So I was gone for 24 hours, visiting my mother.

I was gone for 24 hour- which is 2 feedings from Hubby.

2

Two.

When I arrived home, there was an aura of elation, pleading and feigned indifference.

THE HERD REBUTTALS

First we have Annie, Missy Miss and Mo, who were right in front of the garage.  They saw me pull in and offload all the stuff my Mom gave to me (as she always does… food, clothes, stuff, dishware… more stuff…).

I could feel their eyes burning holes through my back.

Annie:  Ahem.  AHEM!  Just in case you didn’t know… he doesn’t feed like you do.  Would you mind feeding us right NOW.

Missy Miss:  I’m so glad to see you!

Mo (standing way back):  Phew!  I wasn’t sure you would ever come back.  I thought maybe we would all be fending for ourselves like I did when I was living in the wilds.  Have I ever told you about living in the wilds of Nevada?  We had to actually look for our food!  We worked for our food.  It wasn’t just put in a trough for us.  And water… OY, WATER!  That was always an issue…

Annie, Missy Miss and Mo in the background, watching me offload my car.

FINN, BG AND WRIGLEY were all very hopeful.

Finn:  Is that YOU?  Oh thank horsegods!

BG:  It is her, it is her!

Wrigley:  Where?  WHERE is she?

Finn looking at me through the fence, BG with her head held high and Wrigley behind a post.

GWEN was her typical Diva self…

Gwen:  Oh, so you decided to show up, eh?  Well, we all almost starved.  He starves us!

–The truth of the matter is that I overfeed, over water and over indulge all of my animals.  But, not that much… still, probably enough to make a big difference when Hubby feeds in the two seconds he gives himself before going to work…  I think he makes sure they are all standing, and then he throws the exact amount of hay needed, and scurries off to his car.

I, on the otherhand, look everyone over… I chat to them all, I place more hay than needed in more piles than needed, I mix up the hays, I dump the water and refill… and if any of them seem the least bit under the weather, I doctor them.

Hubby, not so much.  “They’ll be fine until she gets home.”

Gwen showing me her distain at being left with Hubby to feed her.

THE CATS AND SCOUTYPANTS

When Scouty is very happy, she parades around with one of her beloved stuffed animals.  She was very happy.

The cats act like it is no big deal, but the fact that they were all around me, indicated that either Hubby forgot about them, or he put into practice his notion that the cats are barn cats and should do their jobs and go catch their own dinner.  (I feed the cats twice a day so that they don’t feel too compelled to kill things….)

All 4 cats following me around, acting like they don’t care – but they all don’t normally follow me around … so they are letting me know that they want FOOD.

Scoutypants brought out one of her prized stuffed animals. She was happy to see me.

THE MORAL OF THE STORY?

My animals are all spoiled.   Just the way I like it!

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The post NOTES FROM THE HERD: “He doesn’t feed like YOU do! appeared first on Horse and Man.

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BRKT0D Close up of Collecting Ring sign at Rosedale Show North Yorkshire England UK United Kingdom GB Great Britain
Library image. Credit: Alamy Stock Photo

The equestrian community has pledged its support for clean sport by backing UK Anti-Doping’s (UKAD) week-long campaign.

UKAD’s Clean Sport Week runs from 21 to 27 May, with the aim of raising awareness of the importance of clean sport and what it actually entails.

The British Equestrian Federation (BEF) is among the bodies supporting the campaign.

“It is vital that everyone participating within equestrian sport fully understands the importance of clean sport and the rules they must adhere to, at both national and international level,” said newly appointed chief executive Nick Fellows.

“[These rules apply to] both human and equine athletes — as well as ensuring the highest standards of horse welfare.”

Mr Fellows said the BEF will promote informative articles online throughout the week.

“[These will] highlight where people can find out more information about clean sport, and how riders, owners and teams, can check prohibited substance and controlled medication lists, ensuring the spotlight is placed on the importance of clean sport across both human and equine athletes,” he added.

The British Grooms Association (BGA) is urging grooms and riders to familiarise themselves with the rules and to take part in its online “Groom Clean” course — open to both members and non-members.

“With increased focus on keeping clean in equestrian sport we are urging all competitors to put their team through Groom Clean to help protect their careers,” said BGA chief executive Lucy Katan.

“The e-learning course will give you a good understanding of how to avoid an anti-doping rule violation, something every competition groom and rider should know.”

Charlotte Dujardin and Carl Hester’s groom Alan Davies said the course is “an invaluable tool”.

“Clean sport is a very serious topic so it is very important that grooms have access to this information,” said Alan.

