May 2010 e Newsletter

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Issue 21 May 31, 2010 
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  Dear Tim,
 
 

Welcome to the May issue of the horseshoecorner.com newsletter.  Today I'm writing this issue on Memorial Day; a day we give tribute to the men and woman of our armed services who have and continue to make the sacrifices necessary to keep this country as special as it is.  We all owe them a great deal of gratitude for what they've given us.  America for all its faults is truly a special place.  There isn't another place in the world where an individual can pursue their dreams as easily as in the United States of America.  I don't mean to say it's easy, but what worthwhile dream is without its challenges.        

I was recently reminded of how special this country is, when I spoke to a man who immigrated to America from Zimbabwe.  He spoke of how he hit the lottery due to a golf scholarship, and how his country-men would give up an arm or more for the opportunity to live here.  Today he's successfully developing a real estate business and living a life he never dreamed of in Zimbabwe. 

Our freedom offers us many opportunities, and it's up to us as citizen's to continue to create and develop those opportunities.   Horseshoecorner.com was assigned this job within the equine industry, and we're always looking for additional opportunities that we can offer the industry.  Our latest effort is to offer free memberships to anyone that makes a donation greater than $20 to the equine related nonprofit organization of their choice.  Send us a copy of the receipt, your contact information, and we'll send you the promotional code that will credit your account.  

We continue to hope that our efforts will help these great organizations make it through the difficult financial times we face today.  Please feel free to notify your local non profits about any offers we make to them.

Thank you for your time and I hope that you've enjoyed your Memorial Day holiday as much as I have.

Thank you,
Tim Van Loan
www.horseshoecorner.com 
 


Featured Horse For Sale 

 danny boy a standardbred horse

Mic Mac Danny Boy, aka "Danny": 1998 registered standardbred gelding, 15 hands. Sound and has been riding children for several years,  recommended for pleasure riding and driving, competitive trail, showing on the flat..  Likes people, does everything that is asked of him (loads, ties, cross ties, good with vet/farrier, clips, bathes, etc).

He's shown us a lovely trot and a great personality! Danny is so smooth under saddle, his foster says he is a real gentleman, and a really fun ride!  Danny has a big trot and is a bigger mover so he would be probably be best for someone with a little experience riding, no bad habits or vices, just  a forward mover.

Danny was in a lesson program and is being returned because the program has too many horses and not enough riders. They feel he is going to waste and deserves to be somewhere where he will be ridden and given more attention. Is being fostered by Huntington Stables in Burton, Ohio until placed into a home.

   

Be sure to check with Second Wind's Adoption special. Additional details are listed below.

   
 

Horse Care - Fifteen Quick Tips for spring

Posted by: Nanette Levin danny boy a standardbred horse

 

In most parts of the United States, we're now enjoying warmer temperatures and budding plants. This is also a good time to take stock of your equine needs and issues. Consider how you might ensure a more successful season by attending to the following:

