Wow Barbara! I am probably dating myself but I remember those days.
Sheila Varian used her stallion (brain fart.....I can't remember his name) to
work cattle on her ranch. She competed him in reining, I believe, in
open shows and if memory serves they won at the Cow Palace.....which was BIG
Qtr Horse competition at that time. It did take a lot of courage to buck
the trend.
I was also a founding member of the Oregon Dressage Society. I
designed the logo. I wonder if it still exists. Yep, we were a
bunch of Arabs. Does anyone remember Ward Wells? He had the
stallion "The Count of Al Marah". The majority of my dressage training
was with Ward in Oregon City, Oregon in the middle 1970's. Our first
clinic was with Herman Freidlander. We were soooooooooo bad, I thought
he would have a stroke. LOL. He did not mince words!!!!
Sadly, one of our Arab owners quit riding, sold all her horses, and her barn
as a result of his critique. As with the QH/Arab thing, we were
considered a bunch of clowns by the Thoroughbred folks at the Lake Oswego Hunt
Club. Gotta love the good ole days!
Merry
Barbara McCrary <bigcreekranch@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
My
Arab gelding came from a ranch in Montana, bred by a man
whose grandfather bred remount horses. I asked him once WHY he was
breeding Arabs in Quarter Horse country. He said, with a tone of voice
that hinted of knowing something that no one else knew, that he found out
that Arabs didn't get tired when they worked cattle all day and he could
ride the same horse the next day, too. He must have had a lot of courage
to buck the trend in cattle and QH country. My gelding is no halter
horse, but he has good legs and feet, lower respiration than I'm used to,
and terrific pulse recoveries. He also has a lovely disposition and was
calm at his first ride. I have yet to see him tired, but I suppose it
could happen. We'll see soon, as we're going to a 5-day ride in a couple
of weeks.
Barbara
----- Original Message ----- From:
To: Cc:
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2004 11:23 AM Subject:
Re: [RC] Top five endurance horses-appys
> >
Heidi..........................That is soooooooo true. > > >
> Not every horse is bred for the purposes of distance riding. Not
every > > person is into distance riding. I guess it would be a
very boring world > > if everyone liked the same
things. > > Yes, it would be. However distance riding is a sport
that brings out the > best in general riding qualities, no matter what
the horse's purpose, and > far too many breeds are going to show
horses that are unrideable for durn > near anything. The Saddlebred
that the modern Arab show horse resembles > is likewise
dysfunctional--his prototype was a good cavalry mount, but > General
Lee would not have gotten three days into his campaign on the > modern
version. The dysfunctional show QH is worthless as a ranch horse. >
Etc. Distance riding is a "generalist" sport--a horse suitable for
riding > in virtually ANY functional situation can "do" endurance even
if he > doesn't excel at it. And horses that can "do" endurance can
also go out > and cut cows, do dressage, jump fences, or
whatever. > > I've always maintained that there are two
disciplines that are basic to > all other disciplines--those being
endurance and dressage. If one > approaches fitness from an endurance
viewpoint and optimizes training from > a classical dressage
standpoint, one will improve ANY horse--even if one > never sets foot
on an endurance course or in a dressage ring. JMHO, but > it seems to
me basic to the nature of a horse that he should at least have > the
biomechanical structure and the metabolic capability to complete
rides > and the trainability to do basic dressage if he is to be a
successful > riding horse at ANY discipline. That doesn't mean that he
has to go DO > those things--but if he doesn't have the CAPABILITY to
do them, he won't > make much of a riding horse.... > >
Heidi > > >
============================================================ > REAL
endurance is reading the LD vs. Endurance thread/debate every 3 >
months!!! > ~ Heidi Sowards > > ridecamp.net information:
http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/ > >
============================================================ >