Friday, December 2, 2011

Thursday, December 1, 2011

December Photo of the Month

Brantley's Roan Allen Jr. & Everett Majors

Monday, November 21, 2011

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Pleasure Riding

*From "The Tennessee Walking Horse", August, 1950

by Margaret Lindsley Warden




Exhibitors of show horses become so absorbed in sitting at the ringside and watching their pets win a prize that they forget or have never known the fun of getting out in the country an having a ride for themselves at their own pace.
  A year ago Wayne Dinsmore, then secretary of the horse and Mule Association of America, stated that there were known to be about 1000 riding clubs in 11 states and that probably there were a great many more unknown to him. As compared with 1930 census figures of 1,300,000 riding horses in the United States there were 1,700,000 in 1949.
 As only a small number of these can be show horses, it is evident that pleasure riding is on the increase.
  To a Southerner reading the Western horse magazines, California must be the pleasure riders' heaven. At the end of 1949 there were in that state 215 riding clubs totaling 14,000 riders, according to figures in the October-November "Horse Lover". A visitor in Tennessee from California stated that her county, which one I forget, had one horse to every three people. 
  All these clubs are members of the California State Horsemen's Association which originated in 1941. By polling so many members, the Association has been able to further a state-wide trail program.
  Not very far behind California is Iowa, with 116 riding clubs, averaging 100 members each. In the "Farm Journal" of 1949 appeared a very charming story of some of these Iowa clubs composed largely of farmers and their families. The fun they were having in the saddle was downright inspiring.
  The increasing number of what used to be called endurance rides and are now called trail rides is noticeable. Iowa's Hundred Mile ride started in 1938 while the better known Green Mountain Horse Association 100 Mile Trail Ride in Vermont has been going since 1936. Its sweepstakes prize in 1949 went to Pine Flag, a three-quarter Thoroughbred, owned and ridden by 68-year-old Mrs. Fletcher Harper of The Plains, Virginia, mounted side-saddle.
These long train rides are the testing ground, or show ring, of the pleasure m mount and rider. Speed does not win them, but stamina and condition, for a good sound horse to get in the money requires a rider who knows how to take care of his or her mount and conserve energy.
  They tell us that horseback riding is a recreation that builds health and character an many have written that they consider their horses and stables and riding equipment an investment in health and happiness, not an expenditure. Practically everyone who can ride and does any amount of it in pleasant surroundings loves it. Then why are there not more riders?
  Three good reasons occur to this scribe.  Leadership is lacking, places to ride are lacking, and horse breeders and dealers have neglected the pleasure horse end of their market in favor of the show horse. They say that it takes just as much time and skill to develop a really desirable riding horse as a show prospect and that the latter outsell the pleasure mounts by five or 10 times. This is quite true, but how do they dispose of the many that can't make the show grade? A cull show horse is not necessarily an enjoyable riding horse.
  As to leadership, it is much more abundant and aggressive in the fields of show and race horses. Besides show and racing organizations, there are the examples of success and fun in these departments that lure new recruits very obviously.
  People follow leaders and we believe many more would become pleasure riders if they saw more of it going on. If the pleasure riding set would get together and have more group rides and shindigs of some sort and have their activities publicized, we believe that more and more people would join them.
  The idea prevails that one has to be rich to be in the "horsy set". A plethora of cash does help in the show and race horse game, but is not necessary for riding and horse addicts should correct this notion.
  In most places today leadership and places to ride are closely related, for it takes leadership and organization to obtain and keep riding  trails. As places to ride are essential before one sets about riding, it seems to us that farmers and residents of small towns are in the best position to become horseback riders. The former surely have places for riding and the latter still do unless every road in the vicinity has been hard surfaced.
  People who like to ride horseback will do well to band together and see to it that a few back roads in their communities are left in gravel or dirt condition, else they will go out some day and find them being "improved" for faster automobile driving.
  Between Nashville and Franklin, Tennessee in the Brentwood community there seem to be more riders than anywhere around the midstate with the exception of Dickson where there is a flourishing riding club. The Tennessee Walking Horse is the prevailing type in both these areas. The state of the roads around Dickson we do not know, but it is obvious that the soft surfaced lanes set in beautiful country is one of the reasons why riding flourishes around Brentwood. The other reason...and just as important...is leadership and example. Riders will attract other riders and we know of two families who moved to Brentwood recently because they wanted to live and ride in a congenial neighborhood with active horsemen.