“We have to be aware of so many regulations and also of how our horses can be affected in many different situations.”

Equestrian products and supplement manufacturer NAF has strict protocols in place to ensure its products comply with clean sport rules.

“Clean sport encompasses the equine anti-doping and controlled medication rules, which deal with the doping of horses and the use of inappropriate medication in competition,” explained a NAF spokesman.

“Anyone who is a member of an equestrian sporting discipline and is eligible [to take part] can be subjected to testing. This includes equestrian sports and [BEF] member bodies such as the British Riding Clubs.”

Recycling debate

Recent discussion on plastic packaging has sparked debate on whether refills could comply with the stringent processes that go into preventing accidental contamination.

But NAF has concerns about potential contamination and traceability problems that could theoretically arise.

“NAF are very conscious of environmental concerns and is working hard behind the scenes to ensure our packaging is as environmentally friendly as possible,” said the spokesman.

“We have trials ongoing currently with recyclable bags, but in the meantime we believe our pots and bottles, which are widely recyclable by all roadside collections, are the best option.

“We also endeavour to provide larger sizes for most of our products, as these reduce overall packaging and give the customer the option of upcycling them – they make great tack boxes for the lorry, or slosh buckets after work.

“Once opened we lose control of the contents, and it will always be possible for contamination to occur, and this is something that we couldn’t risk with our products.

“We do believe that the equine industry needs to rise to the plastic challenge, and we will continue to explore new innovative ways to offer the best quality products for owners and their horses, that won’t cost us all the earth.”

11 tips and facts about anti-doping…

  • Testing of horses and riders can take place, at both national and international competitions
  • The rider is regarded as the “responsible person”, for their horse or pony, with the exception of children aged under 18, although other members of the support team — such as the horse’s owner — may also be held liable
  • Use different coloured feed bowls to avoid the wrong feeds being given to the wrong horse
  • Use different mixing spoons when controlled medication is administered to avoid contamination
  • Ensure tea and coffee-making facilities are not in the feed room
  • Be aware when drinking soft drinks around your horse, or eating snacks such as biscuits or chocolate bars as caffeine is a common positive test result
  • Buy feeds from trusted companies which have full traceability of raw ingredients — look out for Universal Feed Assurance Scheme accredited manufacturers and the British Equestrian Trade Association’s BETA NOPS logo
  • Speak to your vet about withdrawal and detection times for controlled medications
  • Familiarise yourself with the World Anti-Doping Agency’s list of prohibited substances for humans and make sure you discuss any potential issues or therapeutic use exemptions with your doctor and the BEF
  • Record batch numbers and feeds
  • Do not keep first aid and grooming kits in the feed room

For all the latest news analysis, competition reports, interviews, features and much more, don’t miss Horse & Hound magazine, on sale every Thursday.

In this week’s edition, out on 24 May, don’t miss our “cob special”, including how to find the perfect cob, meet champion cob Our Cashel Blue and more.

Horses are amazing creatures, and however long you have been riding for, there are some facts and figures that still take us by surprise

BB6J2W Shetland Pony showing one eye for the camera, South Uist, Scotland. Image shot 05/2009. Exact date unknown.

25 incredible horse facts

1. Horses have around 205 bones in their skeleton.

2. They have bigger eyes than any other mammal that lives on land.

3. Horses can sleep both lying down and standing up thanks to a special locking system in their legs.

4. Male horses have 40 teeth.

5. Female horses have 36 teeth.

6. Horses can’t vomit due to them having a strong band of muscles around their esophagus. This band is so strong that a horse’s stomach would burst before it would vomit.

7. Horses produce approximately 10 gallons of saliva a day.

8. The tallest horse on record was a Shire named Sampson. He was 21.2hh (7 feet, 2 inches) tall

9. You can tell if a horse is cold by feeling the base of their ears

10. A horse’s brain weighs around 623g, half the weight of a human brain.

11. Horses don’t have collarbones.

12. Horses’ shoulders are held to the rest of their bodies via ligaments only.

13. When foals are born, their hooves are covered with soft tissue to stop them damaging their mother’s birth canal and uterus. Names for this tissue include fairy slippers, golden hooves, foal slipper, leaves, gills, and fingers.

