
course, finishing up in 49.15 seconds. Chris Kappler of Pittstown, NJ turned in
the second double clear ride in 50.04 seconds, up on Rafiki. Colin Syquia and
Dumbo De Chapelle stopped the timers just splits behind Kappler in 50.93
seconds, for a third place finish.
Please click here for
further details |
27th January
2001 |
|
ILPH Director takes Retirement
Dr. Douglas Munro, the Director of the ILPH, is
taking retirement and will shortly be leaving Snetterton.
A number of factors have influenced my
decision, said Douglas Munro, among them the fact that I have
recently celebrated my 60th birthday.
|
I will be leaving the ILPH in good shape and
with an ever expanding role to play in the field of equine welfare.
During my period as Director the League has lobbied effectively for a
reduction in the level of transportation of live equines across the European
Union, a cruel and unnecessary practice which we all hope will soon be brought
to a halt.
Please click here for further
details |
26th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Loading the Disobedient Horse
Loading a horse into a trailer is not a separate
skill that horses and their handlers need to learn. Loading is simply a
response to the step cue you've taught your horse through heeding. |
The horse that has learned to stay at your
shoulder, trust your consistency and trust that he's got your full attention
whenever you're with him. He has learned that your step is a cue for him to
take a step. So he will match you step for step and walk right into the
trailer. The step cues are the same and the horse's response to them should be
the same as if you were asking him to walk down the barn aisle or into an
arena. When the horse understands heeding, walking into a trailer is just one
step away from what he already knows.
When people have trouble loading their horses its usually because they didn't
introduce the trailer properly in the first place. Horses that have been forced
into trailers or had some other bad trailering experience get afraid of them.
Other horses are not afraid. They have just decided that they are not going to
get in the trailer and are simply being disobedient.
If you have a horse who is just being evasive and disobedient, the tactics are
a bit different than those you use to reintroduce the scared horse to a
trailer. But you cannot lose your temper or start fighting. Disobedient horses
are spoiling for a fight. Remember that a horse can only get the energy for a
fight from the person who's fighting with him. If you're not fighting with the
horse, he'll quit.
Please click here to continue |
26th January
2001 |
USET Veteran, Little Captures First Grand Prix
Wellington, Florida -- January 25, 2001
-- USET Veteran, Lynn Little of Frederick, MD bested a field of 51 competitors
aboard her mount, Comtessa, to win the $25,000 Nutrena/Western Hay Challenge
Cup at Palm Beach Polo Equestrian Club. Only seven horse and rider combinations
advanced to the sudden death jump-off round of the grandprix season opener.
Little turned in double clear rounds and crossed the timers in 39.81 seconds.
Canadian Equestrian Team Veteran, Jay Hayes, finished the seven fence jump-off
track in less than two seconds behind Little in 41.51 seconds aboard Diva,
followed by 2000 Olympian, Margie Engle of Wellington, FL, who stopped the
timers in the fastest time of 37.85 seconds up on Hidden Creek's Chris, but
knocked down a fence for a four fault finish.
Please click here for
further details |
26th January
2001 |
KWPN Select Sale Enthusiastically Awaits
Next week, during the KWPN Stallion Show in the
Netherlands, 22 three-year-old stallions will be sold. The interest, not only
nationally but also from abroad, in the young stallions that are going to be
sold then is enormous. On Saturday 3 February more than 10,000 visitors will
find their way to the Brabanthallen in 's Hertogenbosch where the first edition
of this elite auction takes place. Information and parts of the videotapes of
those stallions can be found on the internet.
It's The Start of Something Big
Please click here
for further details |
25th January
2001 |
|
History of the Palomino Horse
Association
The Palomino Horse Association is the Original
Palomino Registry incorporated in 1936. Todays Palomino Horse Association is
the continuation of the registry which originally began in the State of
California in 1935, when Dick Halliday registered the golden stallion El Rey de
Los Reyes to begin the records of his envisioned true Palomino Breed. To be
exact, the Palomino Horse Association was founded in 1932, but it took so much
time to study registry methods, the history of breed formation and many points
of law that active field work could not start until February 1934. |
The Palomino Horse Association is a registry that
does not discriminate against any breed. We recognize all breeds based on color
and conformation. If a particular horse is not registered with a breed registry
and the color proves to be Palomino we will register on color. We have horses
from every breed registered with PHA. The ideal color is that of a gold coin,
but the shade can vary from light, medium to dark gold. The mane and tail
should be white, ivory or silver, but we will allow 15% dark or sorrel mixed
in. In the last few years we have opened our doors to the creme colored horse
with blue eyes. It has been researched and proven that these light colored
Palominos always produce a Palomino. Therefore, they are definite breeding
stock for the Palomino,.
The Palomino is a multi-purpose horse. They are
admired not only for their beauty but their versatility, maneuverability and
endurance. They are to be found in ranching, racing, rodeos, pleasure riding
parades, shows, fiestas, jumping, trail rides and all other equine activities.
We even have a few movie stars including Mr. Ed, Trigger and Trigger JR., which
were registered with The Palomino Horse Association
Please click here to learn
more |
25th January
2001 |
News from the 2001 Cosequinâ Winter Equestrian Festival
"Ward Captures Season Opener"
WELLINGTON, FL -- JANUARY 24 - Showjumping
veteran, McLain Ward of Brewster, NY, captured his first victory of the '2001
season aboard his new mount, 4 Seasons. Ward bested a field of 42 starters in
the opening meet of the Cosequin Winter Equestrian Festival, scoring a
fault-free ride over the Americhoice Open Speed 12 obstacle jumping course in
60.80 seconds. Ward also finished in the ribbons in at least five other
competitions today. 2000 Olympian and 6 time AGA rider of the year, Margie
Engle of Wellington, FL finished behind Ward in 62.30 seconds on board Hidden
Creek's Alvar. Third place finish went to USET Veteran, Todd Minikus of
Loxahatchee, FL up on Pandora who finished up just splits behind 62.36. McLain
Ward took a fourth in this competition as well.
Please click here for further details |
25th January
2001 |
|
Horse Shows in the Sun
HorseCity.com Teams Up with HITS as Presenting Sponsor for
$75,000 Bayer/USET Grand Prix at Indio |
INDIO, CA (January 23, 2001)-Horse Shows In The
Sun has announced that HorseCity.com is the presenting sponsor for the $75,000
Bayer/USET Benefit Grand Prix at the Indio Desert Circuit in California on
February 11, 2001. HorseCity.com is a website that offers in-depth horse news
and information from Morris Communications Corporation magazines and other
affiliates. More than 80 team members from Morris Digital Works are involved in
this web effort, and two full time Content Directors lead over 100 freelance
journalists covering the nation's biggest horse events. Based in Augusta,
Georgia, Morris has been involved in the horse industry for over 50 years and
launched HorseCity.com in December 1997.
Please click here for further
details |
25th January
2001 |
Three rides now offered in 2001
APHA takes trail ride program to Philmont Scout Ranch this spring
FORT WORTHThe American Paint Horse
Association (APHA) recreational riding program will cover exciting new ground
this spring, with the addition of a ride at the Philmont Scout Ranch in
historic Cimarron, New Mexico, April 30May 4.