  Around Chicago riding trails were opened in 1922 in the Cook County Forest Preserves and in the last few years about 33,000 people have been patronizing the more than 100 stables in or near them. Near Cleveland, Ohio, 70 miles of trails are available in the parks just out of town. As these increased the number of horses kept for pleasure riding mounted from 695 in 1938 to 1017 in 1946.
  It is our impression that nearly all natural parks near cities have bridle paths and rent stables and schools attached to them. Why not more rent stables and riding schools near small towns in the country? There are some and they have been very successful, especially for children.
  In Middle Tennessee just before World War II, hundreds of Tennessee Walking Horse fans were participating in 10- and 20- mile Ride-a-thons. The war put a stop to such gatherings and they have not been renewed, just because no enthusiast has worked and led them.
  The first hundred mile Trail Ride in Tennessee that anyone has heard of was sponsored by the Williamson County Horsemen's Association, June 14-18, and the winner was a three-year-old Tennessee Walking Horse stallion by the name of Adcock's Pride. No second or third awards were made.
  Adcock's Pride, a strawberry roan with stockings and blaze, is by Golden Jim, by Last Chance, son of Hunter's Allen F-10; and his dam is Adock's Red Lady, by Colonel Allen, second dam, Daisy Westbrooks, by Ben Puckett F-43.
  Adock's Pride was bred by R.A. Adcock, Unionville, Bedford County Tennessee, bought when a weanling by W.C. Haynes of nearby Shelbyville, and owned at the time of his victory by his 16-year-old rider, Dan Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Moore of Nashville.