14. The earliest member of the horse family was the Eohippus, dating back 55 million years.

15. Horses drink at least 55 gallons of water each day.

16. While humans have just three ear muscles, horses have 10.

17. A horse’s heart typically weighs between 4kg and 4.5kg and is about the size of a basketball.

18. Horses cannot breathe through their mouth, only through their nose.

Continued below…

Like this? You might also enjoy reading these:

19. A horse’s teeth never stop growing.

20. Equinophobia is the fear of horses.

21. On average, most domesticated horses live until they are around 25-30-years-old.

22. There are around 350 breeds and types of horses around the world.

23. Most of the white horses that you see were actually a much darker colour at birth and gradually turn white. These ‘white’ horses may start out as bay, chestnut, or almost black. Of course, these horses aren’t actually called white, but grey…

24. The world’s smallest horse is the Falabella which ranges between 38-76 cm tall.

25. A horse’s range of vision is 350 degrees with two small blind spots, one directly in front and one directly behind them.

For all the latest news analysis, competition reports, interviews, features and much more, don’t miss Horse & Hound magazine, on sale every Thursday

This week’s issue (17 May 2018) features a full report from Royal Windsor Horse Show, including all the showing, showjumping and dressage action. We go behind the scenes with the Household Cavalry, plus have an exclusive interview with Irish eventer Padraig McCarthy

Victoria Smith Roy Rocket

A rider is set to make history today as she becomes the first transgender jockey to race on a British course.

Victoria Smith, formerly known as Vince Smith, rode more than 250 winners during a career as a professional jockey between 1983 and 2000 and also enjoyed success as a trainer between 2003 and 2008.

Victoria, who announced her transition publicly earlier this year, is riding Roy Rocket in the Pertemps Network Jockey Club Challenge charity race.

The race, at Warwick racecourse today (Wednesday, 23 May) starts at 5.45pm and is in aid of Your Local Air Ambulance, which covers Derbyshire, Leicestershire Rutland, Warwickshire and Northamptonshire.

She rides eight-year-old grey Roy Rocket for trainer John Berry.

In a recent interview with Rishi Persad on Racing UK’s Luck On Sunday, Victoria spoke about her journey.

“[Every day for a year] I said to myself: ‘I don’t regret anything I have done in my life, but if I don’t do this and I go to my grave tomorrow, would I die regretting [not doing it]’ and every day I said ‘yes’,” she said, adding that her close friends and family have been very supportive.

She said telling the first person what she was going through was “like being released from prison”.

Journalist Emma Berry, wife of Roy Rocket’s trainer John, said the race today will be a “special reunion”.

“Vince Smith rode John’s first winner as an owner,” she wrote in her blog.

“[This was] Witchway North, trained in this stable by Hugh Collingridge to win a selling hurdle at Fontwell in February 1994 at 50/1, narrowly beating the Martin Pipe-trained 5/4 favourite Nanquidno, ridden by Vince’s good friend Richard Dunwoody).

“Remarkably Vince rode another 50/1 winner three years later: Supreme Illusion, owned and trained by John, in a claiming hurdle at Plumpton.

“Vince Smith is now Victoria Smith, and the old team will be reunited at Warwick.

“When it became clear that Victoria, having previously ridden approximately 250 winners as a man, was keen to get on the scoreboard as a woman, John was keen to help if possible.

“Happily, Roy Rocket’s owner Larry McCarthy is also very supportive of the project, and Roy should give Victoria a good ride on this special occasion.

“The pair of them have got to know each other well over the last few months with Victoria coming in to ride Roy out on a regular basis.”

Warwick racecourse’s general manager Andre Klein told H&H the racecourse is delighted to be supporting the air ambulance.

“The service they provide for those in the region is hugely valuable and I hope that we can raise a substantial amount of money to support them,” he said.

“We wish all the riders, including our clerk of the course, Jane Headley, and the first transgender jockey, Victoria Smith, the very best of luck.”

While the charity race does not come under British Horseracing Authority Rules, the organisation has wished her good luck ahead of her return.

“We would like to congratulate Victoria on her return to the saddle for this charity race, and we are delighted that she has received such support from those involved in the racing industry,” a BHA spokesman told H&H.

For all the latest news analysis, competition reports, interviews, features and much more, don’t miss Horse & Hound magazine, on sale every Thursday.

In this week’s edition, out on 24 May, don’t miss our “cob special”, including how to find the perfect cob, meet champion cob Our Cashel Blue and more.

How to settle a horse into a new yard

Whether you’ve just got a new horse or are moving to new stables, knowing how to settle a horse into a new yard is key to make the move as stress free as possible for both horse and owner.

“The key to introducing any horse to a new yard is to be organised,” says the British Horse Society’s head of welfare, Gemma Stanford. “If the horse is new to you, do a risk assessment of the horse before it arrives, including where the horse is coming from, when was it last wormed, is it up to date with vaccinations and does it have a passport?”