The addition of the Scout Ranch ride means APHA
will coordinate rides at three locations this year, all within about a
days drive from most of its members. Other rides this year include the
Black River Trail Ride, to be held Aug. 610 in the Ozark foothills of
Lesterville, Mo., and an outing at historic Fort Robinson State Park, planned
Sept. 38 in the rugged Pine Ridge region of northern Nebraska, near
Crawford.
For more than 10 years, trail riders have signed
on for APHA rides that have taken them though some of the most scenic and
historic countryside in the United States. As in previous years, APHAs
goal for this years events is nothing short of creating the ride of
lifetime for participants.
Please click here for
further details |
24th January
2001 |
|
Spring Loaded Fold Down
Door
Does quality matter?
We Think So!
Look closely at our Products and Compare - Apples
to Apples - Oranges to Oranges! |
Fold Down Panels are not new, but our NEW
SPRING LOADED FOLD DOWN DOOR is unique in many ways! Our Spring Loaded Fold
Down panel allows opening with one hand easy, No tip-toe to reach a
pull ring, slide bolt, or latch. Simply apply downward pressure at any point on
the center picket (bar) and fold down door releases allowing center panel to
lower to an open position. This feature allows horses the freedom to browse the
isle way or be retained during stressful times. When securing the opening, just
reverse the procedure. This feature can be added to any door for only $95.00!
Full Size 8
Please click here for
further details |
24th January
2001 |
|
Will your Weekly Riding Lesson Take
You To The Top?
The British Horse Society is pleased to announce that the Equitation
Competition for Young Riders will again take place in 2001. The BHS believes
that this is the only national competition for those who do not own a horse or
pony of their own. The prizes will be valuable vouchers to spend on high
quality training. |
The competition is designed to recognise the
importance of the welfare of the horse through the part played by correct
riding. The BHS aims to broaden the base of British riding and identify talent,
and to give opportunities to young people to benefit from quality instruction
in horse care and equitation. The competition provides a pathway for talented
riders to progress to the national and international scene, while at the same
time promoting BHS Approved Riding Schools as establishments where safe and
competent riding and tuition can be enjoyed.
Please click here for further details |
24th January
2001 |
|
Horse Shows in the Sun
Coachella Valley Charities Benefit from Indio Desert Circuit Horse
Show |
INDIO, CA-Horse Shows In The Sun, Inc., (HITS)
based in Rhinebeck, New York, has produced the Indio Desert Circuit horse show
for ten years at the HITS Desert Horse Park in Indio, California, and annually
donates ticket proceeds to local charities in the Coachella Valley. Selected
charities pre-sell tickets to the horse show and keep 100% of the proceeds.
Additionally, during the circuit, each Sunday one of the charities provides
members to act as ticket takers at the entrance gates. At the end of the horse
show, each charity receives a percentage of the total gate.
HITS Desert Horse Park features hunter/jumper competition Wednesday through
Sunday from 8am until approximately 4pm, January 24 to March 11. Spectators are
admitted free Wednesday through Friday. Tickets are $5 on Saturday or Sunday.
Children under 12 are always admitted at no charge. More than 25,000 spectators
are expected to visit HITS Desert Horse Park during this year's six-week horse
show.
Please click here for further details |
23rd January
2001 |
APHA awards top racing honors to 16 Paint Horses
FORT WORTHThe American Paint Horse
Association (APHA) announced the names of 16 Paint Horses and their owners who
will receive distinguished racing awards during the associations upcoming
Workshop and Board of Directors meeting slated for May 31-June 2, in Irving,
Texas. APHAs racing committee, comprising 17 members, voted for
outstanding Paint Horses in several categories and named them as World
Champions and Champions in specific age groups.
Karen Utecht, APHA racing coordinator, said the
horses and their performances in 2000 highlighted an outstanding year for Paint
racing. These award-winning horses are also helping to popularize the breed in
racing circles, she said.
Interest in Paint Horse racing is increasing
at a fast pace throughout the country, said Utecht, citing statistics to
back her claim.
Paint racing has shown a steady increase since
1966, when the APHA officially recognized the sport. That year, 17 starters ran
for $1,290. In 1999, 503 starters competed in 367 APHA-recognized races for
purses exceeding $2 million. Last year, 553 starters had competed in 531 races
for a gross purse of nearly $2.7 million. Compared to only three years ago, the
number of Paint starters at tracks across the country has increased 67
percent.
Please click here
for further details |
22nd January
2001 |
|
The Lung Meridian.
In this article we will look at the
Lung Meridian. As its name suggests, this Meridian relates to protecting the
horses immune system and guarding the internal body from external pathogens and
influences. The horse with a weak lung meridian may have lingering conditions
like nasal discharge, coughing or sinusitis. Your touch of this meridian will
stimulate and tonify the horses natural protective armour and can bring many
benefits. Some owners have found that, after a visit from a Shiatsu
practitioner to learn exactly where the Meridian is on their horse and how to
work the Meridian their horse can remain clear of Sweet Itch |
The Lung Meridian begins within the horse's
abdomen and rises to the surface of the chest. It then continues down the front
of the foreleg flowing down to a point on the hoof just above the coronary
band. From its very position you can see why poorly fitting rugs or breast
collars can restrict energy flow.
Each meridian affects the exterior body parts over which it flows so massage
and acupressure on Lung Meridian points are used to treat chest and forearm
pain, arthritis in the knee, tendonitis in the knee area and laminitis.
The Lung Meridian also affects emotions. Horses with balanced meridians are
intelligent, calm, unflappable and composed. They respect riders with the same
characteristics - both horse and rider can enjoy tasks that challenge them. The
well-balanced horse reacts easily with his social environment but any imbalance
in this meridian leads to aloofness, grief, tenseness. Massaging your horse and
his Lung Meridian will surely draw the horse out, especially if done in a
loving manner.
Please click here to
continue |
22nd January
2001 |
Trying to Find Websites? Try HorseLinks.
The ever popular equiworld.net HorseLinks
has been upgraded to make it even easier to both find the information you need
and add a listing for your own site.
HorseLinks also features a new "Quick
Search" facility, along with direct links to a huge range of information.
Also added is an index to equestrian sports.
If you find an equestrian link we have missed, let
us know!
/archive/equiworld-net/horselinks/
|
21st January
2001 |
|
What a Christmas
Present! |
The winner of the Baileys "Cash for
Christmas" Prize Draw for £1,000 was Peter Parsons of Knossington in
Leicestershire. Peter runs a hunting yard in the Cottesmore country, feeding 10
horses and had been collecting the tokens on promotional bags of Baileys
Economy Mix which he sent in for his Christmas "cash back". An added
extra for this year's promotion was the entry into a free prize draw for
£1,000 for every 20 tokens that were sent in.
