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Spring Break

March 12, 2012

Road Trip, Tropical Suntan … In honor of spring break, share your horse’s festive AQHA registered name!

It’s Spring Break in Amarillo, the home of AQHA Headquarters, and we’re taking a short break from our regular Daily posts.

Whether you’re riding the teacups at Disneyland, risking shark attacks in the Florida waters, or just relaxin’ at home, we at AQHA hope you have a wonderful spring break!

Just for fun, we dug up some vacation-themed registered names. Add in your own!

Spring Breakup

Disneys Magic

Shark Attack

Read the rest of this entry »

Coat Color Q&A

March 9, 2012

Each Friday through June 2012, get your Quarter Horse color questions answered on Facebook.

Foals

American Quarter Horse foals are hitting the ground, and we want to help you determine their colors so you can accurately register them with AQHA.

AQHA’s color specialists have entered their busy season, taking countless calls and emails from customers needing to know more information on coat color genetics.

To give you personalized, fast advice, AQHA Equine Color Specialist Lisa Covey will be on AQHA’s Facebook page from 2 to 4 p.m. each Friday through June to answer your questions.

So gather up your horses’ information, photos and questions, and join us from 2 to 4 p.m. on Fridays for Coat Color Q&A at www.facebook.com/aqha1. Lisa will be standing by to answer your questions. Simply post your questions and photos for Lisa on AQHA’s Facebook wall.

Read the rest of this entry »

Unusual Markings

February 28, 2012

America’s Horse is calling for photos of your odd-colored or unusually marked American Quarter Horse.

Go Man Go

The 1953 stallion Go Man Go, registered as a roan, was a sorrel with rabicano markings. AQHA file photo.

It’s the exciting and busy time of year when foals are hitting the ground. Eager foal owners are looking for coat color advice so they can decide the correct color to register their foals with AQHA.

AQHA is here to help with every step of that process! You can e-mail an AQHA equine color specialist, or ask us your questions on AQHA’s Facebook page any time. We even offer a live chat with a color specialist on Facebook each Friday through June from 2 to 4 p.m. CST.

Read the rest of this entry »

2012 Academy Awards

February 23, 2012

As we gear up for Billy Crystal to host the big show on Sunday, let’s look back at one of his most memorable Oscar moments with his American Quarter Horse.

Host of Sunday's 84th Academy Awards, Billy Crystal rode his American Quarter Horse onstage at the 63rd awards show in 1991. Photo courtesy of Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Nicknamed after a brand of chewing tobaco, Charlies Surprise grew up as a ranch horse who was used for roping and gathering cattle. With all that exposure to obstacles, it was no surprise that the calm, cool and collected “Beechnut” found his way to working on movie sets, one of which was “City Slickers.”

The set of “City Slickers” is where actor Billy Crystal met Beechnut. A man who says he can’t and won’t have animals because he’s never home, Billy says he and the black gelding started an “on-location romance.” Because of the connection the pair made, movie wrangler Jack Lilley gave Beechnut to Billy after filming was done. Then with Beechnut’s blaze Read the rest of this entry »

Happy Valentine’s Day

February 14, 2012

Quarter Horses hold a special place in our hearts.

Two Bits Valentines Day

Valentine's Day is a time to celebrate the love we have for everyone in our lives and thank those people for the value they add to our lives.

This year, use Valentine’s Day to celebrate all the loves of your life. The significant others who are anxiously last-minute shopping for your present, the parents who support you, the friends who make you laugh, the children who drive you crazy and the horses that bring you joy. Our hearts have room for them all, and our lives would be less meaningful without them.

Read the rest of this entry »

Top-10 Free Reports

February 6, 2012

Take a look at the most popular FREE reports on America’s Horse Daily.

America’s Horse Daily has dozens of FREE reports to help you become a better rider, training, competitor and horse owner. Download as many as you want, and print copies for your barn, home and trailer. Share them with family and friends.

