
An equestrienne's travel adventures around the planet, or, a traveller's equestrian adventures around the planet (occasionally on foot, sometimes chasing owls, almost always with The Raven). Just Ride - Anywhere!
Monday, March 5, 2012
Rollkur Revisited

Friday, November 4, 2011
Holly Farm New Zealand: Golden Anniversary
Friday November 4 2011
It's not often a farm celebrates their golden anniversary, but Holly Farm of New Zealand is doing just that.
It was 1864 and six generations ago when David Marshall's Scotch ancestors emigrated to the South Island of New Zealand and bought the land that is still Holly Farm today.
It was 1961 when David's father, Lester Marshall, began breeding Arabian horses. His first significant acquirement was Silver Sparkle, "one of the world's most royally bred stallions" at the time. By Oran out of Silver Fire,
"the Queen of Crabbet Park," a champion at the Richmond show and foundation mare of the famous Silver line, Silver Sparkle had been bred by the renowned Lady Wentworth of Crabbet Park in England.
Over the years, David has followed his father's tradition of acquiring select Arabians with classical clean lines and the athletic ability to perform to include in Holly Farms' breeding program, “to ensure that a suitable horse is maintained for the pleasure and use by anyone who appreciates the highest unique qualities found only in the Arabian breed.” The Holly Farm get has been and continues to be successful in the showring and on the endurance trails.
In celebration of Holly Farm's 50th anniversary and its contribution to the world of Arabian breeding, showing, and endurance riding, David Marshall has donated a breeding to either Zaddam or Pradaa as a fundraiser towards the efforts of the Mt Nimrod Club, hosting the first FEI World Qualifying Series for New Zealand towards the 2012 World Endurance Championship in Great Britain.
9-year-old Zaddam (by Anwar Sadat x HFA Mazriah) is half Crabbet, half Egyptian Arabian. David showed him as a yearling and as a 2-year-old, both times winning "A" class Supreme Championships. As Zaddam's career progressed, he won Champion Ridden and Champion Costume, and is also a CEI* level Open Endurance horse. His progeny have already been successful in the showring and will soon be tested as endurance horses.
11-year-old Pradaa is a Russian stallion (by Naazim x GG Sasha). Naazim is a half-brother to Naaddel, who was purchased by Lester Marshall and introduced to the Holly Farm breeding program in the 1970's. Naaddel was awarded the Roll of Merit for his successful, winning progeny. Pradaa is the sire of the first foal (out of HFA Mazlinta, from the Silver Fire line), born in October, of Holly Farm's 50th season.
"This breeding is donated to the Mt Nimrod Club who have gone way and beyond to support our sport of Endurance, and putting forward a full and complete schedule of CEI and CEN rides, which truly reflects what is possible," David says. "An inspiration, thank you." The ride will be held 11-13 November.
Contact Wendy Farnell for more details at jondy.tnc@xtra.co.nz.
(See my visits to Holly Farm in 2007:)
Holly Farm:
http://theequestrianvagabond.blogspot.com/2007/04/holly-farm.html
Holly Farm Stallions:
http://merritravels.endurance.net/2007/04/holly-farm-stallions.html
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Drinkers of the Wind Arabians: The Quest for the Perfect Horse
Tuesday July 12 2011
if you somehow miss that ardent sparkle in his eye, you definitely won't miss the fervor in his voice, when Robert Bouttier (known to all his friends as "Archie") expounds on his Drinkers of the Wind Arabian horses on his ranch in Bellevue, Idaho. He's always got a story to tell, and it always involves his horses.
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"Breeding Arabians is my passion," Archie says, as he launches into the detailed bloodlines of a particularly impressive month-old colt born to a home-bred mare DWA Croix Blanche and by the legendary racing and breeding stallion Monarch AH.
Call it passionate or obsessed, Archie is aiming for breeding the perfect horse. After decades of hard work, he's approaching perfection with the bloodlines he's ultimately focused on. The horses he breeds for racing and endurance carry some of the most outstanding Polish Arabian blood one can find in the US.