Please click here for
further details |
21st January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Applied Heeding: Basic Trailer Training
Trailer loading is not a BIG deal. It is just
heeding. When you step forward, the horse steps forward. When you stop, the
horse stops. Your horse stays by your side always and that includes walking
next to you into a trailer. |
The thing you never do is force the horse into
the trailer. You don't want to make any part of your training program scary to
the horse. You just stay at the shoulder and calmly walk into the trailer.
Loading a horse in a trailer is not an accomplishment. You don't need to do
anything loud when you load a horse into a trailer. It is just having your
horse on your heeding aids so completely that he goes with you anywhere. So if
your horse does not want to go into a trailer, you need to go back and sharpen
your heeding and bring up the trailer question again later.
Fine tune your step cue by going back to the
stage of reinforcing what you ask with an aid, if necessary. Walk forward and
reinforce the message that the horse is to step with you by tapping its
hindquarters with a whip. Stop by turning your body parallel to the horse's
body and blocking its chest with the whip, emphasizing the side that matches
the forward front foot. Do a LOT of backing, controlling each stride. Get
accuracy. Get only the stride you ask for and no more or less. It is accuracy
that makes the horse heed you into the trailer. If you don't get accuracy you
will get disobedience.
Remember that if the horse does not enter the
trailer, it does not necessarily mean that he is disobeying your step cue. He
may not quite understand heeding well enough yet. You may need to go back and
work more with basic heeding to confirm your cue.
Please click here to continue
reading |
20th January
2001 |
|
Federation Equestre
Internationale
- World Cup Final Dressage moved to Denmark
- 2000 FEI World Jumping Challenge
- Participation of women in sport administration
- In Memoriam: Mr J.-J. de Watteville
- FEI General Assembly
Please click here for further
information |
|
20th January
2001 |
The Trakehner
It has been said that the Trakehner has
everything everybody is looking for in a performance horse and if you look at
the breeds list of attributes it is easy to see why.
The Trakehner is the most important and
outstanding of all warmblood breeds, renowned for their grace, power,
magnificent movement, outstanding beauty, great ability to perform, they are
naturally balanced and free. Best of all, they have an ideal temperament - keen
and alert. level-headed and able to take intense work. They have a willingness
to work and due to their intelligence they learn extremely quickly. The
Trakehner, is the warrnblood closest to the British ideal of the modern
competition and riding horse, whose upgrading influence of bloodlines is
evident in most of the continental sports breeds today. The popularity of this
breed is growing at an outstanding rate.
The Trakehner is the "Thoroughbred" of
warmblood breeds, it is more closely related to the Thoroughbred than other
German breeds having had major influence in the stud book from the English
Thoroughbred and to a lesser degree the Arab and Anglo Arab. Due to selective
breeding the Trakehner has retained the best Thoroughbred qualities while
keeping its own special character and "type". The "Lloyds Bank
Black Horse" is a Black Trakehner Stallion
Please click here to learn
more |
19th January
2001 |
The Paso Fino - A Horse for all
Seasons
courtesy of Jennie
Williams
What makes a Paso Fino so special?" Many of us in Paso Finos are asked
that question on a daily basis. There are a myriad of reasons that a Paso can
get under you skin and into your heart forever. But the bottom line is always
the RIDE. It usually takes only one ride to convince people that the Paso Fino
is completely different from any other breed you have ever encountered.
|
|
Although not well known in the US, numbering
fewer than 40,000 in the entire US, the Paso Fino horse is gaining great
popularity among the more horse savvy community. The long held secret is
getting out and more and more horse enthusiasts are looking for that very
distinctive tic-a-tic-a-tic-a-tic-a sound of a Paso going by. This is the
Mercedes of the horse world. Like a Mercedes, the Paso Fino's power steering,
power suspension, low-slung carriage, and high performance motor, give a glass
smooth ride that effortlessly glides along the trails, providing immense
pleasure to both horse and rider.
More and more chiropractors and orthopedists are recommending Paso Finos to
their injured clientele that just won't give up riding a horse for anything in
the world. Paso Finos have become "horse therapy" for all of those
injured backs, hips, and knees.
Please click here to learn more |
19th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Advanced Ground Control
Ground control precedes horse control. If a horse
doesn't heed its handler on the ground, it is never going to listen when that
person swings into the saddle. A lot of horse people mythunderstand ground
work. They think it just means snapping on a lead rope and pushing or pulling a
horse from the barn to the arena or from the stall to the crossties or
hopefully into a trailer. One of the ways to make people think you're magic
with horses is if you can control the horse from the ground constantly and
consistently for the purpose you want. |
Teaching your horse how to heed makes it possible
to tell him not only what direction you want him to move but also how long to
make his strides and how quick you want the strides to be. Heeding teaches the
horse that when we apply a pressure, it has a meaning. The pressure is never an
attack and the horse learns it will go away as soon as he moves way from it.
Heeding takes all of the big, exciting individual episodes out of training. It
makes training a step-by-step development of an understanding between you and
the horse.
Please click here to continue reading |
18th January
2001 |
|
Are You Ready For
Spring? |
The snow may be falling along with the mercury,
but savvy horse owners know that now is the time to get ready for
springespecially if they have an expectant mare.
Foaling demands special skills of most horse
owners. Though veterinarians are often not, proper precautions should include
adequate medical supplies, and your vet's cell phone number!
In the area of supplies, the proven product is the
VSI Foal Kit, one of the unique first aid and emergency kits produced by Pet
Care Products. Developed with assistance from the Center for Business and
Technical Development at Central Missouri State University, Foal Kit" was
created with extensive input from horse owners and veterinarians. The most
important aspect of Foal Kit" may be the peace of mind it provides
horsemen and women who know how important it is to be prepared during this
often-hectic time.
Please click here to learn
more |
18th January
2001 |
|
Brookhill Receives JCVB Special
Projects Grant for 2001! |
Raleigh, NC The Brookhill Steeplechase
2001, run in Johnston County, NC, was awarded a grant from the Johnston County
Visitors Bureau January 3, 2001.
"We are excited to be the recipient of this
grant from the Johnston County Visitor's Bureau to help promote the Brookhill
Steeplechase," says Glenn Seitchek.
Please click
here for further details |
17th January
2001 |
|
Herbal Offers Hope for Cushings
Syndrome |
The symptoms of Cushing's syndrome, a common
ailment of older horses, are so classical most vets skip the diagnostic tests.
And we don't blame them. Not only are these tests expensive ($80-$100+), but
they often return with negative or equivocal results. There's no known cure for
Cushing's, so veterinarians focus on treating these symptoms. Prescription
drugs do show results and aren't a bad choice, but we've also found an herbal
supplement that shows incredible promise.
What's Cushing's
Cushing's syndrome is a collection of clinical
signs and symptoms that are the result of hormonal imbalances. These are caused
by either overactivity of the pituitary gland or a tumor in the gland itself.
The hallmark of Cushing's is an abnormally long,
thick, curly or coarse hair coat that does not shed in the spring, although
there are other obvious symptoms (see link below).