  1. How to Make a Rope HalterTwo experts at Columbia Basin Knot Company shared with The American Quarter Horse Journal their 34-step process for making a quality homemade rope halter.
  2. Horse Color and Marking ChartThe AQHA Horse Color and Markings Chart has a world of horse markings and color information packed into just one page.
  3. Quarter Horse Coat ColorsLearn all of the approved Quarter Horse colors and the possibilities for your future foals.
  4. How to Tie a Rope HalterDennis Moreland explains a safe and effective way to tie a rope halter to communicate with your horse.
  5. Halter Breaking Your FoalLearn how Tom, Wayne and Margo Ball use patience and trust to train each foal through the steps halter breaking.
  6. How to Build a Mounting BlockAQHA consulted an expert woodworker for a homemade mounting block that can become a staple of your barn aisle or arena.
  7. Horse Trailer Loading TipsBill Van Norman gives tips on how to keep your temper while training a horse to load into a trailer.
  8. Showmanship BasicsTrainers Brad and Valerie Kearns give you tips and tricks about every aspect of showmanship from basic maneuvers to picking out the right show halter for your horse.
  9. Horse Clipping TipsAQHA Professional Horseman Randy Jacobs offers his tried-and-true advice on setting yourself up for clipping success, even if that’s not what your horse has in mind.
  10. Cowboy EtiquetteThis guide for aspiring cowboys offers tips for how to acclimate to the western culture by improving efficiency and relations on the range.

Want more? America’s Horse Daily has many FREE reports!

Cheers to the Super Bowl

February 1, 2012

Giants Charged Up and Patriots Big Game are just two American Quarter Horses with a stake in the great American game.

Two-Bits is ready for the big game. Are you?

By Megan Brincks for America’s Horse Daily

Cheers to Super Bowl XLVI, a fight of honor between the New England Patriots and the New York Giants, February 5 in Indianapolis.

When you could be out riding your horses, you will instead be inside, glued to NBC, eating chips slathered in various dips and drinking 10 different kinds of beverages while decked out in your team’s colors.

For one day out of the year — OK, for some of you, one day a week for the entire football season — there is something more important than your new showing prospect, more interesting than your horse’s new shoes and more frustrating than your trusty steed deciding the rock he has seen every day of his life suddenly turned into a horse-eating demon.

Let’s face it, the Super Bowl takes precedence. It sucks out your soul and leaves a trail of heartache … or is that heartburn? You know how much the advertisement spots cost, but instead of turning away in disgust, you watch in utter rapture, as engrossed as though the good Lord himself is speaking through the television set — cough — high definition television set — cough. Read the rest of this entry »

Top-10 Free Reports

January 11, 2012

Take a look at the most popular FREE reports on America’s Horse Daily.

While the snow flies outside, read some of AQHA's FREE reports.

Make a New Year’s Resolution to brush up on your equine knowledge with AQHA’s top FREE reports.

These FREE reports are full of tips and tricks for all aspects of horse riding, training, showing and care. Download as many as you want for your home, barn, trailer and office. They are easy to print and fun to share with family and friends.

Give your horses the best care this year by learning something new!

  1. Horse Color and Markings Chart - The AQHA Horse Color and Markings Chart has a world of horse markings and color information packed into just one page.
  2. How to Make a Rope HalterTwo experts at Columbia Basin Knot Company shared with The American Quarter Horse Journal their 34-step process for making a quality homemade rope halter.
  3. Halter Breaking Your FoalLearn how Tom, Wayne and Margo Ball use patience and trust to train each foal through the steps halter breaking.
  4. How to Build a Mounting BlockAQHA consulted an expert woodworker for a homemade mounting block that can become a staple of your barn aisle or arena.
  5. EPM Report – The American Quarter Horse Racing Journal explains how EPM is transmitted, prevention techniques, the symptoms and treatment options for this neurological disease.
  6. Horse Training FundamentalsIn this six-part report, AQHA Professional Horseman Ken McNabb shows you how to build a strong foundation with a young horse through fundamentals skills.
  7. Horse Trailer Loading TipsBill Van Norman gives tips on how to keep your temper while training a horse to load into a trailer.
  8. How to Tie a Rope HalterDennis Moreland explains a safe and effective way to tie a rope halter to communicate with your horse.
  9. Showmanship BasicsTrainers Brad and Valerie Kearns give you tips and tricks about every aspect of showmanship from basic maneuvers to picking out the right show halter for your horse.
  10. Horse Clipping TipsAQHA Professional Horseman Randy Jacobs offers his tried-and-true advice on setting yourself up for clipping success, even if that’s not what your horse has in mind.

Want more? America’s Horse Daily has many FREE reports!

AQHA Record Update

January 3, 2012

It’s important to keep your horse’s AQHA record as current as possible.

Is your Quarter Horse 25 or older? Update his records every year with AQHA!

On January 1 of each year, all horses turning 25 are listed as deceased in AQHA’s database unless AQHA is notified that the horse is still alive. It is important to keep your records up to date and to notify AQHA of your elderly horse’s status.

So, if your horse is 25 this year, simply e-mail dupcorr@aqha.org with a current photo of the horse, its registered name and your contact information.