  1. This is the best time to do fecals to check for parasites. This is the time large numbers of eggs are shed and the best season to get a good read on which horses may need worming, particularly in the Northeast. Most contemporary thought leaders are now recommending horse owners move away from standardized and regular worming protocols in preference to individual treatment of only those horses identified as infested.
  2. Check vaccination records and ensure all are up-to-date. Four-way (or five-way) are the typical standard, but most are now also including West Nile Virus and, in any part of the country where it is a concern, rabies.
  3. If you're going to be competing or travelling with your horse, get a Coggins test now so you have it when you need it.
  4. If you're expecting foals that haven't dropped yet, check to make sure your foal kit is complete and easily accessible.
  5. Examine pastures to check for broken boards, downed wire, holes from critters, nails exposed in run-in sheds, dangerous trash that may have blown in during winter or any other hazard your horse is likely to be sucked into if he can find it first.
  6. If turnout is a staple, now's the time to plan a good rotational grazing program and ensure you have the forage to accommodate the numbers.
  7. Craft a plan for fly and other flying biters early to get a head-start on the pests. If a Fly Predator (Spalding) solution is your choice, it's usually two to three years before you're free of the buggers, but it's a good idea to start thinking about breeding grounds to treat now (moist areas - think watering areas, manure build up locations, under the spreader, etc.
  8. Develop a plan (manual, tractor, vacuum) to break up or eliminate manure piles early and often along with a good pasture management plan to keep the herd healthy. This will reduce the likelihood of parasite re-infestation while reducing the breeding ground for annoying bugs.
  9. Be vigilant about checking, caring for and treating your horse's feet. Wet ground and emerging rocks can create long-lasting problems if you fail to catch an issue early. Look for stone bruises (iodine is a great way to help toughen the feet and help prevent a stone bruise from becoming an abscess if caught early) and treat them quickly. Make sure the frog is healthy. Protect thin soles as you start a training or conditioning program to avoid lameness problems that tend to come at the worst time.
  10. Check the teeth. Have a skilled professional (contrary to some legislative decisions, some teeth specific professionals can provide a better read and treatment than an area vet who would prefer not to do teeth) look into each horse's mouth to check for problems. You may find many need no treatment, but those that do will thank you. Don't cut the budget here if money is tight - you'll pay exponentially with the extra feed bill for lost and/or poorly digested grain/hay and could send your horse into a state he remembers for many years to come if mouth pain from bad teeth conditions becomes a memory of riding experiences.
  11. Check your tack and any other horse equipment. Make sure it's safe, solid and fits the horse properly. Clean it too.
  12. Clean sheaths.
  13. Go over each horse to check for heat, swelling, weight loss, abrasions or any other change in appearance or heath to ensure you start the riding season right with a horse ready for the demands. With shedding coats, a keen eye may find issues that weren't easily apparent under fuzzy coats. Discover and address them early and it may save you heartache later in the season.
  14. Careful with lush spring grass. If your horse isn't used to it (or has health issues that make it dangerous to have access), you could wind up crying over founder or colic. Starting at and increasing a horse to a half-hour more each a day is a good rule of thumb for the normal horse who isn't dealing with sugar, obesity or other issues.
  15. Start conditioning training easy. Better to go slow and short to ensure a happy, sound, healthy and engaged horse for the rest of the year.
 
Featured Equine Business
                                                 

 

Dar-Stan Stables was established in 1992, on the Suchy Farm in the Heart of the Catskills, in Stamford NY. We have 10x10 and 14x14 box stalls, 200+ acres of lush green pasture and wooded acres for shade. All horse have option of their choosing to be inside or out. Our home is on the premises so horses are monitor 24/7. Horses have pastures
of 5 acres or more with streams of fresh water and lots of lush pasture. Round bales are fed in the winter so horses have free access to food and water. Trails throughout the acreage and a country road for carefree riding. We have an affliation with veternarians, farrier service and emergency care is available. The Suchy family invite you to check out Dar-Stan Stables where "you are always welcome & your horse will call home !"

 

Training Mythunderstandings

danny boy a standardbred horseHorse Logic Body Building

by Ron Meredith

President, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre

 

 

 

Horse training is a mental game played in a physical medium. Here at Meredith Manor, we use a system we call "heeding" to teach students the rules of the mental games they play with their horses. They learn how to use corridors of methodically applied, horse-logical pressures to show, ask, and eventually tell their horses what shapes they want them to take.

 

They also need to methodically develop their horse's physical abilities in order to play whatever game they've decided they like whether it's dressage or reining or jumping or cutting or whatever. Like any athlete, a baby horse needs to learn how to use his body the right way. He has to find his balance. He needs to build his muscles, his strength, in order to play our games.

 

If a student came to me and asked for advice on how to develop strong stomach muscles and I told him to start doing 200 crunches daily, his muscles would be pretty sore after the first day. He might be mentally sore at me, too, and probably disinclined to listen to any more of my advice. But if I'd advised him to do 20 crunches for several days, then to add another 10 for several days, and then another 10 and so on, he would eventually get up to that 200 a day without getting so sore he be discouraged.

 

It's the same with a horse. He has to build his muscles gradually in order not to get sore and discouraged and disinclined to listen to his partner. We help him build the muscles he needs by taking him through a sequence of physical skills that build on one another. Years ago someone (my apologies to them, wherever they are, because I can't remember exactly who it was) introduced me to the concept of a tree to explain just how physical skills have to build on one another to create a strong foundation before the horse can specialize in whatever game his trainer wants and be successful. Once the horse has developed a strong trunk or foundation, he can branch out into any kind of specialized training you want (see drawing).

 

There's a definite sequence to the skills the horse has to master. If you try to skip one, you're going to leave a hole in that horse's physical conditioning that will catch up with him when he tries to play games at the higher levels. The driving horse that never learned to seek contact between the bit and his driver's hands is never going to have good impulsion. The reining horse that never learned to move straight isn't going to be able to spin worth a darn. The dressage horse that isn't balanced will never be truly on his rider's aids.