New horse checklist

1. Does the horse have a passport and is it up to date? Ensure that the current owner’s details are on the passport before purchasing the horse as it can be a nightmare chasing previous owners. Also check that the vaccinations are up to date.

2. If the horse is microchipped, get the details transferred into the new owner’s name.

3. Preparation is key so grooming kits and stables should be fully disinfected prior to the horse arriving. There should be kit that is used solely on the new horse (see more about isolation procedures below).

4. When the horse arrives, perform a health check, such as general outlook, skin and hoof condition, droppings, behaviour etc. There is a blood test for strangles that’s available, and it’s also worth taking the horse’s resting pulse, respirations and temperature to check against should the horse fall ill.

5. Perform a faecal egg count and worm accordingly. You can also do a saliva test for tapeworms. Some yards prefer to keep horses in for a period after worming to avoid paddock contamination.

6. Integrate the horse slowly after the isolation period, for example, move the horse onto a yard or in a stable close to horses that he’ll eventually be turned out with so that he can say hello across the yard. Turn him out with one horse initially, and then integrate him with others gradually. Always be on hand when turning out for the first time in case of an incident.

7. Register the horse with a vet, farrier and dentist as soon as possible. It’s very important that you keep these details easily accessible so that the relevant person can be contacted in the event of an emergency. It’s also advisable to note down a brief veterinary history of the horse, for example if he has had colic surgery in the past, or is prone to tying up or allergic to any medication. Also, what you’d like to happen to your horse in an emergency such as a case of colic if you are unavailable. Make clear your wishes.

8. Keep important paperwork such as passports in a safe place on the yard where the horse is kept, such as a locked safe.

9. Make a note of when the horse last had the dentist, farrier and vaccinations and when they are next due.

Isolating new arrivals

Hannah Westen, campaigns officer for research and education at World Horse Welfare, explains the importance of isolation when bringing a new horse on to a stable yard.

“The aim of isolation is to protect other horses from becoming infected if a horse is suspected of having a disease, or if its health status is unknown,” says Hannah.

“Horses can sometimes be infected with a disease without showing any obvious symptoms, particularly in the early stages, so isolation allows time for clinical signs to develop, and for the outcome of diagnostic tests to be known.

“As a general rule, new arrivals should be isolated for at least three weeks.
Ideally the horse should be able to see other animals but not come into direct contact with them. This includes separate air space, which means keeping them out of the range of droplets that may pass through the air when a horse snorts or coughs.

“Use separate equipment for each new horse including water and feed buckets, haynets, mucking out equipment and grooming brushes.

“In an ideal world one person would care for this horse as diseases can be spread on infected clothing and hands. If that isn’t possible, remove your overalls, wash your hands and clean and disinfect your boots before handling other horses.

“Be extra vigilant with horses from outside the UK because they may be carriers of diseases not currently found in this country. Such diseases may take longer to diagnose due to their unfamiliarity and may infect more horses due to a lack of immunity in the horse population.”

Help your horse to settle in

These useful tips from the Blue Cross are designed to help your horse settle into his new environment.

  • Prepare the area that the horse will go into prior to arrival – so if you plan to stable him, bed down the stable, and get the hay/haylage net and water ready.
  • If going out into the paddock, ensure the field is ready with secure fencing and water, and that any companions are in the correct place.
  • Knowing the routine of the horse in their previous home will help you know where best to place the horse on arrival so that they can settle as soon as possible.
  • Get headcollars, rugs and grooming kits ready. Make sure any equipment used previously on any other horses has been cleaned to reduce any spread of disease.

A little extra planning can go a long way with a new horse, so time spent getting organised before their arrival can pay off long-term with a healthy horse that is happy and settled in their new environment.

Eventer Emily King has launched a crowdfunding campaign to buy a horse she believes could take her to “Badminton, the Olympics and beyond”.

The rider hopes to raise £40,000 before the end of this month to buy six-year-old Langford Take the Biscuit. By this afternoon (24 May) she had already secured more than £13,000 on her JustGiving page.

Emily has only had the ride on “Hobby” for a short time, during which the combination have finished fourth in a BE100 at Mount Ballan and eighth in a novice at Tweseldown, but said his owners need to sell as she is relocating.

“I’m desperate to keep the ride as he’s a top-class young horse,” she said.

“He has a very good movement, fantastic jump and I haven’t ridden a horse quite so talented cross-country. All the ability and class to make a top four-star horse.

“I am desperately looking to find owners/ syndicate members to enable me to keep the ride on Hobby as he really is a horse of a lifetime.”

Emily has asked her followers on social media to contribute “anything” to allow her to keep the ride, in return for which contributors will be “part of his amazing journey”.