Because the average life span of a horse is 25 years, horses over the age of 25 are listed as deceased to help AQHA keep a current and accurate count of the population of horses. Read the rest of this entry »

Deep in the “Heartland”

January 2, 2012

This Canadian TV series features wholesome drama and lots of Quarter Horses.

Editor’s Note: As the January-February issue of America’s Horse hits mailboxes, we thought we’d give our online readers a peek between the pages as we feature American Quarter Horses who are taking a prominent place on the small screen in the family drama “Heartland.” If you’re not an AQHA member, join now so you won’t miss future issues of America’s Horse, which goes exclusively to AQHA members. Each issue is packed full of Quarter Horses who are stars in entertainment, rodeos, shows, trail rides – or just their owners’ hearts. The magazine is just one of the great benefits of belonging to the world’s largest equine breed registry!

By Tom Moates in America’s Horse

Actress Amber Marshall and Top Moon Cuttabar share top billing with the expansive scenery of the Canadian Rockies. Photo by Andrew Bako.

Ever wish you could turn on network television and enjoy a family drama set in the ranchlands? That instead of a full menu of urban crime dramas and silly suburban comedies, you could find a show where the characters ride horses, move cattle, rodeo and live where vast open land unfurls against the Rockies?

It exists.

“Heartland” is a contemporary family drama produced for Canadian television (CBC) now in its fifth season that offers all of that and more. Even better, the series is chock full of registered American Quarter Horses.

The show is a family drama that centers on the Heartland Ranch, owned by the Bartlett family in fictitious Hudson, located in the Alberta Rockies. The series is based on the popular book series of the same name by British writer Lauren Brooke, who set the books in Virginia. The first “Heartland” book appeared in 2000, and more than 20 have been published since.

The series gets going when “Grandpa” Jack Bartlett loses his daughter in a car accident and is left to run the ranch alone with his two granddaughters, Amy and Lou.

Several other regular characters frequent the ranch, and the result is a multi-generational saga set in the present day. You’ll see cell phones and home-schooled high-schoolers doing class work on their laptops. The series’ fitting tag line is: “Even on the open range, life can be complicated.”

The lead character, Amy Fleming (played by AQHA member Amber Marshall), is in her late teens, and it is her special touch with troubled or sick horses that produces the central story line for many episodes.

The horse-heavy script calls for a seasoned wrangler with capable horses, and “Heartland” boasts them both. The livestock coordinator is celebrated Hollywood horseman John Scott (featured in America’s Horse in 2003). And the horses are nearly all registered American Quarter Horses from his outfit.

“The show is unique in the fact that it is a touch of ‘Bonanza,’ a touch of ‘Big Valley,’ and things like that,” John says. “It is set in a ranch location and shows a lot of good scenery and some action and a lot of work with horses. My job is to get all those horses in front of the camera and then make them all work. Every episode is different; there’s always a new challenge.”

John runs John Scott Productions and John Scott Motion Picture Animals and is based in Alberta, about an hour’s drive from the “Heartland” set. He has been in business since 1969, when he worked on his first picture, “Little Big Man.” Television work quickly followed, and he learned that end of the business working on the TV Westerns “Alias Smith and Jones” and “The Big Valley.”

“I’d clean out the trucks and brush the horses just to get on the sets to learn the business,” John says. “Then I came back home because my grandfather farmed with horses right ’til 1959, so I had a lot of his harness and his wagons, and that’s what gave me a start. And then I’ve just been collecting wagons and horses ever since. I’ve got one of the bigger outfits in Canada to supply to the motion picture industry. We have over a hundred wagons and buggies, and we keep around 160 head of horses (mostly registered Quarter Horses) to service the film industry. We’ve done five Academy Award-winning pictures: ‘Days of Heaven,’ ‘Unforgiven,’ ‘Legends of the Fall,’ ‘Jesse James,’ and I went to New Zealand on ‘Lord of the Rings.’

“I still enjoy the business,” he says. “I enjoy the animals. There’s a bay Quarter Horse (called ‘Harley’ on the show but registered as EJ Doc Tivio Frost) that goes with the love interest of Amy, Ty, played by Graham Wardle. And then the father, Tim, he’s on a palomino Quarter Horse (Als Dun Driftin) that appears in the show fairly often.

“It’s always a new challenge pretty well every day, especially on this ‘Heartland’ show because you’ve got four or five different writers that write a lot of different things. Some are hard for horses to do that are not trained horses – sometimes, they’ll see a horse doing something, but that horse has been trained for two years … and they want to duplicate that kind of situation, and we really only have about a week to get that horse tuned to do that.

“We had the birthing of a colt in one show. (It was September), so I had to find a mare that was pregnant. Then once she had her foal, we had to be ready to film two days later. That was a major challenge.”

