ECAHS NEWSLETTER
Transcription
ECAHS NEWSLETTER
ECAHS NEWSLETTE R Feature : BER-LEN ARABIANS page 1; Special President’ Announcement page 3; Farm and Misc. News pages 3 –9; Al-Marah Announcement page 10; Directions to BOD meeting June 8 page 11; Membership Application page 12; CCXX Flyer page 13 EASTERN CRABBET ARABIAN HORSE SOCIETY Our Philosophy The Eastern Crabbet Arabian Horse Society was organized on December 4, 1994 for the preservation of Arabian horses that trace their lineage to the original Arabian horses utilized by W.S. and Lady Anne Blunt, Judith, Lady Wentworth, C. Covey, the Crabbet Stud of England, and the Sheyk Obeyd Stud of Egypt. The Society's purpose is to promote the purity, beauty, utility, tractability and versatility of Arabian horses descending from the Crabbet sources. Lady Ann Copied and reprinted with permission Double R Magazine Summer 1984 May 2013 Page 2 ECAHS NEWSLETTE R Page 3 ECAHS NEWSLETTE R President’s Announcement The June 8th BOD meeting location has been changed to the home of Gaye and Mike Whitaker Cross Over W Arabians. Directions on page 11. Please RVSP Mike and Gaye by phone 540320-4892 or email wmwhit@swva.net Check with Buzz more for conference call information. This will be a pitch in lunch at 12:00 p.m. Meeting to follow. All interested parties are invited. A meeting at Joanne Garofalo’s will be announced. Farm and Misc. News Congratulations: Karlan Downing and Ray Lemaster for receiving the two very prestigious awards from Region 9. Dr. Karlan Downing 2012 Region IX Breeder of the year. Ray Lemaster 2012 Region IX Select Rider We are so happy for you two and proud of your accomplishments. It is fantastic to see two members who have done so much for ECAHS receive recognitions for their hard work and contributions to the Arabian breed in Region 9.. Syrocco Melody ridden by Lynn Hartmann won the Middleweight Division of the 2013 Cheshire Competitive Trail Ride. Melody was bred by Meg Sleeper, who was also the breeder of Syrocco Reveille an ECAHS 2012 Horse of the Filly arrives at SunSet Arabians 05/27/2013 Dandaloo Kadet x Inshallah Rendezvous Page 4 ECAHS NEWSLETTE R Farm & Misc. News News from Tracy Oliver Aulways Magic has earned his Legion of Masters and Legion of Excellence! His final points were earned at the 2013 Scottsdale Arabian Show, so he is now Aulways Magic ++++// Aulways Magic ++++// is a 2004 Chestnut Sabino Stallion who is 82.87% Crabbet/Blunt breed, certified by ECAHS. Sire Aul Magic +/ and Dam Aur Silver Myst Aulways Magic ++++// was trained and shown by Patience Prine Carr of Watsonville, CA and is now home with his proud owner Tracy Oliver of Pasco, WA Aulways Magic++++// was ranked #3 in the nation by the Arabian Horse Association in 2012 and #9 in 2011. He has earned 25 Championships 14 of which were Regional Championships. 13 Reserve Championships 2 were National wins, 4 were Regional. 8 National Top Tens. 4 top Fives. 5 Top Fours, 4 Top Threes. 60 First Places, 27 Seconds places, and 15 third place awards. Aulways Magic ++++// was the USEF Horse of the Year for the Arabian Breed for Third and Fourth Level Dressage and the USEF! Ravenhill Arabians from Sherry Morse. True Blue Arabians True Blue Arabians welcomed a new filly to the herd on May 5th. She is a double granddaughter of our beloved True Blue Britni. Her father is True Blue Goldmine, ECAHS horse of the year honoree by Bl Majestic Gold and out of True Blue Britni. Her dam is True Blue Rockette out of True Blue Britni and by Rappees Rustler. This foal is double Al Marah Rapid, Virginia Kelsall's wonderful stallion. She is also double Mishma who is a As far as showing, we attended the first Lehigh Val- full brother of Rapid's. Thanks to Bl Maley Dressage Association jestic Gold she also is (LVDA) show on May 19th and finished with scores of Double Rissalix. We look 65.1785% for Training 2 and forward to many happy years watching her grow 70.4% for Training 3. That put us fourth and 2nd in our and hopefully joining our classes (both of which had brood mare band. Bill , Sharon and Will the same 9 horses entered). I'll attach some pic- Noonan tures that were taken at the show. . We went to the NJTRA 100/80/50/30 to do the 2 day 50 mile ride on Mother's Day weekend and came in 5th in our ride. I was really pleased with how well Tsornin did over the two days of riding, especially considering it was unseasonably warm and humid on Saturday. Our next ride will be at the end of July and I'll have to see how I'm doing before I decide if we'll do the 2 day 50 or a one day ride. Page 5 Things happen for a reason…… submitted by Sari Bolnick I am a firm believer that things happen for a reason. Kobe’s first show season last year was very exciting but our lease ran out on the pony we were leasing and we were now horseless. Barbara