“If I can attract just 2,000 of you to put in £20 each we’ve got him!” she said, adding that she has a company “interested in sponsoring his running costs”, so the initial payment would be the only one.

Continues below…



“Whoever is so kind as to donate will be able to see him at the lorry/ stables at all his competitions and see how everything works behind the scenes, walk his cross-country courses with me at all the big events he competes at, come to watch him train at home, near Chester and be an official part of Team King.

“[You will also] become a true part of Hobby’s journey to the top of the sport and follow him with a true connection to Badminton, the Olympics and beyond.

“It really is a rare and awesome opportunity not to be missed.”

For all the latest news analysis, competition reports, interviews, features and much more, don’t miss Horse & Hound magazine, on sale every Thursday.

In this week’s edition, out on 24 May, don’t miss our “cob special”, including how to find the perfect cob, meet champion cob Our Cashel Blue and more.

Michael Johnson, author of “HEALING SHINE and many other wonderful missives (click here to go to his website) sent this great story… I love his stories.  They always ring true for me.

THROWING MY LOOP…
Michael Johnson

COMING OUT OF THE DARK

“If you would understand your horse, you will find you have to work on yourself.”
– Ray Hunt

I read those words long ago. Now so many years later, I am so ashamed to tell you something. I sat there after re-reading that sentence a number of times, and I thought to myself, “What? What on earth does that mean?” Because try as I might, there was just no way I could see me being the problem…because I knew all about “it.” Couldn’t be me.
So it had to be the horse.
The article by Ray Hunt came in a Zen magazine. (Yeah, like I read those all the time.) Of course, I didn’t order the thing, but it still somehow managed to slip through all the security I had around my farm to prevent new ideas from making their way inside. This thing fell out of the sky on its own. Didn’t matter anyway. No time for such nonsense. I had a serious problem to deal with. My horse wouldn’t rein.
The blue colt had come into my life almost two years before and I had rarely known such happiness. The color of a pencil lead he was and my heart was so full of joy. My goodness, he was a splendid child. I took great pains with him during those first two years. Careful never to frighten him, always patient, and only employed the very best of practices in his elementary school years. While I did enjoy that preparatory time, I could not wait for the day when I could actually mount him and begin our journey to him becoming the best roping horse in the world. Then the goofy thing couldn’t rein. Good grief. I called my friend, Bronc. (Great name for a cowboy or what?)
“He’s just dull in the face,” I said into the phone. “I have to plow him around like an old mule.”
“How long have you been working with him?” he asked.
“I don’t know. Maybe three weeks,” I said. “And that has amounted to three weeks of nothing.”
“My goodness,” he said. “Three weeks and he’s not ready for a world show?”
I knew he was scolding me for being impatient – something Bronc cannot abide in people when they are impatient with the horse. “Okay, okay,” I said. “You still have to come down here and do something to fix him.”

He came and he stayed two days. I think about those two days all the time now. I sit on the porch in the evening watching Blue graze in the pasture – no longer two, but twenty now, and still such a splendid child – and I think of those two days.
I remember that morning with such freshness now after all these years, and how he watched me ride the colt in the round pen for a short time, and then he said, “Okay, let’s get some lawn chairs.”
“Great,” I said. “Are we going to use the chairs for some sort of drill to help him?”
“No,” he said. “We are going to sit in the chairs and talk until you see that when you get better, Blue will get better.” We sat in the chairs, and he talked and at first, I was irritated and impatient. I wanted to help my colt. And the more he talked, the quieter the world became on that day, until there was just Bronc and me in the world. After a time, it was as if he grasped my lower eyelid with one hand and upper with the other and jerked them open, and the light came in… and I could see.
It wasn’t the colt. It was me. It’s not them. It’s us.
Jeez. Still hurts to write that.
While that little lesson may have been painful, it was certainly worth it. Bronc didn’t fix my horse, but he certainly helped me. And guess what? Blue still doesn’t know much about reining, but he handles like a dove. Bronc taught me how to ride him with my feet, and my legs, and my voice.
I’m not telling you I have arrived. No boasting here. There is a catch to all of this. It is joy that I feel having walked out of the darkness about the old ways. The old ways of yelling and hitting the horse. The old ways of “breaking” the horse, and the old ways of “never letting the horse win.” There is joy in learning the horse will do anything we ask if he understands what we want. But once we walk into that light, we just assume the new and better answers will be lying in the sun there waiting for us. They are not. Just because we learn our old ways are ineffective does not mean that now we know the right way. The right way remains to be learned.
But at least after all these years, I’m coming out of the dark.