Poor immunity, both to infections and internal
parasites, often develops, related both to the poor overall condition and the
hormonal factors. In advanced cases and/or with large tumors, blindness may
occur due to pressure on the optic nerve. The horse may also tilt his head.
Sometimes you can decrease or stop Cushing's
treatment in the early summer. Summer's longer day lengths probably result in
less stimulation of the melanotrope cells, which produce the problematic POMC
hormone. Symptoms return in the fall, which is a common time for laminitis to
appear.
Please click here to
continue |
17th January
2001 |
Equiworld at BETA 2001
Equiworld will again have a stand at
this years British Equestrian Trade Association (aka BETA) International Trade
show being held on 18/19/20th February 2001 at the NEC, Birmingham, England.
Equiworld was the first equestrian internet company to have a stand at BETA.
This year marks Equiworlds fourth year at the event.
The equiworld.net team will be available to chat about the Equestrian Internet on
our stand (C1.3) throughout the event. You can find more about the trade show
on the web at, http://www.beta-int.com/ |
16th January
2001 |
|
Equine Research Centre's Reproduction
Workshops to be held at Glengate Farms in Campbellville, Ontario
Reproduction Workshops on Transported Semen,
Frozen Semen and Artificial Insemination will be held on
February 16th,
17th and 18th, 2001 |
Guelph, Ontario: The successful ERC
reproduction workshops are expanding to Glengate Farms to provide participants
the opportunity to work in an industry laboratory.Participants will view
firsthand the operation of a state of the art breeding facility that stands
seven stallions and houses over 75 mares."It is an excellent environment
to learn the techniques of reproduction," said Debra Ottier, reproduction
researcher at the Centre.Doug Nash, farm manager of Glengate Farms, has been an
essential part of the ERC's workshops, providing current information on
shipping procedures and legislation."He lends an industry point of view to
the technical information of the workshop in a manner that participants are not
overwhelmed."These workshops will address the issues, procedures and
practices related to collecting, transporting, and freezing semen, and
inseminating mares.The workshops are designed to be practical, in-depth and
hands-on.Active participants will be required to sign an accident and liability
waiver in order to participate.Highlights of new reproductive technologies and
respective conception rates will also be presented.
Please click
herev for further details |
16th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Working In Corridors
Heeding is a horse communication system that
proceeds in small, horse-logical steps that never create fear or antagonism in
the horse. It requires being consistent in the moves you make around the horse,
introducing just one small bite of information at a time, and making sure that
new information is just one step away from what the horse already
understands.-. |
Heeding builds a solid foundation that the horse
and trainer can use to play reining or show jumping or dressage or any other
game they decide to play. In a relationship with a horse, the best place to
start is at a distance. So last time we talked about how you start the heeding
relationship at a distance. You turn the horse loose in an arena and just
"play" by following him in a way that builds his confidence that you
are not an attacker. You establish an imaginary line running through your
shoulders and the horse's shoulders and consistently keep your body facing in
the same direction as the horse. The horse begins to associate that posture
with the freedom to move forward. When you step behind this line, you put
pressure on the horse to move forward. If you step ahead of this line, you
restrict him a little.
As you and your horse get to playing together and
paying more attention to one another, you can eventually use these actions to
encourage the horse to turn another direction or change speed. For example, you
can step ahead of the shoulder line, turn, and ask the horse for a turn.
-Please click here to
continue |
16th January
2001 |
|
Tent Space Renewals are Hot to Trot
for Brookhill 2001
Raleigh, NC Coming back after its record
breaking 2000 season, the Brookhill Steeplechase has started signing up tent
space renewals for 2001. |
Last year, tent sales volume increased by as
much as fifteen percent - our best ever, says Vice Chairman for
Marketing, Dupre Jones, Jockeys Club, Paddock Club and Outrider
Club tent spaces were some of our hottest sales packages. The renewal
rates for Brookhills most exclusive tent package, Winners Circle,
are as high as ninety percent.
Please click
here for further details |
15th January
2001 |
|
Popular author Cherry Hill
and publisher Teton NewMedia release first of a kind CD-ROM for Horseowners:
Cherry Hill Horsekeeping" & Training CD-ROM
Collection. |
Jackson Hole, WY - January 2001. Now
horseowners, trainers, and equine enthusiasts can enjoy instant access to the
wisdom of popular equine author Cherry Hill with the Cherry Hill
Horsekeeping" & Training CD-ROM Collection developed and marketed
by Teton NewMedia. The Collection is comprised of three separate CD-ROM
libraries containing Cherry Hills most popular horse care and training
books with enhancements such as video and animation.
The 3 CD-ROM Libraries are the Horse Care
Library, Rider Library, and the Master Library. The Horse
Care Library contains these Cherry Hill books: Horse Health Care,
Horsekeeping on a Small Acreage, and Maximum Hoof Power and retails
for $49.95. The Rider Library contains: Horse Handling and Grooming,
Becoming an Effective Rider, and 101 Arena Exercises with 15
animated exercises! The Rider Library also retails for $49.95. The Master
Library contains all of the previous titles plus 6 more of Cherrys most
popular books, additional videos and animations. The Master Library retails for
$169.95.
Please click here for
further details |
15th January
2001 |
The Canadian Pony of the Americas.
On March 12th, 1975 the
Canadian Pony of the Americas Association was recognized by Agriculture Canada
to maintain a registry for CPOAs in Canada. Appaloosa coloured ponies had been
bred in Canada prior to this date, but no one had maintained a record of them.
Consequently, ponies with unknown background, which met the breed requirements
could still be recorded and become part of the breed. Now there are CPOAs in
most provinces. |
|
Today our breed standard calls for a versatile
performance pony exhibiting excellent conformation, working ability and
durability combined with a good and willing temperament, which is suitable for
the entire family, at home and in the show ring. The CPOA measures between 11.2
h.h. (46") and 14 h.h. (56") which has the appearance of a small
horse, having sufficient body to be able to do a full day's work, while having
enough refinement to make it attractive. It should have beauty and personality
as well as stamina and stability. The CPOA started out as mainly a Western Pony
but over years of breeding many have developed a long flat kneed forward
movement and the breed has advanced to now being very capable in all
disciplines including hunter, jumper, dressage, gymnastics and Three Day
eventing, and are being ridden by youths and adults alike! They have now become
the versatile using pony for the whole family
Please click here to learn
more |
14th January
2001 |
|
Prezwalskis Horse.
The Przewalski Horse (Equus przewalskii Poliakov)
or Takhi as the Mongolians name them is rather small, sturdy animal with a
short, strong neck. |
They are sand-colored all over except for a dark
stripe running along the spine into the dark colored tail, covered by light
deckchairs. The nose is cream-colored and the legs show zebra stripes. Their
erect manes and tail are dark brown. Prehistoric drawings in caves in France
and Spain show that primitive humans hunted these horses over 20,000 years ago.
The earliest written reports on Przewalski horses date from the ninth century
and in 1226 a herd of Przewalski horses is said to have caused Chingis Khan to
fall off his horse. For millennia these horses roamed the steppes of Europe and
Asia.