It was in the mid-1970's, when Archie, a commercial pilot, was furloughed from United Airlines, and moved to Idaho to ski and work in a ski shop in Sun Valley. And it was there he met an endurance rider who later introduced Archie to Wendell Robie, the founder of the Tevis Cup. "Listening to his friend talk about the endurance rides made Archie want to try the sport," says Helen, "and another friend who worked at the ski shop got him Tezan, Archie's first endurance horse."
That was in 1975. "I didn't even know how to ride," says Archie, "I bought a Steuben saddle, and I started going to CTRs (Competitive Trail Rides). Tezan was the greatest horse that ever lived. He took care of himself, and he took care of me. I couldn't override him because he wouldn't let me.
"On our first CTR, we got second place and Best Condition. The lady judging said there was no way Tezan could get BC because, she said, 'the guy can't ride!' Tezan ended up getting BC anyway, and after that, I ended up trying endurance riding because there were a lot less rules."
Archie and Tezan finished Top Ten in a couple of endurance rides in the West. "I didn't know what I was doing. That horse Tezan, he just took care of me." Archie's second endurance horse was Mateus, whom he got as a 3-year-old, and kept till he died at 35 in 2009, and whom he considered his best friend. Archie then discovered Ride & Ties, which he was quite successful at for 4-5 years until his running partner retired. Archie also dabbled in polo, which was popular in the Wood River valley for a time. "Then I got married and sort of didn't do anything with horses anymore."
Luckily for the Arabian breed, the horse fever started burning in Archie again in the mid-1980's, and he got interested in Arabian racing. Archie knew the Wrigley family, who owned a big Arabian ranch on Santa Catalina Island off the California coast, so he contacted their trainer Joe Dawkins and asked where he could find some racehorses. Dawkins recommended Sabson as a stallion for breeding.
"I asked him who Sabson was, and he said, 'You'd better do your homework!'"
Sabson's race record was somewhat mediocre, showing 2 wins in 5 starts at 3 and 4. "Back in the old days, they started racing 3-year-olds at 1 1/8 miles, 1 1/4 miles," Archie says. "They didn't have 5 furlong races. Then after Sabson's racing career, they made him a Park Horse. He was Reserve Champion Park Horse in Scottsdale after he raced." And while Sabson had proven his athleticism and versatility, Arabian show breeders didn't really fancy him. "It was the 'show horse thing.' Sabson didn't have a classic show horse head, so nobody was using him."
Lucky for Archie. "Sabson has the bloodlines of the two most important and prolific racing Arabian mares: Sabellina and Forta." These two mares have since become the pivotal aspect of the Drinkers of the Wind breeding program.
Sabson's sire Czort "is the only horse they made a Shrine to at the Polish National Stud," Archie says. Czort raced 19 times over 4 years, winning 13 races, 8 of them stakes races. He won at all distances and carried up to 146 pounds. As a sire in Poland, he sired the most winners of stakes races than any other sire. Some of his offspring (including Sabson) went on to win championships, in racing, performance, and the show ring.
Czort is out of Forta, "among the greatest Polish Arabians of all time." While her race record was unremarkable (2 wins from 11 starts over 2 seasons), her successful production record has been unequaled. Forta produced 20 foals by 11 different stallions, 18 of which started at the track and were race winners, five of those winning Classic races. Additionally, some were champions in the show ring, and most of them were great producers in their own right.
On Sabson's dam side, Sabellina reigns supreme. She was a "perhaps the finest race mare ever to leave Poland," (7 starts in two years, 5 wins including the Derby and the Oaks), and she also became a superior broodmare. Her 16 foals won championships on the track and in the show ring. Twelve of them won stakes races in Poland. Most of them also went on to produce great offspring on the track, in performance, and in the show ring.
"The Polish Arabians - everybody thinks they're bigger," Archie explains, "but the Poles breed for 14 2 1/2 hands. And short cannon bone - that's why they're so fast. The long cannon bone is the weak link - that's where all the leverage is, the tendons and ligaments - that's where all the force is. A short back is stronger than a long back, a short cannon bone is stronger than a long cannon bone."