“Coming out of the dark, I finally
see the light now
And it’s shining on me.
I see the light. I see the light.”
— Gloria Estefan

Michael Johnson
Johnson Farms –
Home of Little Blue,
good reining horse

The post MICHAEL JOHNSON MONDAY…”Coming out of the Dark” – wonderful prose, lesson learned. appeared first on Horse and Man.

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Supporting The Bucket Fund through Amazon Smile


Supporting The Bucket Fund through Amazon Smile is HUGE for the horses. Please choose HORSE AND MAN when you make your Amazon purchase through this link. THANK YOU!

I am a huge fan of HORSEFLY FILMS.  I’ve written about their beautiful, moving and inspiring films.  They do an excellent job both in production and research.  They are the real deal.

SOME OF THEIR INCREDIBLE WORK…

Sophie and Jen have a new film about the California Camarillo White horse.

They need just a small amount to finish it.  Are you interested?!  Read on!

CLICK HERE to go to the original story.

FROM HORSEFLY FILMS

Click to go to campaign

STALLION OF A DREAM spotlights a rare horse breed forged in the history & mythology of the Golden State. Now extremely endangered, the Camarillo White Horse embodies the collective dream of California and a cultural beacon of hope for a new generation of Californians trying to save them.
28 Days, 16 Hours Left
Inclusion Statement
As women filmmakers, we represent gender equality in film. In a current climate in which Hispanic-Americans are under cultural attack, our film celebrates California’s Hispanic roots, creating positive role models for identity and sparking cross-cultural recognition of our origins as Californians.
About The Project

STALLION OF A DREAM: California and the Camarillo White Horse is a feature documentary film (56 minutes) that tells the story of the rare Camarillo White Horse. It is the quintessential California story of immigration and empire-building, and of the roots of cultural and social change, told through the Camarillo family who came from Mexico in the 1830s in a quest to realize their dream.


Into the cauldron of desire, possibility and the alchemy of transformation that was early California, came the aristocratic Spanish colonists known as the Californios, among them the Camarillos. The pastoral era of Rancho life was steeped in romantic Spanish traditions and all things equine.  In this early California landscape horses were more than a conveyance or a tool for work— the horse was, like the car a century later, a deep reflection and expression of personal identity.  Nowhere was the connection with one’s horse and incredible and daring riding skills more appreciated than by the gallant and bold Californios.

In California the horse has been singularly central to our early history, tradition and cultural identity. In STALLION OF A DREAM we spotlight a genetically and historically unique rare breed forged deep in the history and shifting mythology of the Golden State. Beginning with the Camarillo’s arrival in California with the Hijar expedition in 1834 aboard a ship that may or may not have contained Napoleon’s doom within its planks, our film tells the story of one family’s rise to prominence. The Camarillo family eventually settled in Ventura County, purchasing the original Ruiz Spanish land grant and transforming the wild landscape of the California pastoral era of the Rancheros. Despite his critics, Camarillo was a visionary and drove the shift from the booming cattle trade toward a managed, agricultural paradise, which is reflected  in the transformation of Rancho Camarillo. Adolfo Camarillo’s progress and embrace of the vanguard mirrored California’s own spirited ethos and march toward modernization. California’s very name is a fiction of an exotic and fantastical Utopia. California embodies the bold tension held at the western edge of a vast continent,  the lure of whatever comes next. We boldly exclaim ourselves in our state of mind and in our state motto “Eureka!”, meaning “I have found it!” , but what is it Californians have found? Gold? The next freeway exit? A dreamer’s Paradise? For the Camarillo family, the dream began with a horse.


Adolfo Camarillo was a California visionary and his greatest vision would arrive, most appropriately, on the back of a horse. In the 1920’s he created a new breed of horse to bear his name: The Camarillo White Horse. Adolfo, with his stallion Sultan, embarked on an equine journey that would become more than a personal identity or brand. The White Horse would become his family legacy; their gift to California and the world. An icon of Adolfo’s forward, revolutionary thinking, Sultan not only gave Adolfo considerable physical stature, together they became ambassadors for the Camarillo family and for California at large. One is hard-pressed to find an animal so synonymous with one place. Everyone who encountered the rare white horse and the Spanish horseman astride him had the same passionate reaction— with a presence evocative of both California’s storied past and bright white future,  Adolfo and Sultan ignited a spark in spectators everywhere, embodying all that was good in the collective dream of California.