Amber Marshall and "Stormy." Photo by Andrew Bako

Amber’s horse in the show is called “Spartan.” Like his human counterparts, that stage name isn’t his real name. The main horse that plays the role is a Quarter Horse known as “Stormy” (registered as Top Moon Cuttabar). Also as with the humans, Stormy has doubles and stunt doubles.

“He has got about two doubles that are registered Quarter Horses,” John says. “Sometimes we’re up to five horses to do what that black horse has to do. His (main) double is ‘Rocky’ (registered as Black Sapphire San).

“We’re very fortunate that Amy – or Amber Marshall – had some horse experience before she came to the show. She was a very good rider, and that helped a lot. What kills us is when they cast actors that can’t ride. They come in one day before they’re going to shoot, and they expect us to make riders out of them. There again, it’s the horse that carries them through the scene.

“So you have to have the right horse that’s going to keep them safe and get them from Point A to Point B to get the shot. That’s the reason I have so many Quarter Horses, because of the disposition. They’ve got to have the right attitude that things like smoke and gunfire and big white screens around them and lights are not going to bother them that much.

“We try them out on the ranch, and if they do good there, we give them to a wrangler to ride on a movie set, and if they do good there, then we move them up to the act situation. Our horses are very well tuned and screened before they really get to a movie set with an actor.”

Amber, like John, came to “Heartland” already with a strong appreciation for Quarter Horses. Working on the show for the past five years has only increased their esteem for the breed.

“I own two Quarter Horses,” Amber says. “I’ve always had Quarter Horses. I love them. I love their minds. I’ve just always been drawn toward them. I love working on set with all the horses. You’ve got some fantastic actors – I guess you can call them actors – because they do know their roles, and they do become very familiar with the on-set procedures.

“Our lead horse, Stormy, he knows his job inside and out, to the point now that if we put a big red mark down where he’s supposed to land, I can ride in and not even look, and he’ll stop on that red mark. He’ll just wait there quietly until I get off. And if we’re in the barn doing a scene where he’s just supposed to be tied to his stall, he’ll be standing there, and he’ll have his head down, and as soon as ‘Action’ is called, he puts his head up, he perks his ears up, he looks alive … he knows his job. It’s incredible. We take it for granted how good they are.

“We can have three cameras right around him and 50 people standing in a semi-circle around his back end while he’s up on a close-up, and he doesn’t care. He says, ‘Yep, this is my job, I’m supposed to do this.’ And he knows as soon as they call ‘Cut,’ he can go back to sleep or whatever else he was doing. He’s quite incredible.

“He is one of the faces of the show. We did a signing a couple weeks back at a very elite jumping show. He was there, and he was in his own little stall beside our signing booth, and the amount of people that gathered around him to have their picture taken with him probably outnumbered the people that gathered around us. He’s definitely a hit. He’s just as much a part of the show as any of us.”

The show is in production from around April to late December each year, John says. A typical day of filming requires about 10 horses, although there are times where the wranglers haul in as many as two trailer loads of horses and the occasional load of cattle.

“The show is moving so fast,” John says of its production, “that you’re shooting two episodes at once. And the day you start shooting them, the next episodes are starting up. So you’ve got one crew going and shooting with a set of horses, and then you try to prepare horses for the next episode almost immediately. So it’s kind of like a machine. There’s not a lot of time for training. You have to do different things, and a lot of it is what I call ‘adverse horse work.’

“We train horses to jump in a trailer and load real quick. Well, people will bring a horse to Amy (the character) to fix because it doesn’t load in a trailer. Then you have to figure a way to cheat this horse and make him spook back from not loading in the trailer. We use everything from air hoses to a guy in a trailer with an umbrella, things like that, to do it. So that’s why I say that’s ‘adverse’ horse training, because you’re kind of screwing the horse up, and then you’ve got to spend time to rectify him out of it. It’s very painful, because we work so hard to get these horses foolproof to do the job around a movie set, and then the whole premise of this story is that Amy’s a horse whisperer, and people are always bringing her these horses that are screwed up for her to fix. So it might be a bucking horse or it might be a rearing horse or it might be a horse with an attitude, all different things like that.”

Each Sunday evening, Canadians enjoy a new episode of “Heartland,” the top-watched drama north of the U.S. border. There’s little doubt some of the credit for that success goes to the sprawling landscape of Alberta and majestic American Quarter Horses that share the screen with the human actors. They both clearly count as full-fledged cast members in this show.