In 1986 Archie bought the then-16-year-old stallion Sabson from Gilbert Van Camp Jr. At the same time, Archie won his first Arabian race as an owner in 1986. He became one of the founding members of the Arabian Jockey Club in the U.S. He began breeding his mares to Sabson when they were finished racing; then, enamored with - or obsessed by - the Forta and Sabellina lines, he started acquiring broodmares with that breeding, and mating them with Sabson. "For some people, it doesn't make a difference. But to get that close to Sabellina? I mean, like a granddaughter of Sabellina? And you're breeding her to a stallion that's got Sabellina in him? or Forta?" His eyes still sparkle with astonishment at the thought.
The validity of this mating nick at Drinkers of the Wind Arabians (named after the book of the same name written in 1942 by Carl Raswan) has not only produced some successful racehorses but some outstanding endurance horses.
As of 2010, DWA-bred horses have racked up 104 first place wins, 206 Top Ten finishes, and 53 Best Conditions in endurance riding in the U.S.
Nobody would know this better than Christoph Schork of Global Endurance Training Center in Utah, who in September of 2010, was acknowledged as world record holder of the most first place finishes at endurance events.
Schork has ridden seven DWA horses since 2000, to 69 first place finishes. The first of these was DWA Sabku +//, foaled in 1993. DWA Sabku started on the racetrack, but he didn't take to it. Endurance was where he belonged. Making his first endurance start as a 6-year-old, he competed over 12 seasons, finishing 69 of 74 rides, 17 of those first place finishes, 61 of them Top Ten. He completed 10 of 11 100-mile rides, and he might have won the Tevis in 2004, if his rider Ali Khalfan from the UAE hadn't fallen off and broken his arm during the ride, and, still riding with a broken arm, if he hadn't gotten off the trail and lost for several miles. They still finished fifth. DWA Sabku +// raced an incredible 1335 miles in 2002 alone, finishing all 23 of his starts that year. He is just 40 miles short of 4000 career miles.
Also ridden by Schork, DWA Powerball and DWA Millenium were similarly tough and sound. Over 8 seasons, DWA Powerball has completed 71 of 74 starts, 2 of 3 100's, has 35 1st place finishes, 64 Top Tens, 7 Best Conditions, and a total of 3720 miles. Over 8 seasons, DWA Millenium has completed 39 of 43 starts, 4 of 6 100's (including a Tevis), has 14 first places, 32 Top Tens, and a total of 2210 miles. Both are still competing this year.
A good portion of endurance rider Tennessee Mahoney's career 5680 miles have come on DWA horses, including DWA Pearl (5 seasons, 1250 miles, 29 finishes in 34 starts, 9 first places, 6 Best Conditions), and DWA Sabella +/ (5 seasons, 1655 miles, 30 finishes in 34 starts, 10 first places, 6 Best Conditions).
Speed, soundness, toughness, and longevity - they don't come much more solid than that.
Sabson died in 1999 at Drinkers of the Wind ranch at 29 years of age. "He was always a gentleman," Archie says. Archie now uses two stallions on his ranch, DWA Ziffalat (a sound, 4-season racehorse who traces back to Forta on his topside, and Forta and Sabellina on the damside) and Moment of Valor (a sound, 4-season racehorse; a son of Wiking, with Sabellina and double Forta on his damside). He's got frozen semen from several stallions, including Monarch AH ("the Secretariat of Arabian racing", with 19 wins - 13 of them stakes races - in 23 starts, and who traces back to Sabellina and Forta on his topside), and Samsheik (a 5-season racehorse tracing back to Forta and Sabellina through his sire Sambor - a full brother to Sabson).
Despite retiring from piloting airliners in 2003, and notwithstanding the number of Arabians of all ages that Archie owns on his ranch (56 or 57 when we counted, depending on the definition of "own"), Archie isn't much interested in riding. He did 3 Limited Distance rides in 2003 and 2004, but now any spare time is spent taking care of his ranch and horses, growing and cutting and stockpiling his own hay (and cutting hay for farmers in the area) - and following his passion for breeding, looking for that perfect horse.