Please click here to learn more |
14th January
2001 |
|
Cyberfoal.com is the
free Internet service offered to breeders having lost mares and foals, during
and after foaling. It also provides the availability and need of
colostrum. |
Mares and foals unfortunately meet unforeseen
circumstances during and after foaling. Realizing a need for breeders to help
each other in these situations, Peter decided to set up the unique Internet
service of Cyberfoal.com, a free service offered with the support of a
sponsor to breeders in need. This independent site, allows owners and breeding
farms the opportunity to enter and view mares, foals and colostrum available at
the touch of a button. Both parties closest to each other then discuss an
amicable agreement. Many breeders are satisfied in offering their mares, in
return of care and/or trade of a breeding, their priority being that of
companionship to both mare and foal, when compatible. Through this service many
mares and foals have been united and new friendships have been made by the
cooperation of breeders helping each other. Cyberfoal brings together
all breeds, an accomplishment seldom seen, but for the love of our
foals.
The Cyberfoal mission is not to take away
what nature has given, but give back what nature has taken and with this
philosophy Cyberfoal has become a successful Network to world
breeders.
Please click here for
further details |
14th January
2001 |
Horsing around the net
The internet is very much in the news
and internet sites seem to be springing up at an alarming rate, many will fall
by the wayside but one we heard about of recently seems to have all of the
ingredients required for success.
horseandponysales.co.uk is the brain child of
Nicola Walden and offers the opportunity for owners and prospective purchasers
to do just what the domain name suggests at a price lower that most forms of
advertising and yet available to a greater audience than even the largest
circulation magazine. For as little as
£25.00 Horse and Pony Sales will show a colour photograph and written text
on their site placed under the heading of your choice. (Adverts can be
placed without a photograph for £20.00) So if you are selling or
buying an animal or have tack or other items for sale there is usually a
heading already in place, but if not one can easily be created and you can be
on site and advertising within 24 hours, as the site is updated on a regular
basis.
Please click here
for further details |
13th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
"Leading" Is Misleading.
Ground control precedes horse control. Before you
snap the lead rope onto a horse's halter, you and the horse need to start
communicating in a meaningful, horse-logical way. |
The reason for that is because lead ropes don't
lead horses or control horses. You're in trouble right from the start if you
expect a little bitty rope, or even a rope with some kind of chain at the
business end, to control a horse. You have to lead a horse using a
communication system that clearly tells the horse you are the lead mare he can
trust and that clearly tells him the speed, the direction, and the shape you
want the horse to move.
We start by bringing the horse into a small indoor arena. This confines the
horse in way that is understandable to him. Starting inside four solid walls
minimizes distractions and makes it easier to get the horse's attention,
especially in the beginning lessons
Please click here to
continue |
13th January
2001 |
|
NaturallyPaws.com
If your pet is injured or unwell and traditional
remedies are simply not working, you should visit a new website which, in its
own words, is "dedicated to providing information on how we can naturally
look after our pets in sickness and in health" |
The site, naturallypaws.com, offers advice on
where to seek alternative treatments for your pet when all traditional methods
have failed. Many people now accept that going the alternative route can often
be the best, and this site has all sorts of useful tips and advice; it also has
some wonderful case studies, which you may find really inspiring.
You'll also find directories of services and
suppliers, book reviews, regular contributions from the naturallypaws.com team
of vets, product reviews and, of course, updated reports on alternative and
complementary treatments available today.
Please click here to
learn more |
13th January
2001 |
|
Executive Committee Announced for
2001 Brookhill Steeplechase
And theyre OFF! The Raleigh Jaycees
Board of Directors has announced the Executive Committee for the 2001 Brookhill
Steeplechase, the Triangles premier horse racing event, to take place on
May 5, 2001 in Clayton, NC. |
The Brookhill Steeplechase is a horse race,
sanctioned by the National Steeplechase Association, owned and operated by the
Raleigh Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Raleigh Jaycees. Founded in 1993, the
Brookhill Steeplechase offers enthusiasts from across the Research Triangle
region a chance to witness professional jockeys compete for purses exceeding
$40,000. Proceeds from this unique event help fund many of the more than 120
projects run by the Raleigh Jaycees each year, including Goodfellows, the
Turkey Shoot at the NC State Fair, numerous child literacy and mentorship
programs, professional and personal training programs and cooperative efforts
with the Jaycee Burn Center and the Boys Home of North Carolina.
Please click
here for further details |
12th January
2001 |
|
12th January
2001 |
|
Are Police Cuts Costing Lives
?
Incidences of loose horses on Britains roads
are on the increase says a leading horse welfare charity.
Following todays report of the shooting by
police of three loose horses on the A13 in Essex, the International League for
the Protection of Horses (ILPH) is calling for a more cohesive national police
policy on dealing with loose horses. |
Says David Mountford, Head of Equine Operations at
the ILPH, We have seen a drastic rise in the number of calls we receive
from the public reporting horses loose on the roads. Whether these animals have
strayed, been abandoned, or broken their tethers, the ILPH sadly cannot take
them in having neither the capacity nor the authority to do so. It is the
responsibility of the police to remove them from the public highway and impound
them.
Please click here for further
details |
12th January
2001 |
The Appaloosa.
Although Appaloosas are readily
recognized by their spotted coats, some "Appys" are solid in color.
The Appaloosa Horse Club recognizes 13 different base colors, including bay,
black, chestnut, white, and palomino. The identifiable characteristics of the
breed are: white sclera around the eye; striped hooves; sparse, short mane and
tail; and, mottled skin around the nostrils and genitalia, a characteristic
unique to Appaloosas. Appys range in height from 14.2 to 16 hands.
Appaloosa patterns are: Blanket - white over the
hip area with a contrasting base color; Spots - white or dark spots over all or
a portion of the body; Blanket with spots - a combination of the above two;
Roan; Roan Blanket - has roan pattern over a portion of the body, usually the
hips; Roan Blanket with Spots - the roan blanket has spots within it; and,
Solid - coat has no contrasting color in the form of an Appaloosa coat pattern.
Leopard coats are white with dark spots; Snowflake coats have dominant spotting
over the hips; Frost coats have white specks with a dark background.
Please click here to learn
more |
12th January
2001 |
|
Open Forum: For Arabian Horse Owners
(And those interested in owning an Arabian horse!)
El Masri Arabians
588 Highway 36 West
Barnesville |
üHave
fun with your Arabian horse on the Trail!
üCompete
with your Arabian in Barrel Racing or Team Roping
üRide
your Arabian in Reining or Cutting horse competitions
üRide
an Arabian as a Hunter or Dressage horse
üRide
an Arabian in Western Pleasure or Working Cow Horse classes
üShow
your Arabian or ride for pleasure! The Arabian horse can do it all!
Please click here for
further details |
11th January
2001 |
|
9 divided by 3 = 1 Tri-Shield Rug
System?
Horses could be in for a cosy new treat this
winter with the launch of the Tri-Shield Rug System. Tri-Shield is an entirely
new concept of combining the benefits of nine, yes nine rugs, into one
comprehensive system. |
Based on original research at a leading British
university and developed by extensive field trials, Tri-Shield has brought
Innovation to the equine rug market at a price that offers real value.