Cohen of Thorn Valley Farm in Oxford, PA was in need of another lesson pony. Dawn Jones-Low of Faerie Court Farm was looking to sell her 10 year old Arabian gelding AAA Legend of the Seas (Naibara Blaze Man x HSA Seamist). I did some research on this gelding and got very excited. He loved to jump and was trained in dressage. His babies were successful. He was pony size and he was Crabbet. What more could I ask for? I was not in a position to purchase a horse so I thought, perhaps a lease? In early December, one of our trainers Katie Weagley and I drove to Vermont (and back in one day) to meet Legend. Katie rode him and was quite excited and really wanted this horse to come back to Pennsylvania. That made me very excited. The following Sunday Bill Noonan and I drove back to Vermont and we brought Legend home to Thorn Valley Farm. It was love at first sight for all of us. I knew this when Barbara kissed Legend’s nose as he was walking into the barn. Barbara got her lesson pony, Kobe got a pony to ride and love, and Legend got (especially) a little, 12 year old girl to call his own. But it doesn’t stop there. ECAHS NEWSLETTE R For the past few months, Kobe has been working very hard learning to ride Legend. Small children ride Legend in their lessons and even grownups do. Everyone LOVES Legend. He is smart, his conformation is correct, awesome jumper, lovable….. the list goes on and on. I have fallen for this little chestnut pony. No surprise there! Now comes along Haley Korejwo. She is one of Chrystal Wood’s (Kobe and Legend’s trainer) students and is on the Penn State Berks Equestrian Team. She is a fabulous jumper. Haley has now joined team Legend. This is called win-win. Haley really enjoys working with Legend and all that work will pay off for Kobe in years to come. Legend is very happy jumping so this adds some variety to his work schedule. He’s a very happy pony and I have one very happy granddaughter. We went to the NJHAHA Arabian show this past weekend. It was so much fun watching this little chestnut pony. Kobe won her Intro A dressage test on him and Haley was 14’2 Working Hunter Champion. They are qualified for Regionals and Sport Horse Nationals. Fun! There were two things that really made me say wow! The first was while Haley was warming up Legend before one of her classes, I saw Legend do a leg yield. I wondered if Haley asked that of him or what. She came around and asked me if I had seen what he did. I smiled. Then I see our chestnut pony doing the most lovely side passes. Kobe’s mouth dropped. All these little hidden things that Haley is discovering with him. The second thing was Kobe was scared to go into the Sport Horse Under Saddle – JTR class. She loves to canter Legend at home, but was a bit scared to do it at a show. So we scratched her. A little while later she came to me and said “Mom Mom, I want to try that class.” So I re-entered her, she completed it, cantering and all, with big smiles…. She overcame her fear of cantering in a class. We have come a long way in just a few months and the possibilities are endless for Kobe and Legend. She knows that her hard work and determination will pay off down the road, of course with the help of Team Legend (Barbara, Ron, Chrystal, Katie, CiCi, Dawn, Haley, Kobe and me). To use Haley’s word….. this journey with Legend is going to be “epic”. Kobe meeting with AAA Legend of the Seas for the first time , December 10, 2012. Page 6 This is a slightly edited version of a story written by Robert “Bob” Joder, youngest son of Anna Best Joder, which appeared some years ago in the Joder Arabian Ranch (JAR) newsletter in a column known as “Bob’s Bits”. In the story, we see how Anna Best Joder’s ranch came to be. ECAHS NEWSLETTE R mother, I was the only one left in Cheyenne to help as my brother and sister had already left for college. So, I was given the task of hauling our 35 horses to Boulder on weekends in our two-ton Ford stake truck. I was alone in the job unless I was able to recruit a friend. When this effort started, I knew our family needed all the help it could get, so I just did it. The Move by Bob Joder It was 1953 and I became aware of my life changing when suddenly my father, Glen H. Joder, was not around anymore. When he did come around it was to get me to help him pack something into boxes for him. I had no script for this or my mother’s actions and no one was telling me what was going on. Finally, even a 17-year-old that still believed the earth was solid realized that a divorce was happening. This divorce signaled the demise of the Cheyenne, Wyoming ranch and the beginning of the ranch near Boulder, Colorado that would become the Joder Arabian Ranch (JAR), operated by my mother Anna Best. The ranch was apparently part of the divorce agreement and was originally