  The 1949 Trail Ride, the first sponsored by the Williamson County group, was also won by a registered Tennessee Walking Horse, My Rambling Pal, a gelding by Rambling Allen owned and ridden by Mrs. C.B. Murphy of Nashville. They were among those present in the 1950 event.
  The steeplechase stable at Percy Warner Park in Davidson County about eight miles south of Nashville was stabling center and the starting and stopping point for each day's ride.  As there were no scales there, the judging of the contestants was less severe than in 1949 when each horse was weighed at the beginning and at the end of the jaunt which then comprised some 57 miles in three days.
  Adcock's Pride received the judicial nod for finishing the approximately 100 miles in the best condition. He was the least hot and tired and had the best pulse.  According to those who were in his company, he displayed exemplary manners. At least one stallion had competed in the 1949 ride.
  None of the contestants finished sick or sorry, though some were hotter than they should have been and were not judiciously ridden. Unfortunately the art of conserving a riding horse's energy on long trips is not well known in this area. With the small amount of pleasure riding done, there is little occasion to conserve the energy of one's mount. The weights of the riders, saddle, etc., were not considered in the awards.
  As the purpose of the Williamson County Trail Rides is to foster pleasure riding rather than to test horses, the trips were not difficult. The only  uncomfortable feature was the heat, the weather turning hot and sultry on the first day, a Wednesday. Even so, the enthusiastic riders denied any discomfort, saying that their routes were mostly shady.
  Only five went the entire five days. Besides young Moore and his mother, there were Mrs. Murphy, Mrs. B.A. Herron, and Miss Edith Bowen. Saturday brought out 15, the largest number, and 10 rode on Sunday. Mrs. Moore, daughter of a farrier, shoes her own horses and is known as " the lady blacksmith". There was no report of needing her talents.
Hollow Tree Gap, about four miles north of the next town, Franklin, was the objective on the first day. The second, third, and fifth days were over the shady trails of Percy Warner Park. On the fourth day the group went to the Goodpasture farm near Forest Home, northwest of Franklin.
  Average rides were 20 miles, involving some three and a half hours in the saddle. On longer trips lunch was enjoyed somewhere before the return to the stable. On Sunday the ride ended in a barbecue on the shady side of the steeplechase barn. Friends, relatives, and reporters swelled the number fed on pig, potato salad, pickles, and chess pies to 42.
  The great majority of the mounts were registered Tennessee Walking Horses or of that type. No thoroughbreds completed and no registered saddlers that we know of.  Much of the traveling was at a walk, and some at a running walk or canter.  Nearly all of the footing was dirt trails, including some up- and down-  hill grades.
Most contestants rode along together which emphasized the social rather than the competitive angle, an emphasis that was intentional.  J. Guill McClelland had his three-year-old daughter in his "lap" on that Sunday ride. The youngest independent rider was eight-year-old Noel Anderson, who enjoyed the jaunt so much that she expressed the wish that it would last until Christmas. Her taste for horses comes from her  mother, Catherine Noel (Mrs. Charles) Anderson, and grandmother, Jeanette Acklen (Mrs. Oscar) Noel, both horsewomen of note. The former is raising children and Shetland ponies.
  No money prizes were given and the committee had enough funds left from entry fees to furnish a nest egg for a possible fall trail ride.
  The silver trophy for the winner was contributed and so were the smaller tokens that were drawn for after each single day's trip. One-day riders could enter for just a dollar (lunch money), while $15 financed feeding and care of a horse for the entire outing.
Mrs. Noel, Mrs. Herron and Col. Campbell H. Brown were trail ride chairmen. The first two and Dr. N.J. Sibley, D.V.S., were judges.
Besides those mentioned, riders indulging one or more days were:  Mrs. A.L. Ersin, Walter W. Olgivie, Jim Ogilvie, Mrs. J.T. Goodman, Jack Mabry, Mrs. Mabry, Mrs. Lois Tidwell, Mrs. Margaret Leonard, Dr. Eugene Regen, Eugene, Jr., Henry Goodpasture, Ken Goodpasture, James C. Tippens and Glen Glover.  Col. Brown and Dr. Sibley did not ride. 
  All lived between Nashville and Franklin except the Ogilvies, who came up from Allison some 30 miles southeast of Nashville.
  The suitability of the pleasure type of Tennessee Walking Horse for this kind of ride was abundantly evident. This was true especially of individuals that could canter with ease, the old-fashioned versatile type. They had the gaits and the disposition. A variety of gaits rests both mount and rider.
  For those who are interested, in the 1949 ride there was a show variety of Tennessee walker that was a one-horse demonstration of the unsuitability of the show-trained Tennessee Walking Horse of today on a long trip. She was supposed to have been hardened for the occasion by exercise, but surplus weight on her large frame, the long foot that she carried and the pushing running walk that she was ridden in nearly exhausted her each day. She was unduly tired the first day, extremely tired the second, and after the third day was found to have lost 125 pounds on the trip. This would have been about 10 per cent of her weight, while the winner had lost only two per cent.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Sunday, October 30, 2011

November Photo of the Month: 1951 Trail Ride

Dickson County Saddle & Bridle Club during a Sunday afternoon trail ride in 1951

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Part I: Fundamentals of TWH Training