Essentially users will not need any other rugs, as
Tri-Shield has a simple solution for the horses varying needs in terms of
warmth, protection or care. At its heart is the simple principle of using
multiple layers and providing more options. There is a tough outdoor
weatherproof New Zealand, a really snug stable rug for the
draughtiest barn, or a superb sporting universal rug to quickly dry off the
competitive horse, Tri-shield has a design solution that has been field tested
to work, and work well.
Please click here to learn
more |
11th January
2001 |
The Tennessee Walking Horse.
The Tennessee Walking Horse's claim to
fame is its unique gait, the running walk. This smooth, gliding gait is a fast
version of the flat walk in which the back foot glides over the track left by
the front foot. The horse's head nods in time to the beat, the ears swing in
perfect motion, and some horses will click their teeth. These are very rhythmic
horses!
TWHs range in size from 15 to 17 hands, weigh approximately 1000 pounds, and
come in a variety of colors. The head is large, with pointed ears, a straight
profile, large, gentle eyes and flared nostrils. The neck is muscular and
arched and fairly broad at the base.
Please click here to learn more |
11th January
2001 |
|
Great Interest for KWPN Select
Sale
In three weeks it will be upon us; the first
edition of the KWPN Select Sale will take place in 's Hertogenbosch. The
interest in the young stallions that are going to be sold then is enormous. In
the meantime the organization is in full swing. |
"The selection is complete and the
photography and video work is done" says Hank van Campen of EQ
International. A group of 22 stallions remained after the veterinary
examination.
Please click here to
learn more |
11th January
2001 |
Tejano Red, stakes winner of 7 races with earnings of over
$237,000 U.S. will be entering his first year at stud in Dunrobin,
Ontario.
|
Sired by Tejano (Caro, Infantes
by Exclusive Native) and out of Life's Melody (Stop The Music, Spit and Polish
by Herbager), is a welcome newcomer for thoroughbred mare owners in the area .
His presence means that mare owners won't have to travel long distances to get
their mares to a good quality race sire. His race record and bloodlines speak
for themselves
Please click here for
further details |
|
10th January
2001 |
|
Organic Dust Suppressant
Reduces Dust and Saves on Watering
DUSTLOCTM Dust
Suppressant, from EnvironMist, Inc., is a revolutionary new organic dust
control product that nearly eliminates dust and dramatically reduces
watering. |
Stop harmful inhalation of dust by horse, rider,
and spectator while also reducing the time and expense of constant watering.
When properly applied, Dustloc's new formula bonds with the soil and retains
moisture in the footing of your indoor or outdoor arena. Dustloc reduces
evaporation, which keeps your footing moist longer, thus reducing the frequency
of watering.Dustloc also contains a de-clumping agent to keep your footing
uniform and manageable. The amount that Dustloc reduces watering depends on
your particular soil, but in our tests, an indoor arena that needs water once
every two days will need water only once every 2-3 weeks.
Please click here to learn
more |
10th January
2001 |
|
Hill Country Equestrian
Lodge - A Haven for Riders and Nature Lovers
Nestled in an oak-studded valley, and encircled by
the rugged hills west of Bandera, Texas, Hill Country Equestrian Lodge offers a
new perspective on the traditional guest ranch. |
According to owners Dianne Tobin and Peter
Lovett, "Everything here is designed to create a very personal experience
for each guest. We emphasize privacy, and no one is restricted by a set
schedule. Guests can bring their own horses and ride at will, or they can take
a private lesson or a guided ride on one of ours. Each of our cabins is
carefully placed among the trees to provide a sense of seclusion, and is
situated to take advantage of the incredible Hill Country views here."
Built in historic Early Texas architectural
style, each cabin has a full kitchen, rear deck, and spacious front porch from
which to enjoy sunrises, sunsets, birding, and stargazing. In four of the
cabins, a limestone fireplace stretches from the hard-wood floor to the peak of
the 21 foot cathedral ceiling.
Please click
here for further details |
10th January
2001 |
Hedgeholme Stud Announces Two New
Stallions for 2001
Hedgeholme Stud are pleased to announce that for
the 2001 season two new Stallions will be available for British Breeders.
The well proven stallion Namaqualand, a Group
Winning son of Mr. Prospector has moved to Hedgeholme from Rathbarry Stud in
Ireland. |
Namaqualand |
The really fast son of Dancing Dissident, Almaty
will be joining Namaqualand for the 2001 season at Hedgeholme, this exciting
new Stallion could well be the horse to fill the gap in the North left by
Clantime.
Please click here to
learn more |
9th January
2001 |
A Horse, of Course
with Don Blazer
He's got ears--they hear, and he talks
with them, and they can tell his temperature, and at times they make a good
handle.
Horses have an extremely good sense of hearing. Little is actually known about
how they hear, but it is suspected his hearing is more similar to, than
different from our hearing. |
|
Humans hear a range of sounds from 30 to 19,000
hertz. Horses can hear a range of 55 to 33,500 hertz. So a human can hear a few
lower sounds, but horses hear many more sounds through the higher frequencies.
Please click here to
read this article |
9th January
2001 |
Equestrian Cornwall Health & Safety Evening
www.equestriancornwall.co.uk
website is hosting a Health and Safety evening on January 29, at the Crossroads
Motel, Scorrier, Cornwall for Show/Event Secretaries, Organisers/Competitors
etc., Health and Safety at Equestrian Events is a high profile issue at the
moment and we have top-notch panel of experts coming for the evening.
These are: Christopher Riddle (Royal Cornwall
Show Sec); Jane Philips (Litigator specialising in Personal/Injury Equine Law,
Solicitor to the BSJA Insurers and BSJA Disciplinery Steward); Bill Cook
(Safety Mangement Consultant, Advisor to the Pony Club at Branch, Area and
National Level) and George Harvey (BSJA Coursebuilder).
It is quite unique to get such high profile
people like this together for one evening and we expect an excellent turnout on
the night.
Health and Safety will be an upper-most concern
for many of us in the Year 2001 - Show Organisers, competitors, owners,
employers and employees are all aware of the importance of Health and Safety in
the Equine World.
Please click here
for further details |
9th January
2001 |
The Horse of Course 4-H Club, Washington
HI. My name is Jackie Deutsch. I am a member of
the Horse of Course 4-H Club in Pierce County, Washington. I am seeking
sponsors to help us put on a club show. We are proud to announce ads for our
sponsors during our show, and to hang banners or signs you supply. We will also
be listing a link to sponsors web sites on our Club Web Page. We will e-mail
you a tax-deductible receipt, which includes our nonprofit EIN number upon
receipt of your donation. Donations may be mailed to Horse of Course 4H club
Please click here for further details
|
8th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Intensity and Activity.