some 600 acres in size, although today it has shrunk to around 330 acres. In the move down to the new location in Colorado, in 1954, the last to leave were the horses. And, besides my At the time, I didn’t know that my life’s path would soon take me to college at Colorado State University, then through a series of jobs throughout the West with the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management, before coming full circle in the mid-1970s to return to the Joder Arabian Ranch to take the reins from my mother, Anna Best. But back to the story of the move. There was a wooden loading chute in Cheyenne and another one at the ranch site just north of the town of Boulder with two hours of narrow two-lane highway in between. Because the truck bed was so high, the chutes were long, angling up at about 45 degrees. My job was to get each horse up that the chute, down the highway to Colorado, then back down the chute at the other end— for as many loads as it took. Although I’m sure others helped me with this work from time to time, all I remember is facing the task without the help of any better experience than my own. One load in particular is still with me and will always be with me. I had recruited a friend and between us we had loaded a couple of fillies with ease. The next filly proved a different story. I tried everything my 17-yearold brain could come up with to load her. When I began to lose it, my friend and I had her about halfway up the chute. The filly lost it with me, also. She reared up, fell over back ward and hit the ground on her back and head at the start of the chute. She was dead. This memory is as clear as if it had happened today. I stood in the chute waiting for her to get to her feet, but she didn’t move. My friend didn’t know what to do, nor did I. Except that I was young enough to cry—so crying is what I did. I went to the house to tell my mother that I had just killed one of her fillies. Through my sobs, I got the story out. To her credit, she heard me out and instructed me to drag the body out of the way and to finish the load and be on the way. She would take care of the filly. She asked only one question: “Which filly was it?” Page 7 Well, I finished my tasks in moving horses to Boulder. I stayed behind, living with my Dad, while I finished high school in Cheyenne. I made weekend trips to the new Boulder ranch from time to time, but school and my forestry career were becoming priorities for the next many years. Horses were a thing of the past—or so it seemed. A coda, by Daniel Joder, grandson of Anna Best and one of Robert Joder’s three sons: Fast forward to today, a warm day in late May of 2013… We are now deep into the process of “deconstructing” the Joder Arabian Ranch in preparation for its sale to the City of Boulder for use as Open Space. By July of this year, all the horses will be gone, most of the infrastructure will be gone, we will be gone, and Joder Arabian Ranch will be gone. It has been a tremendous, near 60year run, but the cycle has come to an end. Although it is a bittersweet time, we are quite happy that the land will not be developed and will be open to the public for all future generations. As part of this deconstruction, we are removing a ropesconfidence course, three outdoor arenas, numerous horse shelters and pens, two mobile homes used for employees ECAHS NEWSLETTE R and instructors, and a large stable, lounge and classroom area—and all the while we are stirring up dust heavy with nearly 60 years of horsehuman history. Anna Best, my grandmother, was a not-very-tall, fire-in-the -eyes, strong-willed, welleducated (and very opinionated!) woman before her time—a published playwright, expert in Arabian horse breeding and lineage, and founding editor of the national Arabian Horse News magazine, owner and operator of the Hobby Horse Gift Shop as well as the matriarch of JAR for many years. At one point during her tenure, JAR was home to the Rocky Mountain School of Horsemanship, the Gift Shop, a controlled breeding program, a boarding operation, and some 90 Arabian horses including the award winning Arabian stallion, Ibn Rogue. Robert “Bob” Joder, my Dad, and his wife Eloise Witt Joder (she was Colorado Horse Council president, 20012003), did eventually return to Joder Arabian Ranch in the 1970s to take the reins from my grandmother. They began the process of transforming JAR into less of a breeding operation and more of a community in which the horse and human could gently interact and learn from one another. Bob and Eloise, upon reassessing the carrying capacity of the pastures, began to limit the breeding and reduced the size of the Joder herd drastically. They then expanded the boarding operation and introduced an extensive array of equine activities to bring the community into