*From "The Tennessee Walking Horse", April, 1949


The Tennessee Walking Horse, because of its nice disposition and easy gaits, has walked its way to popularity and into the hearts of people throughout America and also many foreign countries during the past few years. This well-mannered horse with its gentle temperament, beautiful conformation and free and easy gaits, provides a ride that is healthful; and is the ideal mount for those both young and old who desire the utmost in satisfaction from horseback riding.  Equine lovers who are inexperienced in handling horses have found the Tennessee Walking horse easily managed, and have grown to love and admire it.
 Thousands of Tennessee Walking Horses have been purchased during the past few years and have been shipped into sections where Tennessee Walking Horses have never been before. Requests are received almost daily from owners and riders who do not throughly understand the mannerisms of our Breed, and as a result the horses are not trained or ridden in the manner to which they are accustomed.
  We begin handling our colts when they are about a week or 10 days old, and teach them not to be afraid of us. They will learn by kind treatment that we do not intend to hurt them. We enter his stall and paddock at frequent intervals, pet and handle him, gently rub his legs, and pat him on the nose and ears; he will become accustomed to  being handled, and soon be our friend.
  Horses are like people, no two are alike, although fundamentally all are just about the same. Tennessee Walking Horses are intelligent animals and very docile; they invariably respond to kind treatment. you can be good to your horses and also your colts without spoiling them. However, leave off all sugar and apple feeding, etc.; this does not make your animals one bit more gentle nor do they think any mm ore of you----it only teaches them to bite and be ill-natured.
 When your colts are about six weeks old put halters on them and begin teaching them to lead. After they have become used to the halter attach a four-or five-foot leadline to the halter. Have an attendant lead the colt's mother off in front of him and the youngster will follow her. After a few days the colt will respond to your movements of the leadline, and while following along in the steps of his mother he will not even realize he has been taught to lead. Be very careful not to overwork your colts, and do not ever let them get tired.
  Bear in mind that every colt demands certain particular attention because every colt should be treated as a different individual. However, the above practices are those which are generally applicable to almost every colt. If one particular phase or recommendation does not work with your colts, try another similar method. As the colt grows older we think he should be led on a loose rein, the attendant holding the rein some four or five feet from the colt's head, letting it walk naturally. Former experience has taught us not to lead a colt fast enough to cause it not to go in a long, loose flatfoot walk or faster than a slow running walk; and we never try holding onto a colts halter and trying to force it to nod. we have seen a large number of loose colts that never developed into top horses. We think this was due to the fact that they were led so much. Many are tried to be taught so much excessive motion that when they are put under saddle they are inclined to be choppy in their gaits. Pampered colts being led and held back are inclined to not properly line up and often go wide behind, which faults must be corrected later in order to make top horses.
 Fresh air and plenty of exercise are good for growing colts. Therefore we let ours run out practically the year 'round during the day and night when the weather is pretty; and put them in the barn or some other good dry shelter when the weather is cold and bad. After colts are weaned, which is at about six months of age, we leave our shelter door open so that colts may come and go and random. A trough is placed in the barn or shelter where the colts have access to a good balanced grain rationing, together with a good legume hay.
  We start to break our colts around the first of each year, or when they are a year and a half or two years old. At this age they will range in weight from 700 to 750 pounds, and will stand approximately 14 hands and three inches.
  I like to take my colts completely off the pasture from 30 to 60 days ahead of time, and feed them a good balanced ration. During this time when the colts are in the barn and before we begin riding them they are placed in a stall convenient to a small paddock for use during pretty weather. during this period a bitting rig is used for a short time each day. Be very careful not to place a colt in a strain by reining his head too high, or having the side reins too tight at the beginning. Tighten the reins gradually as the colt becomes used to the bitting rig. This helps the colt get accustomed to having bits in its mouth, reins on its neck, having something on his back and also get him used to a girth. This also helps make it easier for the rider to set the youngster's head when this part of his education arrives. About one hour each day is long enough for the average colt to have on a bitting rig as we do not want to tire the colt.
  we shoe our colts just before we begin to ride them with plain keg shoes; the size of the shoe depends on the size of the hoof. After the colt has worn a set of shoes for about two months his feet might have grown too long and will need shortening. we use a regular bridle equipped with a snaffle bit, and it is a good idea to lead the colts around a few times after putting the snaffle bit in his mouth in order for him to become more used to having it in his mouth. We ride our colts the first few days without a saddle. Get on his back gently and be as quiet as possible until he realizes that  you intend to ride him. It is a good idea to have an attendant lead the colt around with you on his back. He will soon become used to the idea and will not mind having you there.