Never do anything to frighten a horse to gain
control. Swear pressures or avoidance pressures can create activity in an
animal but activity should not be mistaken for learning. A high level of
activity can sometimes limit the amount of learning. If a horse is reacting to
frightening situations, it is not responding to your aids.. |
Many people think that a horse isn't working very
hard if the horse isn't reacting in an "active" way- trying to avoid
a punishment that will surely come if it doesn't perform correctly. Avoidance
situations create more activity than approach situations. An avoidance
situation is stronger in that it creates more reaction. You create about five
times as much negative feeling with an avoidance situation as you can create
positive feeling with an approach situation
. People often use avoidance pressures because they stir the horse up so much
and so quickly and these so called trainers think that activity indicates
learning. It does not, necessarily. So whenever these people come to the end of
their knowledge about how to enforce training positively, they often resort to
avoidance pressures. That means pop that sucker, jerk him, jab him. Jabbing,
jerking or excessive spurring are not going to produce a high level of trust in
the horse.
Calm concentration teaches the horse more than frantic confrontation. The
mental effort of straightening things out in his own mind and then repeating
that effort over and over is the important part of training. And that's working
pretty hard work. You don't want the horse to do anything from fear because if
does, you're going to get the wrong result.
Please click here to
continue |
8th January
2001 |
British Equestrian Tourism examinations for Assistant and Ride
Leader and Holiday Riding Centre Manager.
These qualifications are jointly promoted by the
British Horse Society,the Trekking and Riding Society of Scotland,the Wales
Trekking and Riding Association and the Association of Irish Riding
Establishments as British Equestrian Tourism (BET) and are internationally
recognised by the Federation Internationale Touriste Equestre (FITE).
These qualifications are very relevent to todays
Riding School which is becoming more aware of their commitment to the safety of
both rider and horse, and the need to look after their clients in a more
professional competent and friendly way. For the first time in the South of
England,Burley Villa School of Riding,Hampshire is holding a refresher course
and examination for the Assistant and the Ride Leader Qualifications during the
week commencing February 19th 2001.
Please click here for
further details |
8th January
2001 |
Sending a Press Release.
Press releases are a great way to get
publicity for something you are doing. It might be a local riding club show, or
a new product. Press releases need to be interesting, well written and
informative. You can email press releases and news articals to Equiworld,
press@equiworld.com
Please click here for
further details |
7th January
2001 |
|
ArabianAuctions.com
Online auctions for Arabian horses, stallion
breedings, tack, saddles, art, clothing and other horse-related items.
Eileen Verdieck has been a pioneer in the Arabian
horse Industry and has become |
an authority on marketing Arabian horses. Now she
is using her talents and vast contacts to revolutionize how we market Arabian
horses. After selling several hundred horses in live auctions, Eileen decided
to expand her base of operations to the Internet
The next auction will run February 28 - March 11,
2001. Potential consignors are encouraged to list their horses as early as
possible to allow more exposure. Potential buyers are encouraged to regularly
view the website as consignments for the next auction are already listed. The
website is being upgraded and the server enhanced to support heavier
usage.
Please click here to
learn more |
7th January
2001 |
Veterinary Statistics.
Those essential statistics - learn
about the pulse rate, temperature and respiration rate of the horse along with
many more interesting facts.
Please click here |
7th January
2001 |
|
Animal Crackers
Animal Crackers is an animal feed
supplier for the Aberdeen, Stonehaven and Durris areas in the North East of
Scotland. We stock all the main horse feeds, plus dog and cat food. For more
information phone 01569 731064. |
We pride ourselves on our friendly and efficient
service. Delivery available within the catchment area is only £2.50 and
anyone outwith this area can collect, if they phone ahead their order will be
made upready for them and someone will load up their car/lorry with their
feed.
Please click here for
further details |
6th January
2001 |
|
Major Changes Introduced for the 2001
Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials
The many changes being introduced at the
Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials this year will most certainly mean the
Box Office staff being inundated with early applications when the Office opens
for business on Monday, January 8th. |
One of the new features for Badminton 2001 will
be, for the first time the cross country course starting and finishing in the
arena and it is here, too, the final fence will be positioned.
Another important innovation being introduced by the Director, Hugh Thomas, is
a Badminton Members' Club adjacent to the main arena where, for a modest daily
charge, spectators will be able to have a meal or a snack in some degree of
comfort in a ringside marquee with its own toilets and closed circuit
television. The Badminton Members' Club replaces the marquee previously
exclusively reserved for British Horse Society and British Horse Trials
Association members.
Please click here for
further details |
6th January
2001 |
The Falabella.
A Brief History of the Falabella
Although the origin of the Falabella miniature
horse is still uncertain, there are several tales of how this rare horse came
to the notice of the Argentinians.
One such tale has it that a European settler,
named Newton, settled on the Pampas. Newton had built a mill on the river that
dissected his property. This river provided the only water source for miles.
For fear of marauding Indians, Newton would place rocks in the millwheel at
night. The rumbling of the stones would echo across the vast Pampas. This lead
the Indians to believe that Newton had magical powers.
Empty carriages, without occupants, were not an
uncommon site at the river. Sweating teams of horses would arrive at the ford,
parched from their panicked flight. It was one such occasion that a miniature
horse appeared at the ford. Newton managed to capture the stallion, and it is
believed that this horse was one of the forebears of the Falabella.
The Falabella is a perfectly proportioned
miniature horse, resembling the Thoroughbred or Arab, of under 34"
(86.5cm). The Falabella miniature horse has a sleek coated, slim frame. True
proportions may be imagined as looking through the wrong end of a telescope
Please click here to learn
more |
6th January
2001 |
Saddle Fitting Clinics for the Thinking Rider start this month
A new series of clinics aimed at
eliminating the saddle fitting problems faced by many horse owners at some
stage during their horses working lives, will take place throughout 2001. The
clinics, organised and run by The Free 'n' Easy Saddle Company, aim to empower
riders whatever their final choice of saddle style or brand - with a clearer
understanding of how the saddle affects both the horse and rider; with the
result that any potential saddle fitting problems can be anticipated and either
prevented or more easily solved.
Saddle Fitting for the Thinking Rider
clinics cover aspects of the horse structure, assessing the fit of the saddle
and examining how the saddle affects the balance of the rider. The first few
clinics will take place in the South East with further dates to be announced
later in the year across the UK - Please
click here for further details |
5th January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Keeping a Horse's Attention.
There are probably as many jokes about getting a
mule's attention with a two-by-four as there are pickup trucks in Texas. When
you are teaching your horse to heed, you must keep bringing its attention back
to you. But you don't want to use a two-by-four. You don't want do a lot of
exciting or loud things that will cause the horse to do a lot of exciting or
loud things. |
Horses only pay attention to one thing at a time.
Their eyes are out on the sides of their head to see any approaching attacker
and their instincts tell them to constantly look out for those attackers. This
superb peripheral vision is what makes it so easy to get horses to heed your
body position. They can see all the way to the back of their hindquarters with
just a slight tilt of their head. But what gets their attention keeps changing
all the time.
When their attention goes away from you, your goal
is to get it back. When something in their environment puts a question in their
mind and diverts their attention, you want them to come back to you for the
answer.