contact with the horse—beginner-oriented horse shows, 4-H meetings and activities, costume horse shows, equineassisted therapy, equine workshops, dressage, western and hunter-jumper instruction, to name a few— always with natural horsemanship techniques as the foundational philosophy. Three generations of kids (mostly girls it would seem!) have grown up and learned life’s most important lessons while working with horses at the Joder Ranch. As to my Dad, he evolved as a horseman well beyond what he was at age 17 (see the introductory story) to become an accomplished natural horseman and, to use a popular term, “horse whisperer”. In recent years, JAR has hosted Caroline Roy’s nonprofit Rocky Mountain EquiRhythm (RMER) offering equine therapy, riding lessons, equine workshops, summer camp programming for children, graduate student equine Page 8 therapy internships and other associated equine activities. Happily, once JAR shuts its gate, Caroline and RMER will continue operations at the nearby La Rienda Ranch here in Boulder County. So, after some 20 years under the stern eye of Anna Best Joder and nearly 40 years under the direction of Bob and Eloise Joder (with help from sons Dan, Brian and Greg, and many, many boarders and volunteers), the Joder Arabian Ranch will end its wonderful run. With equus as our teacher, we hope that we have contributed in some small way to the betterment of the lives of the many folks who were part of our horse community over the years and we thank them for their support. We also hope that the Joder Arabian Ranch experience will continue to ripple through the universe in a positive way long after we are gone. A final postscript: The 2001 Benefactor of the Breed award from the Eastern Crabbet Arabian Horse Society (ECAHS) given to my grandmother, Anna Best Joder, for her contributions was a wonderful surprise when we learned of it this spring. Although my grandmother is no longer alive, my father has received the plaque, the letter, and the Crabbet/Blunt breeding certificate for the last Joder horse, Jasara Ebn Walad (#566474). Now retired from horse ranching, and somewhat handi- ECAHS NEWSLETTE R capped from a head injury suffered in a fall from a horse, Dad was quite emotionally moved by the honor—he, along with the entire Joder family, thanks you for this recognition. We also wish to personally thank Mrs. Virginia Kelsall for her detective work in tracking us down to deliver the award. All the best to the ECAHS as you continue to maintain the breed. ECAHS Benefactor Award given to Anna Best Joder in 2001 and the painting is of my Dad when he was 16 or so. The painting was done by Alice Kingham-Lechevre, a BritishFrench artist and good friend of Anna Best. Eloise and Bob Joder Bob Joder on Jasara May 2013 (from L to R): Anna Best, daughter Patricia, Unknown horse, son Robert (Bob), Unknown Sheik, Glenn Joder (standing), and son Donald (kneeling). Jasara Their Last Arabian Page 9 News from Rebecca Spicer I still have Bart ( Cayuga Vartan ) and he is still my buddy. He was 32 April 19th. He is the Crabbet Arabian chestnut gelding with a big white blaze and 4 white stockings. We did the Old Dominium 100, Florida 100 and many many of those wonderful New York Rides when Punky and Don Fox were there. We Top 10d in some National Ride one Year. He has many Championships. He has had Cushings for years so still gets his Pergolide . Has had a few abcesses but new farrier ( Josh Egging ) and wonderful Vet (Dr Michael Odian) have him fur side up and hungry and smiling. It's OK for me to ride him again after last trimming. Marilyn Miller says 10 miles of conditioning for every mile in competition so together we must have done 50,000 miles !!!!!! He can go in and out of the barn to his stall any time he wants and has the pasture all day and our front yard all night. A wonderful part of our family. Nobody else has ridden him since I bought him when he was 10 years old. I love this horse and can't even imagine not having him any more ECAHS NEWSLETTE R SUBMITTED BY JOANNE GAROFALO A HORSE STORY by Brianna Stegall, age 12 The most magical creature on the planet Earth is the horse. I believe this because they tell a story. Also they tell you how they feel, how they think, and how much you love them. They are also one of the most beautiful creatures. I say this because the way they move, the way they look at you with their eyes, and how they feel what you feel. In this I will tell you how I feel about these beautiful, magical creatures. I said horses tell a story because they tell you all kinds of things as in their feelings, their thoughts, and they tell you they know you love them. Every horse has a story to tell. Congratulations Polly Knoll. The Pyramid Society in Lexington, Ky., is awarding me their Trustees Award for devotion and promotion of the horses which will be presented at the Embassy Suites Hotel in the ballroom on Friday, June 7th. The honor usually goes to major breeders, etc., so I was MOST pleasantly surprised! Polly Knoll I said they’re beautiful because they really are they move without a care, without worries. Their eyes are really beautiful they are just so pure, kind, and gentle. Lastly, but most importantly every horse has a free spirit. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The most magical creatures are the horses. I say this because they tell you a story using beauty, movement, and their pure, gentle eyes. In this story I will tell you how I feel about these beautiful creatures. Horses are so very beautiful, they can tell a lot using their beauty. They also have beauty in the way they move with such gracefulness. A horses eyes say a lot, the way they look at you with such pureness, it is truly beautiful. They use all these things to tell such a wonderful, exciting story. Every horse has a story to tell you just have to look, listen, and talk to them. "All things that live have parallel, save one: The Arabian Horse, he alone has none!" Page 10 Mark Miller Jumps in the Saddle with Changing of the Guard at ALAL-MARAH Innovation, Preservation and Arabian Horses Continue a Legacy HandHand-inin-Hand with Entertainment and yes... he really rode Trigger! KISSIMMEE, FL—Apr. 30, 2013—You could say Mark Miller’s taken up his own kind of Roman riding. Galloping with one foot atop his Orlando-based equine entertainment dinner attraction Arabian Nights, the other is firmly planted on Al-Marah LLC, which continues the world-famous Al-Marah Arabian horse farm in Tucson, established by his mother the late Bazy Tankersley. “I literally grew up in the Arabian Horse industry,” says Miller, a Chicago native, who was born one month after Al-Marah’s foundation stallion Indraff (Raffles’ son) arrived at his mother’s. Miller also grew up surrounded by horse world and entertainment luminaries at large, who often laid over at AlMarah while touring, during the quarter century when the farm was located near Washington, DC. And, yes, Miller really did ride Roy Rogers’ horse Trigger! “Bazy was always full of innovative ways to bring Arabian Horses not only into the mainstream of the horse industry, but also into the mainstream of American life. And, she remained to the end, a person who never bred a horse to please anyone, but Bazy,” reflects Miller, who’s devoted his own life to preserving equestrian arts and sharing horses with millions of visitors since opening Arabian Nights (www.arabiannights.com) for business on leap day, February 29, 1988. “When I built Arabian Nights 25 years ago, I ECAHS NEWSLETTE R wanted to make a showplace for the herd of Arabian Horses that has been part of my family for 70 years,” notes Miller, who had the foresight to choose an Orlando location just minutes from Disney World when it was still in its infancy. “It was once written that Mother’s eye was always on tomorrow,” adds Miller, who shares the talent and trait. He’s in the final phase of developing a new production for launch at Arabian Nights this summer (while the current show continues without interruption), on top of keeping the Al-Marah flame burning bright. Miller remarks, “My mother dedicated the majority of her life to preserving and improving one band of horses. 2014 will be the 200th year they have been a herd and I am the 6th person in only the 3rd family to have the honor of keeping them together.” Miller, who owns Al-Marah LLC, explains, “I have been told they are the oldest, privately-owned, continuously bred band of horses in the world.” Like their Arabian ancestors, travel lies in the future. “Over the next two years, the AlMarah herd will once again relive its nomadic roots and migrate from Tucson, Arizona, to Kissimmee, Florida,” says Miller, who lives near Orlando. (Meanwhile, breeding operations are continuing and competition horses are making their rounds on the show circuit.) “Jerry Hamilton, my mother’s longest tenured employee ever (now 32 years and counting) will help me keep Bazy’s vision alive and create horses she would be proud to call Al-Marah Arabians.” * * ** * The largest family-owned and operated entertainment business in Central Florida, Arabian Nights features a cast of 50 horses and 20 human performers in a 90-minute dinner show performed without intermission, 365 days a year. Founded by Mark Miller in 1988, Arabian Nights is located in Kissimmee (Orlando), Florida, just moments from Disney World. Devoted to preserving equestrian arts, Arabian Nights is a “sister company” to Al-Marah LLC. Established by the late Bazy Tankersley, Al-Marah Arabians celebrated its 70th anniversary in 2012. Carl Raswan (author of the book Drinkers