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Yes that is true that they do work them but still we are not talking anything remotely approaching the conditioning one would do for endurance. Most of the work that I saw was done on flat ground with no rider or weight. Now that was probably due to the age of the horses. The trainers I worked with were very conservative. This is from my experience and I am not the authority. But still, the big emphasis was on making them nice and plump, or Round as you say. I just thought they were all fat. But that is the endurance rider/marathon runner/bike rider in me coming out. Now if things are changing and they are looking at good muscling that is great. I did enjoy watching the halter classes thought it did teach me alot about conformation. Not that I know that much LOL! Tony -----Original Message----- From: Bette Lamore [mailto:woa@stormnet.com] Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 7:46 PM To: Corbelletta, Antonio Cc: 'Kathy Mayeda'; ridecamp@endurance.net Subject: RC: RE: Bloodlines Hi Tony Actually when we were in halter competition the horses had to be worked 6 days a week to build up the hind quarters---- usually the big trainers used treadmills and lunging in the bull pen---- it was REALLY important to have muscling. Flab never won. Round was the key. Bette Bette Lamore Whispering Oaks Arabians, Home of 16.2hh TLA Halynov (Yes, really 16.2!) http://www.arabiansporthorse.com "Corbelletta, Antonio" wrote: > > Funny you should mention "unconditioned". Having done the halter thing too, > I was surprised what they mean by conditioned for halter. All it means is > that the horse is FAT. They feed it non stop to get it to put on weight and > then teach them to stand and park and bend the neck. If you took a > conditioned endurance horse in the ring they would NEVER place. They are > too thin. > Tony > > -----Original Message----- > From: Kathy Mayeda [mailto:Kathy_Mayeda@atce.com] > Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 8:31 AM > To: SandyDSA@aol.com; CMKSAGEHIL@aol.com; ridecamp@endurance.net > Subject: RC: Bloodlines > > Point taken! But I was first a little bit in the halter world where the > "pretty heads > and hooky necks" meant "type." Didn't stay there too long. > > Also, the halter ring showing techniques leave much to be desired in showing > an Arabian's saddle horse potential. When I visit my ex - he loves nothing > better > to turn out his unconditioned show mare and have me watch her bounce around > like a bunny rabbit in the arena. He thinks she's cool, but it makes me > want to puke. > I bet if this mare had proper endurance conditioning, she would function as > well as any horse > under saddle instead of flouncing around. > > K. > > -----Original Message----- > From: SandyDSA@aol.com [mailto:SandyDSA@aol.com] > Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 8:11 AM > To: CMKSAGEHIL@aol.com; Kathy Mayeda; ridecamp@endurance.net > Subject: Re: RC: Bloodlines > > In a message dated 7/24/01 10:32:03 PM Pacific Daylight Time, > CMKSAGEHIL@aol.com writes: > > How can they NOT come in the same package? True Arabian "type" includes > basically correct riding conformation, as the Arabian was and is still > supposed to be a riding horse. This has been lost along the wayside > somewhere in some mythical sort of "type" that has come to mean "pretty > heads and hooky necks." You should be able to look at a functional Arabian > body and say, "Hey, THAT is an ARABIAN!" And that is what type is all > about. As for beauty--how some of these caricatures today can be > considered beautiful is beyond me. It is almost painful to watch many of > them move, and they look like a discombobulated combination of unrelated > parts. Well conformed horses, on the other hand, are downright beautiful, > and a joy to watch in motion. There is simply no way you can SEPARATE > type, correctness, and beauty--you can't have one without the others. > > Hey, the English language CAN explain something succinctly! Way to go , > Heidi! > San( who breeds for type, beauty and ability) > > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-Ridecamp > is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. Information, > Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/RideCamp > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- > > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= > Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. > Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/RideCamp > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= -- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/RideCamp =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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