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Love learning to take care of myself T age62 don’t like depending on others
I hate to disagree with you but must correct some of the erroneous information your article presents. I grew up on horses starting with Quarter Horses on my uncles ranch. I have ridden and trained Quarter Horses. Saddlebreds, Thouroughbreds, Paints, various pony breeds, mixed breeds, etc. for 60 years. I started breeding Arabian horses 40 years ago including half Arab crosses with Quarter Horses. You made 2very incorrect assertions regarding the Arabian Horse breed.
First that they require more feed. Having fed hundreds of horses first in the Southern California region and the last 40 years in Western Montana, I assure you that Arabians do not require more feed for performance. If you are claiming Arabians are more flighty then I can only guess that your exposure to them has been with halter horses who are kept jacked up and conditioned for halter appearance with yes, lots of high quality high energy feed. Unlike many breeds like the Quarter Horse as an example, Arabian halter horses are shown at very fast trots, they must stand up looking like they are ready to spring into top flight action at the wink of the eye vs the Quarter horse who ambles around the arena in both the walk and trot. I bred and trained many lovely Quarter a Horses until I trained my first Arabians. Within 6 months I had sold all my stock and purchased my first Arabian. So easy to handle, so, so quick to learn and little to no repetition required as they get bored when we humans can’t keep up intellectually. Just so much fun where work is more like play.
Arabian horses have been used in war fare for a 1000 years, much of the world was explored and conquered on the back of Arabians. Far from flighty, they are keenly intelligent and do require intelligent and kind handling and with a interesting, encoursging, respectful way of teaching them they will learn twice as fast as the average horse, carry you twice or three times as far in half the time. Think the 100 miles Tevis Cup endurance race over the top of the Sierra Nevada’s, the Arabians and half Arabians pretty much own that competition to the point that non Arabs can compete under a different classification.
On our 200 acre calle ranch we feed pasture grass in the summer and grass hay in the winter. The horses live year round on 150 acres of grassland with a 30 acre portion forested. Only our breeding or young stock get fed supplemental feeds and are kept up at the barn in winter but none are ever locked in stalls unless I’ll or injured, yet all glow in health, can work cattle all day or take us into the Selway- Bitterroot Wilderness for high mountain lake fishing trips or hunting. They are fearless and calm where faced with Wolves or bears and the most gentle and loving caretakers of children you will ever find.
No matter the breed it is the combination of great bloodlines and humane and intelligent handling that blesses mankind with a wonderful horse. Just don’t discount the Arabian horses as they encompass every trait you could want in tough times especially for transportation. Ours pull wagons, then work cows, then teach the grandkids how to ride and in an emergency they will still be running when another horses is dying from exhaustion.
thanks
OUTSTANDING book. Thank you. Why can’t we be learning things we need to in schools. Can’t say enough about the education it gave me.
Love all your’ helpful info. and look forward to all you send. Endless thanks!