 

Everything starts with rhythm. That means the horse moves with steady, even footfalls. Then he's got to be relaxed physically. He's got to be swinging through his back and neck. There can't be any tension in his jaw or his poll or his back or anywhere or he won't be able to move freely. Moving freely means the horse is reaching forward with the hip and shoulder without any resistance in his own body or any resistance from the rider. Learning to carry a rider's weight is hard work for a baby horse and sometimes the best thing a rider can do is just not interfere while the horse figures it out.

 

Once the horse has figured out how to carry a rider, he should start seeking contact. He's swinging along in a relaxed and rhythmic way and now we want him to stretch his neck down and out a little to find a steady, elastic connection between the bit and his rider's hand. Once the rider has that contact, she can start asking the horse to move in a straight line. The horse can move straight on a straight line or a curved line. What we mean is that the hind foot on one side is following the same track as the front foot on that same side. He's not moving his hind legs to the inside or outside, he's just tracking along.

 

Now he's ready to start some serious body building. Everything's in place so that he can start to develop all his muscles more or less equally. We want the horse to become balanced. Horses generally carry about 60 percent of their weight on their front end. Some horses are more balanced than others and some horses carry so much of their weight on their front end that balance is going to be a tough deal for them. But Nature built horses with rear wheel drive and a horse has to learn to carry more of his weight to the rear if he's going to jump a bigger jump, or do a longer slide, or do a better canter pirouette.

 

As he shifts more of his weight to the rear and become more balanced, the horse gets stronger in his hindquarters and he can start moving with impulsion. He develops power, some engine thrust. Now we want that power but we don't want the horse to be stiff when he's thrusting forward. We want him to keep his joints loose while he's bending them, to stay supple. As he puts all of this together, he starts to have enough physical conditioning to stay on his rider's aids which means he can listen to and respond to his rider's corridors of pressure for a period of time without losing his balance or relaxation or rhythm or whatever. The final stage of his physical conditioning comes when he can collect himself up, bend his hocks even more, lower his hindquarters and move like a super athlete.

 

There's no such thing as an average horse but, on average, figure at least two years to bring a baby horse through this basic training tree sequence. The first year, he's just going to be learning how to carry the rider's weight with rhythm and relaxation and to move forward freely, on contact, in a straight line. Then he spends the second year in serious body building so he can carry himself in balance, with impulsion and suppleness. The ultimate is when he's got it all together enough to stay on the aids and eventually become collected. Now you've got an equine Schwarzenegger.

 

The great thing about the training tree is that it works as well for older horses as it does for bringing along baby horses. If you get an older horse that's having a problem, you start him at the bottom of the tree and work your way back up. When you get to the level he can't perform, you've found the root of his problem and you can work on it. The training tree is physically horse logical just as heeding is mentally horse logical. So it works.

© 2001 Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre. All rights reserved.

Instructor and trainer Ron Meredith has refined his "horse logical" methods for communicating with equines over 30 years as president of Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre (800 679-2603; http://www.meredithmanor.edu), an ACCET-accredited equestrian educational institution.


 

If you enjoyed this article, please check out all of the articles we have available at  www.horseshoecorner.com


Second Wind Adoption Program is Offering an Adoption Special
Payments for every Budget
Horses for All Disciplines and Riding Levels
Special Ends June 13th

Special Description and prices:

-Post the Colors is $5000. down and $1000. a month for 10 months

-Big'n is $2500. down and $1000. a month for 5 months

-Beau is $1000. down and $250. a month for 8 months

-Poochey, Big Dawg & Dancer are $1000. down (each) and $1000 a month for 2 months

-Sukhoi, Trinket, Romeo and Irish Cream is $500. down (each) and $250. a month for 6 months

-Brioso and the Irish Warmblood is $300. down (each) and $100. a month for 7 months

-Chance, Shadow, Kismet, Rock Doctor, Jasfar, Dreamer, Azim is $300. down (each) and $100. for 2 months

-Casino, Joker, Silver, Monty, Danny is $300. down and $100. for 5 months

-Dixie and Orphy are companion horses that are free to a good home (they are not rideable)

-an additional 10% off these prices if paying in full up front

 

For additonal information please go to http://www.crossedsabers.com/

Let us know what you think of HorseshoeCorner.com, we're always happy to receive feedback from YOU - our community members. Drop us a line by replying to this email!
 
Sincerely,

Timothy Van Loan
President & Founder
Horseshoecorner.com

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