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Re: [RC] Letters to the World - jamie

Hey you all,

You should really tell AHW your thoughts! We are
LOVING these posts (I've been passing them along to
our publisher) and would be thrilled if you'd send
some of this great stuff our way! (So far, we haven't
got much response from our readers). So, don't be shy
... e-mail us at info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx with your
comments. Really.

Jamie

--- Barbara McCrary <bigcreekranch@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Here's one little old lady who applauds what both
Heidi and Lif are saying.
I've ridden my share of hysterical Arabs (and one
hysterical QH, as well) on
endurance rides in my younger days, but until we had
the good fortune to
come by a couple who are safe, sane, quiet, and
well-behaved, we never knew
it could be so good.  I'm sure there are some
bloodlines and individuals
within other bloodlines that are safe and sane and
these need to be
encouraged and perpetuated.  With all this
discussion about the letter to
the editor in AHW, I took another look at the
magazine, pricey thing it is,
and looked at all the wild-eyed, Vaseline-faced,
weak-backed, flat-crouped
show horses that are either just standing there or
doing what is
euphemistically called park horse gaits, and it made
me cringe.  I saw some
real beauties on Day 1 of Cold Springs XP ride and
they weren't any show
horses.  They were all business, going down the
trail with purpose.  One
woman was riding hers with nothing but a rope around
its neck.  I agree that
the Arab horse industry needs to be looking at
something other than the show
ring as a marketing tool.  The show ring standards
have ruined, at least,
many cattle, dogs and horses.
Great messages, Lif and Heidi.

Barbara

----- Original Message ----- 
From: <heidi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <lif@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: <ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 10:05 AM
Subject: Re: [RC] Letters to the World


Wow, Lif, you get a standing ovation from me for
that response!  You hit
the nail on the head, and drove it home.

BTW, in a recent Registry survey, distance riding
was the #1 competitive
use by Arabian owners, surpassing shows.  It is,
indeed, time that the
Powers That Be at AHA woke up and smelled the
coffee.

The trainers are promoting a sort of horse that no
daddy would even
CONSIDER buying for his little girl--and yet they
are crying in their beer
about the success of AQHA, who has marketed that
very concept--a calm,
gentle, friendly animal with a youthful owner
riding, or a family
including grandpa out on a weekend outing.  I
think about that every time
I walk through an endurance camp, where Arabians
are peacefully tethered
to trailers and putting up with little electric
pens, and then are ridden
out on the trail by children, little old ladies,
and everybody in between.
 They stand in line at vet checks to be poked and
prodded, they co-exist
in jammed-up circumstances on the trail, and they
still go out and
demonstrate superlative athleticism, time and time
again.  THIS is the
classic Arabian horse--and is the one that should
be on the marquee, if we
want to market to the general riding public.

Heidi

The letter to the editor from Raoul Baxter in
June Arabian Horse World
raises some excellent points, however I feel
that as long as showing
continues to be held to be the end-all salvation
for the Arabian breed,
then we are truly and ultimately looking at the
end - might as well just
cut our losses, close the Registry's doors and
get it over with.&nbsp;
Showing, in my opinion, is the cause of the
problems the Registry finds
itself in today, not the solution.&nbsp;
Mr. Baxter writes that &quot;The Arabian horse
has to stand for
something unique to itself&quot; and further,
that solutions to
declining new owners and new registrations of
Arabian horses will not be
found as long as those solutions do not focus on
the breed's
specialty.&nbsp;&nbsp; The Arabian horse started
as a distance horse,
and that, in my opinion, is it's specialty, it's
very own niche that no
other breed can compare to.&nbsp; The right of
the Arabian horse to
claim this specialty is tested - and proved -
almost every weekend in
the United States and around the world.&nbsp;
Showing of Arabians has
had it's time to prove it's worth to the
breed.&nbsp; Anyone can see
where it has gotten
us.&nbsp; It is time to focus on the Arabian
horse's tried and true
specialty:&nbsp; Distance riding.
I agree with Mr. Baxter - it is time for
revolutionary change.&nbsp;
Support the Arabian horse's proven area of
expertise, support distance
riding, support endurance riding.&nbsp; Support
a use that promotes the
need for traditional Arabian conformation where
form follows
function.&nbsp; Support a use that promotes
family participation,
outdoor recreation, healthy bodies and minds
(for horse and human!) and
the positive goal of&nbsp; &quot;to finish is to
win&quot; instead of
the negative &quot;everyone loses but the
winner&quot;.&nbsp; Therein
lies the salvation of the Arabian horse and the
solution to declining
registrations and ownership.&nbsp; Give everyone
a chance to be a
winner.





============================================================
Every horse can be taught to walk faster than you
think.  It is one of the
most important qualities of a good riding horse. 
Some have it naturally,
others need to learn. On the other hand, if you
are riding a tired horse,
an easy jog is more efficient, covers more groumnd
with less effort.
(it's
the rebound effect of the two beat trot)
~  Dot Wiggins

ridecamp.net information:
http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/



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Why should I look good if I don`t smell good? 
~  author unknown

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============================================================
Every horse can be taught to walk faster than you think.  It is one of the
most important qualities of a good riding horse.  Some have it naturally,
others need to learn. On the other hand, if you are riding a tired horse,
an easy jog is more efficient, covers more groumnd with less effort.  (it's
the rebound effect of the two beat trot)
~  Dot Wiggins

ridecamp.net information: http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/

============================================================

Replies
Re: [RC] Letters to the World, Barbara McCrary