  Follow the above procedure for a very short time each day until the colt is absolutely at ease with you on his back. After a week or so take him to a place where there is level ground, and hold the reins in your own hands. Be very careful not to snatch the colt or pull up on the reins quick or hard. A colt's m mouth is very tender and you may scare and hurt him without meaning to in the early stages of his training. Allow him to walk in one direction then another, and he will soon learn how to respond to your handling of the reins. When you are sure the colt is accustomed to having you an his back, he is ready to be ridden with a saddle.
  It is a good idea to let the colt smell the saddle before it is placed on his back, so that he will not be afraid of it. After you have placed the saddle gently on the colt's back, let him stand for a few minutes then lead him around. He will soon find out that the saddle is not going to hurt him and he will not be afraid of it. When the colt has ceased to pay any attention to the saddle being on his back, mount and ride him.
    As it is generally known, the Tennessee Walking Horse has three distinctive gaits, the flatfoot walk, the running walk and the canter. Each of these gaits should be throughly understood and recognized by every Tennessee Walking Horse owner and handler. The Tennessee Walking Horse is a born walker and while at his mother's side he can be seen performing these gaits and to change from one to the other, at the will of the rider, is the sole task which the trainer finds before him.
  The flatfoot walk is the slowest of the three, and is the first gait Tennessee Walking Horses perform. We ride our colts in a flatfoot walk for about 30 or 40 days, around parked automobiles, tractors, other horses and around other objects with which we want them to become accustomed. The Tennessee Walking Horse is fearless and level headed, and once he has learned an object he is not afraid and does shy away from it. When we are sure he is not afraid of these things, we ride him further away from the barn and in other surroundings that soon become familiar sights to him. He can be ridden around over the farm, along the roadside and other places where he will see moving vehicles. He will soon learn not to be afraid of anything.
  After riding our colts four to six weeks in a flatfoot walk they are fairly bridle-wise. We then remove the snaffle bit, because the colt is ready for a curb bit. Still using a regular bridle with a curb bit and a loose chin strap, we ride our colts over new territory, often in soft ground. If they feel that they are going somewhere they will start striding and want to go on. The flatfoot walk has a speed of from four to five miles and hour, and is performed with much comfort to his rider. With the diagonally-opposed movement of its feet he strikes the ground with his right-fore and left-rear, and left-fore and right-rear.
  We now allow our colts to go into a running walk. Mount your colt and ride him in  the flatfoot walk for about 10 minutes, or until the colt begins to relax and take hold. Then add a little more to his walk by gently urging him on and taking hold of his head by slightly tightening up on the reins. The running walk is a faster movement of the flatfoot walk and is obtained by simply making the colt "go on". Do not ride the colt in the running walk too long at a time. We ride the average colt only 30 or 40 minutes each day.
  The running walk is the most popular and leading gait that the Tennessee Walking Horse performs. It is a four-cornered gait and is started like the flatfoot walk, but as the speed is increased the horse oversteps the back foot over the front track from a few to 18 or even 24 inches. It takes the jar or jolt from its back by the spring of its legs, the motion of its feet and the nod of its head. When your horse is walking his best you will notice him relaxing certain muscles that cause him to nod his head in more pronounced movements, as he lengthens his stride, takes hold and gets down to work.
  The Tennessee Walking Horse nods his head with his every stride and brings each fore-foot to the ground a mere second before he does his diagonally opposite hind foot. This is the only difference between a running walk and a fox-trot, and is also the reason that our Tennessee Walking Horses are born walkers and never man made. A horse doing a stepping pace springs from the ground with his right fore-foot and right rear-foot, then with his left fore-foot and left rear-foot, going a one-sided gaits. He usually shows a kind of hopping motion with his tail and not too much motion with his head. The Tennessee Walking Horse must stay on his four corners and not on two sides as the horse that does the amble or stepping pace. When our colts are inclined to want to pace we use trotting balls on their front feet to help square them up. This extra weight helps to start them to reaching, or in other words to lengthen their stride, it also makes them fold their knees a little more. We often ride our colts some distance from the barn; colts are aware that they are leaving home. This is a good way to start a colt to walking as he is anxious to get back to the barn and to more familiar surroundings. he will begin to take hold and start to stride and want to go on. You may steady him with the bit and he will likely hit a good true running walk.