Adolfo Camarillo was an astute businessman with a great grasp of the value of PR and over the next fifty years the Camarillo White Horses were paraded hundreds if not thousands of times locally, nationally and even internationally with many broadcasts of their rides in the Rose Parade, the Opening of the Oakland Bay Bridge and an appearance in the Opening Ceremonies of the 1932 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

The Camarillo White Horses because synonymous with old California values, a fact not lost on politicians who borrowed their magnificence to their own ends in political campaigns of every ilk. In a pre-televisionworld, dignitaries and mayors clamored to beseen riding the Camarillo Whites where they could make a splash in the press. Political hopefuls of every stripe, from President Harding to Governor Ronald Reagan rode the horses in parade, keenly aware that Adolfo Camarillo’s stellar reputation across the Golden State was tantamount to an endorsement  of political virtue. They were quite literally playing the part of the hero on the white horse.


It was not just the advent of the automobile which would push these horses to the brink of extinction.  Just when history was cementing these icons into California history, controversial family decisions and bitter strife pushed the horses towards an almost inevitable and unceremonious end.  Long held by Camarillo family members only, some felt this horse was theirs and only theirs— not just by birthright, but by their identities as Californians.  The future of the horse was on a precipice.


With breed numbers floundering at a mere eleven horses left on earth, it was at a final contentious auction that outsiders swooped in 28 years ago to save the horse for future generations.   In recognizing their own personal identity as Californians and what they felt was their connection to these endangered horses, the Camarillo White Horse had transcended the domain of a single family and become the property of Californians everywhere who rejoiced in their salvation.


Today, spectators of these horses still rejoice as Camarillo family members work diligently alongside non-family to create a viable future for these beloved horses that are living vessels of history. Away from public parade however, a different view emerges.  The work of breed conservation is a constant struggle and the future of these horses is anything but secure. The next challenging reality that White Horses of Camarillo faces is how viable is their future for with little to no connection to California’s youth? The people involved in saving and perpetuating the breed are up against time itself and the burning question is how can these horses survive the next decade, let alone the next century? How can tangible intergenerational learning occur? How can California’s youth not only be made aware of their heritage but become excited enough in recognizing themselves in our collective history that it ignites their passion to continue what Adolfo Camarillo started a hundred years ago? Will they adopt his dream as their own?

CONCEPT AND THEMES
Despite modern technology making horses obsolete for many, the debt to history remains. From the sword to the plowshare, horses are an integral part of who we are, of who we became, and though the culture of the horse is intangible and cannot be preserved in a museum, it is something we can reflect upon and explore with film narrative. Using the equine as a central focus and unusual lens on humankind’s saga brings into sharp focus our agrarian and warlike histories, our spiritual connections and the ongoing battle to preserve our unique heritage in the face of rapid globalization.


As mankind built civilizations on the backs of horses, we owe our victories, our survival, our enriched culture to the noble horse.  There are many equine breeds and cultures close to extinction, and without the help of a dedicated few, this valued bond between humankind and horse is sure to be lost.  The Camarillo White Horse is one such rare breed and this film will help highlight the precarious position and ongoing revival of these horses and the people who are trying to save them by bringing their uniquely fascinating history to the screen.


Throughout the film’s rich narrative, we focus on broad themes of California’s transitioning personal identity as a direct correlation of the evolution from horse to automobile, shifting attitudes on race and social status in California, the disconnect of today’s youth with our collective history and the ongoing fight to halt this rampant cultural memory loss in future generations. The thread of diversity in all its forms in California— old, young, Hispanic, non-Hispanic— is prevalent throughout the film’s focus. The preservation of memory and California’s heritage and the celebration or mourning of any part of that cultural spirit is inclusive of us all, requiring us to view ourselves first as Californians. This is not just the story of the Camarillo family as the “other” but rather a film exposing one of the roots and key components of California identity, as played out in the ever-unfolding story of the Camarillo White Horse.


Unlike any other domesticated animal on earth, the horse, and mankind’s relationship with it, has changed drastically and permanently in just the last hundred years. With the advent of the automobile, it is a loss we barely even register, all but slipping into the past unnoticed.  This massive shifting of our connection with the equine and of their practical usefulness to us has profound effects on our culture and our idea of ourselves. In California, the automobile has been embraced so passionately and engrained so deeply, it is part of our cultural DNA. Nowhere else has our relationship with Horsepower undergone such a drastic sea change as in this home of car culture and the call of the open road.  From the days of the Rancheros, Californians have sought a faster, better, slicker means of locomotion, but before lowriders and hotrods, surf woodies and the LA freeway, California was the birthplace of a singularly unique breed of horse that set it apart.