He has a few in mind that he's bred that he'd consider "pretty close to perfect": DWA Zahir, a 4-year-old gelding by DWA Ziffalat out of a Sabson daughter; DWA Barack, a 3-year-old bay gelding by Moment of Valor out of a Sabson granddaughter; and DWA Malik (by Monarch AH out of a Sabson granddaughter) a 4-year-old recently bought for endurance by Bar Lazy Y Ranch.
If the likes of DWA Sabku +//, and the new babies on the ground are any indication, one would tend to think Archie's getting pretty darn close to the perfect horse.
To contact Archie and find out more about his available horses, see www.dwarabians.com
Monday, February 28, 2011
2011 Scottsdale Arabian Show - "Look at those Hairy Horses!"
Sunday February 27 2011
Mouths agape, the teenaged girls-used-to-show-horses stared at Rusty and the hairy Redford as they trotted around the arena in the Scottsdale Arabian Show Parade of Champions. "Look at those hairy horses!" It's the first time (we believe) that endurance horses have ever appeared in the Scottsdale Arabian Show Parade of Champions. (Aileen Baca also rode in the Parade of Champions, on her horse R Star Ghostdancer). It was definitely the first time that horses have appeared at the Scottsdale Arabian Show that have not had every excess hair clipped from their bodies.
Rusty and Redford had won the 50 miler, and Aileen and R Star Ghostdancer had won the 25 miler at the AAHA Halloween endurance ride in October in Scottsdale, and were included in this Parade of Champions.
Various Championship winners from the 2011 SAS rode in the Parade (English pleasure, Western pleasure, working cow horse, mounted native costume, and others), all perfectly manicured and polished and clipped. The two hairy endurance horses - especially Redford - looked like shaggy bears compared to the other slick and sleek horses - but they showed off just as well and they looked just as good (better, in my biased eye). And they were most approachable: Redford was constantly surrounded by kids who came up to touch him, pet him, and hug him, because he was so quiet and well-mannered.
Redford did get scared a few times before the Parade, by not only the WooWooing people and the popping whips and the shaking trash bag and the hands banging on banners and fences, but by the startled wide-eyed horses that were rearing and spooking and snorting and being chased into the arena. Rusty had to walk Redford far away from the Madding Crowd every time that happened.
This year's Parade of Champions was an historic event where, as Kevin put it, "The Two Worlds Meet," and indeed they did. Redford had never been so primped on (and still managed to look wooly and rugged), and some show people surely had never seen such an endurance Arabian before.
Many more photos at:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2011SAS/
Saturday, February 26, 2011
2011 Scottsdale Arabian Show: The Athlete and The Adored
Saturday February 25 2011
On one side of the Scottsdale Arabian Show venue, the Athletes took the stage in their Championships and showed off their agility. The working cow horses do it all - combining "the thrill of cutting and the finesse of reining." The working cow horse does a bit of cutting, spinning, rolling back, wheeling, sprinting, flying lead changes, sliding stops - and a bit of thinking. You can see some of them change horsenalities when their cow steps in the arena - their whole body shifts forward, all attention on that cow.
You can see some of them eyeballing the cow as they are turning it. **(There were also reined cow horse classes... are these two the same thing?)
I lusted after one of them (#880! More pictures of him in the slide show and photo galleries from today). He won his class. I bet he'd make an outstanding endurance horse, as would many of these physically fit, sturdy and well-built horses.
Near as I can figure from the prize money listings, first place in the Championship classes receive from $125 to $1600.
On the other side of the venue, the Adored took center stage in their Halter classes.
These finely chiseled, delicate, fine-legged, wide-eyed, head-tossing, shampooed and shined and greased two-year-olds showed off their looks. Winners of the Championship classes took home $12,483.33, Reserve Champion $6,241.66. (Yearling Champions received nearly $40,000.)