Please click here to
continue |
5th January
2001 |
Horse Welfare Charity Calls for DIY
Livery Yard Licencing
Just before Christmas yet another skeletal horse
arrived from a DIY livery yard at Glenda Spooner Farm, Nr. Hoarwithy,
Herefordshire.
Says Dee White Manager of the Centre, run by the
International League for Protection of Horses (ILPH), When Solo came to
us in January last year from a DIY yard I said that he was the worst neglect
case I had every seen, but my latest case comes a close second.
Please click here to
continue |
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5th January
2001 |
The Northern Minnesota Horse Fair 2001
This years Northern Minnesota Horse
Fair located in Virginia, Minnesota on March 30-31 and April 1, 2001 is coming
together fast.
There will be entertainment, food, seminars,
demonstrations and exhibits to appeal to every member of the family.
Entertainment being scheduled will include Old Time Cowboy reenactments. Horse
drawn wagon rides. Planned events include Barrel Racing, Breed Demonstrations,
Jumping and Dressage Demonstrations, Stallion Presentations. Seminars will be
included on all aspects of Horsemanship and Care of Horses. This years
show will also feature over 70 exhibitors covering tack, trailers, western
wear, stables, Organizations and Associations among many others. Definitely
something for everyone!
Please
click here for further details |
4th January
2001 |
|
Poisonous Plant Alert.
The Equine Research Centre, Guelph,
Ontario
Toxic Plants: Is your horse safe?
Is your horse's pasture free from toxic plants?
Are you sure? It is important for horse owners to be aware of potentially fatal
plants that could be present in your pastures. |
This brochure provides you with some simple ways
to help avoid pasture poisoning, lists some resources available to help
identify plants and offers suggestions in case of suspected poisoning.
How to Avoid Poisoning: Preventative Medicine
The single most effective thing you can do to
ensure that your horses will be unlikely to eat poisonous plants is to ensure
that they have access, day and night, to good pasture and/or good hay. Sensible
horse management can prevent almost all cases
Please click here to
continue |
4th January
2001 |
BEIB Pledge Further
Support to Injured Rider
Felicity Coulthard's major supporter BEIB (British
Equestrian Insurance Brokers) has pledged to carry on with their current level
of support for the forthcoming season even though this young rider has suffered
a severe riding accident during training at the end of last summer.
|
|
Felicity who is sixteen years old spent a week in
hospital after dislocating her shoulder, spraining her wrist and breaking three
bones in her elbow. She now has three plates in her arm which meant that she
was ordered by her doctor not to ride for the next 8 months at least!
"This is a terrible blow" explains Felicity, "it not only means
that I have missed out on the winter competitions, but it looks like I will not
be ready for the summer as well".
Please click here to
continue |
4th January
2001 |
THE COLLEGE Equestrian Centre
Church Road, Keysoe, Bedford
The Competition Dates for January - March 2001 are now available.
Please click
here |
3rd January
2001 |
New Dates for Horse of the Year Show 2001
The Horse of the Year Show (HOYS) has
confirmed new dates for the 2001 show. The Show will now take place at Wembley
Arena from Tuesday 2nd October to Sunday 7th October 2001, a week later
than previously published.
Following the considerable growth that the event
has experienced over the last four years, the organisers, Grandstand Media
Limited, have agreed with the venue to extend the Show by an extra day to
accommodate the increasing numbers of competitors and visitors.
In order to facilitate this new format, Horse of
the Year Show will revert to its traditional week at the beginning of
October.
Please click here to learn
more |
3rd January
2001 |
American Paint Horse Association
releasing limited-edition bronzes |
|
FORT WORTH, TexasThe American Paint Horse
Association (APHA) has unveiled a one-eighth life-size version of its bronze
masterpiece Legacy of Color, a sculpture which will serve as a
representation of the breed standard that was established nearly 40 years
ago.
The one-eighth life-size bronze, now on display at
the American Paint Horse Association in Fort Worth, Texas, was the first of
several such pieces to leave the foundry recently. Both one-eighth and
one-third life-size pieces, called maquettes, will be produced in the months
leading to spring 2002. At that time, a life-and-a-quarter size bronze of four
Paint Horses, measuring 36 feet long, will be completed and displayed at the
APHA headquarters building during the associations 40th anniversary
celebration.
Please click here to learn
more |
2nd January
2001 |
|
Training Mythunderstandings -
Horse-Logical Communication Starts With Grooming.
A lot of amateur trainers MythUnderstand what the
training process is all about. They think that training involves dominating a
horse, showing him who's boss. They approach training as though it were a
battle in which one party wins and the other loses.. |
Good training is not about confrontation. It's
about building a horse-logical communication system. As trainer, you do your
talking as a non-hunting predator just walking through the herd or in the role
of lead mare in your little herd of two. But you don't ignore the horse's side
of the conversation.
To understand the horse's side of the conversation means learning
horse-speak--how horses say things to one another. Then you use that knowledge
to say things back to the horse for your own purposes. You want to communicate
to the horse that you like it, that you're glad it's there, that you like to be
around it. You're not going to just grab the horse and beat it into submission.
In terms of horse-speak, grooming can be a powerful influence you can use to
gain control and trust.
Wild horse survival requires strong herd instinct. Mutual grooming expresses
camaraderie among horses and helps wild ones bond into a herd. Horses love to
be groomed. Use this to your advantage to make friends with a horse when you
first start working with it and to study how your horse communicates things to
you.
Please click here to continue |
1st January
2001 |
The Conrad Jupiters Magic Millions to be seen by a global
audience.
Bloodstock and technology are brought
together by QuickStream Australia at the Conrad Jupiters Magic Millions on
January 11th 2001.
Gold Coast, Queensland Magic
Millions and Brisbane streaming media company QuickStream have teamed up to
allow Internet users around the world to access first ever video previews of
horses offered in the prestigious Sales.
In addition to the previews and fully integrated
on-line sale catalog, all the action from the 2001 Sales will be broadcast Live
to a world wide audience from the Magic Millions Web Site
http://www.magicmillions.com.au
The live broadcast will offer individuals
interested in Australias premier Yearling Sale the opportunity to view
the lots anywhere in the world as the sales unfold. By logging on the viewer
will be able to see:
Please click here for
further details |
1st January
2001 |
Message Board Upgrade
The equiworld.net message board has had a
few upgrades recently. These include,
* Faster page loading.
* Quicker message posting.
* New messages have a reply counter.
/archive/equiworld-net/chat5/ |
1st January
2001 |
Nabab De Reve Wins Final Qualifying Heat
The last qualifying heat for the finals of the TNT
Sires of the World took place in the Nekkerhal in Mechelen, Belgium on Friday
evening, 29 December 2000. There were 38 stallions in a strong field of
contenders who all had a go at gaining the last points. The selective course of
Lucien Somers produced seven candidates for the jump off. After a thrilling
competition it was Nabab de Reve (Quidam de Revel x Artichaut) with Phillipe
Lejeune riding for Belgium, who took the first prize.
Please click here to learn
more |
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