The first two seasons of “Heartland” are now available in the United States through syndication over network television and over the GMC cable and satellite channel, and as a Netflix and Amazon “watch instantly” option. The series DVDs are available through the Heartland USA website, www.theheartlandranch.com, which also provides a listing of local stations and times where the show is broadcast each week.

Happy Holidays

December 19, 2011

Some horses, no sleigh, Merry Christmas any way!

Two Bits, the American Quarter Horse, as RudolphBy Samantha Eckert for America’s Horse Daily

Pulling on my coveralls and climbing aboard my horse with all her blankets on to go walk around in the snow, mosey around the property and feel the snowflakes on my face.

Going for that first ride in fresh snow is my favorite part of the holiday season.

Of course, opening presents comes in a close second. But sometimes it can be hard for my non-horsey family and friends to know what to get me.

If you have a friend, family member or child who is horse crazy, here are some great gift ideas!

Horse stocking stuffers:

  • Candy canes
  • Apples
  • Horse treats
  • Hoof picks
  • Combs
  • Travel size detangler, shampoo or conditioner
  • Lead rope
  • Name plates for halters or stall fronts
  • Tail bag
  • Nutrena feed coupons

Stocking stuffers for horse showers:

If you’re planning on throwing a party for your barn friends, here are some homemade healthy horse treats to try!

Cold Weather Tips

The cold weather can do horrible things to your tack. AQHA Professional Horseman Julie Goodnight suggests keeping a Crock-Pot with saddle oil in your tack room. The Crock-Pot keeps your oil nice and warm before cleaning time. The warmed oil will absorb more easily and help keep your tack protected against the cold winter wind.

I also like to keep a Crock-Pot with water in the tack room to dip my bits in and warm them up before I put them in my horse’s mouth. You can add some antiseptic mouth wash to the water to kill the germs that could cross between horses. It also gives you tack room a fresh minty smell!

This Christmas I will be heading out to see my 3-year-old filly, Lexi, with my mom. After we give Lexi her stocking and a good brushing, we’ll probably take her out for a ride in the snow. This will be the first winter I get to ride our homebred and trained filly through the fresh snow. Having a Quarter Horse and great family to share this holiday with, is my greatest blessing this Christmas.

We would love to hear your favorite horse gifts and winter weather tips!

The Noble Horse

December 15, 2011

The Christmas story of “The Nutcracker” gets told with American Quarter Horses.

Rich Costa and his American Quarter Horse, "Rusty," jumping through a ring of fire.

Rich Costa, a star performer, jumping American Quarter Horse, "Rusty," through a ring of fire. Photo courtesy of The Noble Horse Theatre.

There are very few people who haven’t heard of Clara and the dreams of sugar plums dancing through her head.

The Mouse King and the toy solider army are all brought to life in the lovely tale “The Nutcracker.”

But you might not know that the famous story was originally performed by equestrians until 1892, when Tchaikovsky turned the short story into a full-length ballet.

The Noble Horse Theatre in Chicago is the only theater in North America that performs “The Nutcracker” in its historic form. They take pride in this exciting rendition of the classical holiday tale.

During the “Nutcracker on Horseback” performance, horses and riders from around the world come together to help bring the story to life.

“Two of our star riders from Kazakhstan, Omar Chinibekov and Sergey Latokhin, perform breathtaking acrobatics on horseback as a part of the story,” The Noble Horse website says. Here, from its website, is more about the production:

The performers use a wide variety of horses to perform this spectacular show, including American Quarter Horses. They also use Andalusians, Lipizzans, Arabians, Thoroughbreds and Belgians.

The Noble Horse has more than 70 horses that begin their training at 5 years old. It takes about six years to finish their training as performance horses. Their draft horses also work double-time as carriage horses in the city for The Noble Horse Carriage Company. The carriage horses are stalled on the first floor and performing show horses on the second.

The riding hall where they perform “Nutcracker on Horseback” was built in 1872 and was renovated in 1999-2002. This made the facility climate controlled, handicap accessible and one of Chicago’s favorite destinations. It also houses Chicago’s only horse museum. The arena now seats 300 people and was restored to look like it did when it was first built.

Dan Sampson, the owner, producer and director of The Noble Horse and “Nutcracker on Horseback” has spent his entire life around horses. He grew up on a farm with his family raising horses and participating in rodeos. The head horse trainer, Laura Steffee, graduated from Salem College with a bachelor’s degree in equestrian studies. She has trained around the world and specializes in dressage.

At the closing of every show, all of the performing horses and riders line up to meet spectators.

The Noble Horse also performs “Quadrille: The Mystique of the Horse” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.”

For more information on the Noble Horse and show times, visit the Noble Horse Theatre website.