At higher levels of Hunt Seat Equitation, riders sometimes switch horses as part of their test, and are judged on how well they ride a horse other than their own. Wouldn't it would be quite interesting to turn the tables on these two classes of Arabians? They are the same breed but oh so different in every way. Stick the Working Cow Horse in the Halter arena and let them show off their looks, and stick the Halter Horse under a Western saddle and point them at a cow.
Now, that would be a show to see!
Slide show here:
Many more photos here:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2011SAS/
Friday, February 25, 2011
2011 Scottsdale Arabian Show: So Many Championships, So Little Time
Friday February 25 2011
The pace is picking up for the final weekend of the Scottsdale Arabian Show.
Today included championships in three different arenas in (among others) hunter pleasure and english and western pleasure, western side-saddle, older stallions and mares halter horses, show hack, and reining. Many classes have both Arabian, and half-Arabian/Anglo-Arabian divisions; most have amateur and pro divisions; some also have age divisions.
The hunting over fences continued all day in another arena (some girls so small they could practically walk under the horses on which they fearlessly flew over fences with);
the cutting horses started their classes today in still another arena.
Today's highlight was the half-Arabian/anglo-Arabian mounted native costume class with a dozen entries. Finally, this class took place in the main outdoor arena! The sun was hiding behind clouds, so the costumes didn't sparkle, but they were still dazzling! Green, red, royal blue, gold and silver, the high stepping horses sashayed around the arena to the Lawrence of Arabia music. I'm glad I wasn't a judge because I couldn't have picked my favorite.
Occasionally an organization or barn will throw a party for everybody. Yesterday the Modern Arabian Horse magazine threw a party because they received the 2010 Pegasus Media Award from the United States Equestrian Federation in the Association Publication category.
Today Royal Arabians, of Mesa, Arizona, served catered food and had an open bar while they showed off some of their horses.
This happened during the Native Costume class... so many horses to see, so little time! I made it back to their barn after the costume class to see NW Siensational, a handsome bay who was the 2010 US National Champion Gelding in Hand.
Two more days of this year's show are left, and some of the championship riders and horses will have some of the Southwest's wild winter weather of 2011 to deal with. A 'cold and wet winter storm and associated cold front' is moving in tomorrow afternoon, with a 100% chance of rain Saturday night. They're usually right about rain around here when it's predicted, so when the outdoor arenas turn to slush, it will be interesting to see how and where all the championship classes will be squeezed into, with the crowds who would normally be sitting outside watching them.
Included in Sunday afternoon's festivities is the Parade of Champions, in which two local endurance riders are schedule to ride: Clydea Hastie, and Rusty Toth on Redford!
Slide show here:
Many more photos (including lots of the gorgeous Native Costumes) here:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2011SAS/
Thursday, February 24, 2011
2011 Scottsdale Arabian Show - All The Pretty Horses
Thursday February 24 2011
At the Scottsdale Arabian Show, you have your Working Horses and your Pretty Horses.
Many halter classes for the Pretty Horses today - 3 and 4 and 5-year-old mares and stallions in the morning, and yearling colts and fillies in the afternoon. I will forever think of them as the Woo Woo classes, because that's the cheer you hear going around the arena when a group's favorite horse comes in the gate and trots/props/leaps/bounces/floats around the arena. "WooWooWoo!" The background beat is the kicking of trash cans, the shaking of chairs, the banging on anything that makes noise. The showier and just-on-the-edge-of-control the horses act, (or not), the more it pleases the crowd.
Meanwhile, reining continues all day on one end of the venue (I missed Fireman), while on the other end of the venue - the cowboy barn end - the calves have been trucked in for the Cutting and Working Cow Horse that will begin tomorrow and Saturday.
Hunters take up another outdoor arena, while in the covered Equidome, classes vary from Driving to English and Hunter and Western Pleasure to Sidesaddle, and the single Arabian Mounted Native Costume class of the day. Such fun, colorful, imaginative, elaborate outfits of the native Bedouin type can run you into the thousands of dollars - and well worth it for all the time that must be put in making them. Classes are judged on 75% performance and manners and 25% on "appointments" - whatever that is. The costumed horses and riders are very popular with the crowd, though the class itself is short - doesn't last more than 10 minutes, and there's not even one class a day at this year's Show (and Tuesday's class had only 4 riders in it).