of the Wind) named her Tucson, Arizona farm AlMarah (Arabic for “The Oasis”). Known for producing national champions in all divisions to Tevis Cup contenders, Al-Marah continues Bazy’s mission to produce the best Arabians possible. Classic beauty, amenable dispositions and athletic ability, are stated priorities for Al-Marah Arabians. For Arabian Nights tickets and information, visit www.arabiannights.com. Stay tuned to www.al-marah.com for upcoming news about Al-Marah and its legendary herd. Page 11 ECAHS NEWSLETTE R Directions to Whitaker’s Cross Over W Arabians 5891 Chicwood Drive Pulaski Va. 24301 540-320-4892 No matter from which direction you come it is best to get on I81. Take exit number 98 which is the Dublin Va. Exit. Go toward Dublin at the first stop light next to MacDonalds turn left on Alexander. Stay on Alexander past Walmart and when you come stop light by Volvo turn right on Cougar Trail. Stay on Cougar Trail until you come to stop light at route 11. Turn left on route 11 go about 3 blocks and you will see a convenient market Cougar Xpress. Turn right at Cougar Xpress on State Route 643 (Thornspring Road). Go 1 mile and on the right you will a sign “Chicwood Estates” turn right Into Chicwood. We are 6th place on the left approx .5 miles in. Cedar house , black fences , green roof. Horse heads on mail box. The E astern Crabbet A rabian H orse Society The Eastern Crabbet Arabian Horse Society was formed in late 1994 for the expressed purpose of promoting the purity, beauty, utility, tractability and versatility of Arabian horses descending from the Crabbet sources. M em bership A pplication 2013 201 3 One Year Family/Farm Membership - $45 - two votes (via PayPal $47.25) Three Year Family/Farm Membership - $125(via PayPal $131.25) One Year Individual Membership - $30 - one vote (via PayPal $31.50) Three Year Individual Membership - $85 (via PayPal $89.25) One Year Youth Membership - $10 - no vote (via PayPal $10.50) Introductory Membership - $15 - no vote - First Year Only (via PayPal $15.75) (Check One) Name: Farm Name: Address: Phone #: Fax #: E-mail: Web Site: If you are interested in serving on a committee, please circle interests: Show, Futurity, Publicity, Fund Raising, Crabbet Celebration, Finance, Hospitality, Newsletter, Archives, By-Laws, Nominating, Membership, Certification, Honoree, Youth, Preservation Make checks payable to: ECAHS or send your payments via ECAHS@hotmail.com Send completed form via mail to: Joanna Garofalo, ECAHS Membership SunSet Arabians joannapgarofalo@hotmail.com 9653 Nutbush Road Green Bay, Virginia 23942 Crabbet Celebration XX 20th Anniversary Airfield 44--H Conference Center Wakefield, VA 8/318/31-9/1, 2013 A special weekend of demonstrations, clinics and horse showing. Join us for a Who’s Who of presenters on “Form-to-Function” Dr. John Shelle, Michigan State University Professor of Animal Science, has directed the Arabian breeding program at MSU for more than 30 years and is the leading researcher on the heritability of conformational traits in Arabian horses. Stagg & Cheryl Newman, from Candler, NC, Stagg has served for six years on the American Endurance Ride Conference Board, has over 10,000 miles of long distance competition (endurance & CTR). He has completed over 50 one-day 100s with more than 20 wins & Best Conditions. Cheryl has competed in endurance across the USA, is a member of the ride management team for the Biltmore Challenge and is an FEI steward. Breeders Panel Meg Sleeper, VMD, DACVIM (Cardiology), University of Pennsylvania’s Family Groups School of Veterinary Medicine, is an international endurance competitor. Her recent accomplishments include 2011 North American Endurance Championship 100 mile ride, individual silver medal & team bronze with Syrocco Reveille; 2011 Pan American Championship, Chile team silver medal with Syrocco Cadence; & having two horses named to the USEF long list for the 2012 World Endurance Championship. Halter Classes Theresa McManus, of Dillwyn, VA, has trained horses & Vivian Mack 22371 Courthouse Road Yale, VA 23897 vmack53@wildblue.net 434-535-0923 www.facebook.com/ECAHS Liberty Performance Classes Sport Horse Classes Stallion Presentations riders for 30+ years. She has a unique style that stresses balance communication between horse & rider. In 1988 she served as a trainer for the British Olympic Pentathlon Equestrian Team. A show bill will be available in July. For more information or to be placed on our mailing list contact: EVENTS FEATURED TOPICS Form-to-Function Measuring Stride Osteopathy Proportions & Balance Aging & Changes in Conformation Measuring Angles & Lengths and Its Significance Hands-on Palpation of Anatomical Landmarks Selecting the Right Horse for Your Discipline Saddle Fitting-–How it affects performance & soundness