Then, finally, came the Wild and Pretty Horses - in the Arabian Liberty class. You bring your stallion into the arena, turn him loose and let him "perform" - i.e. run around and show off - for 2 minutes to some lively music. When the music stops, you have 2 minutes to catch him. Some of the horses show off mightily, which gets the crowd going, which gets the horse going more, which really gets the crowd cheering. One horse today did such a quick spin while showing off that he threw a shoe. One girl (and the man with her) could not get their horse's halter off because he seemed to not want his ears touched - but after his 'show', he walked right up to the girl to have his halter put back on. (There were only 4 in today's Liberty class.)
There's a final for this on Saturday where the winner gets $5000. All for looking pretty! Presumably that will buy him a good stash of carrots, in addition to gaining some fame and girls.
The Scottsdale Arabian Show is building toward its conclusion on Sunday and the Championship halter classes, Championships for reining and working cow horses, Championships for the different riding disciplines and driving. Which will all prove to be interesting, since another cold, wet, windy winter storm is coming through (sunny Arizona!) starting on Saturday.
Might be a lot of Wet Working and Pretty Horses at the end of the day.
Slide show here:
Many more photos here:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2011SAS/
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
2011 Scottsdale Arabian Show - Bling and Boing
Tuesday February 22 2011
Most endurance riders aren't particularly known for dressing up in the saddle. We have other things on our minds, like correct saddle fit over 50 miles, the right boots (our horses and our own), to biothane or not to biothane.
Long ago my trail riding friend was rather appalled I didn't have a 'color.' She insisted I go with one, so I chose red - one of my Thoroughbred Stormy's racing colors. I have to admit, he does look mighty fine decked out in red polos, red saddle pad, black and red bridle, with red saddlebags matching my black and red tights, shirt, and chaps, though I've only gone to that extreme 'costume' maybe twice in my life. Or maybe it was just once, just for pictures. I don't know what happened to the pictures.
A few endurance riders coordinate their clothes colors with their horse's tack... or at least some of them coordinate their horse's tack colors... or not.
Fashion and bling is the name of the game at the Scottsdale Arabian Show.
The dressage riders are neatly attired in their required 'costume', and their horses' manes are neatly braided.
Western pleasure riders have the bling blouses that blindingly sparkle rainbow colors in the sun. I haven't raided the shopping tents yet, but I did see the price of two sparkly tops, one for $900 and one for $1500. I also saw some glitter on a bathroom floor... I wonder if this came from one such top? If so that was like gold dust.
Even the Western reiners, mostly men, and many of them the ultra cowboy type, slip into the bling mode, if ever so subtly, with the silver bling trim on their saddles, silver bling trim on the western bridles, and the silver big bling belt buckles and the jingling silver spurs.
But nothing outshines the Native Costumes. They are almost fancy enough to make an endurance rider want to take up Arabian Mounted Native Costume competition. They're gorgeous.
There were only 4 riders in today's single Anglo-Arabian Mounted Native Costume class; as one previous reader mentioned, it was fun watching them in their high stepping hand gallop around the arena to the Arabian dance music. A couple of the horses knew exactly how to sashay and make their tassles swing and swish back and forth. One horse's knees almost came up to his eyeballs as he trotted around the ring. Fantastic fun! The biggest disappointment of it all is that the costumes classes are held under a dark, covered arena. No chance for the bling to sparkle. (Same with the western pleasure.) Come on - put these classes out in the sun!
There's the Bling... and there's the Boing.
One can expect most of these show horses live in stalls (certainly while here at the show) and, like racehorses, they only get out once a day to work and cool down. One would also expect they're fed a lot of grain, so when they get out, they have a lot of vroom to blow off.
This Anglo-Arab was feeling terrific. He could get some air. And he did it a lot. He had the high knee action - is this partially natural, or is this the heavy wedged shoes he wears?
Slide show here:
And many more entertaining photos (including the boinging lunger) here:
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2011SAS/index.html