CREATIVE APPROACH, STYLE AND COLLABORATORS
In making this film we are working with all of the people involved in the breed, the Camarillo White Horse Association, the Camarillo family and board of the Camarillo Ranch House.  Two-time Pulitzer Prize winning historian of the American West, Dr. Alan Taylor of UC Davis /University of Virginia and California historian and horseman, Dr. Al Hurtado of the University of Oklahoma are joining the team as Humanities advisors.

Synthesizing visual beauty and academic scope, the film will feature our signature acclaimed cinematic visual style, blending breathtaking footage of larger- than-life horses that leap from the screen, adept re-creations of key historical moments, in-depth interviews, authoritative and compelling script, lush score and a treasury of archival materials including vintage never-before-seen film, photographs, newspapers, paintings and the private family diaries. As well as the current oral histories uncovered in interviews, we are amassing a body of rich, diverse archival materials from repositories as disparate as the International Olympic Committee, the Smithsonian’s Autry National Center, the Camarillo family, wax cylinder music recordings by Charles Lummis and the Tournament of Roses Rose Parade, in order to creatively tell the compelling story of these horses and their enormous  ongoing cultural impact and relevance in California.

WHY US?
This film will be the sixth film in our series of documentaries of the Horsefly Films’ Rare Equine Trust, an ongoing cinematic library dedicated to exploring diverse cultures, rare equine breeds and unique stories and cultural histories centered around the horse.  We are experts in telling these kinds of stories and our films are not only screening worldwide, but are fulfilling our mission to effect change and raise awareness.

WHY YOU?
We’ve already done a LOT on this film. In fact, we’re about halfway. We write, shoot edit and wear as many hats as possible for 2 people to wear. But to get this film completed, there are some things we can’t do– and that’s why we need your help! We  still need to pay for things like:

Our Composer
Our Narrator
Archival photos & footage
Sound mix
Historical Picture Car
Location fees

 

The post FANS OF THE CALIFORNIA CAMARILLO WHITE HORSE: COME LISTEN AND WATCH! We have a chance to help the breed survive! appeared first on Horse and Man.

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ragwort
Dolly and Rocket now

A leading welfare charity is urging owners to take action on ragwort after a mare was brought into its care with severe liver damage.

Dolly was found by a World Horse Welfare field officer in Dorset in March 2017 with a foal at foot.

The mare was weak and struggling to survive while caring for her foal, named Rocket by staff at the charity.

“When Dolly first arrived she was very thin, with all her ribs and vertebrae clearly visible,” said Glenda Spooner Farm supervisor Grace Vooght.

“When new horses come into our care they are always examined by our vet and routine blood tests are undertaken to ensure they are not suffering any underlying problems.

“When Dolly’s results came back it became apparent she was suffering from severe liver damage which could have been caused by a number of poisons.

“One of the most common causes of liver damage that we see is ragwort poisoning, but without knowing her background, it was difficult to determine what had caused Dolly to be in such a terrible condition.

“The first step was to wean Rocket on to eating more independently so he was less reliant on Dolly’s milk, which worked well as he was quite a greedy foal.

“This allowed Dolly to put what little energy she had into repairing her damaged liver.”

Ms Vooght added that Dolly’s condition did not seem to be improving, with blood tests showing little progress in her liver’s healing.

Rocket now

“We continued to monitor Dolly and provide her with all the nutrition she needed so she could bring up her young foal and it was very much touch and go as to whether she would survive,” she said.

“After a few months of dedicated care and attention, Dolly miraculously began to recover and her liver finally started to function properly, which amazed us all.

“Both ponies are now living out in their herds and have undertaken their handling training as well as learning to go into a trailer – all in preparation for them to find loving new homes on our rehoming scheme.”

Article continues below…


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World Horse Welfare’s chief field officer Claire Gordon is urging owners to remove the toxic plant from horses’ fields.

“It’s vital that your horse doesn’t eat ragwort, and you can’t assume they will choose not to eat it,” said Ms Gordon.

Dolly now

“Spraying in April and early May while the plant is growing is the most effective way to eradicate it from your pasture, but you must be able to rest the field after spraying.

“For those without access to additional grazing, pulling the whole plant up — including the roots — is the next best option.

“It’s best to do this at the seedling or rosette stage, before the plant flowers and while the ground is still soft — so the sooner you act, the better.

“Seeds can remain in the ground for 15 years before germination, so even if you’ve removed ragwort in previous years, it’s important to do it again every year.”

Click here for more information on how to control ragwort

For all the latest news analysis, competition reports, interviews, features and much more, don’t miss Horse & Hound magazine, on sale every Thursday

This week’s edition (17 May) features a full report from Royal Windsor Horse Show, including all the showing, showjumping and dressage action. We go behind the scenes with the Household Cavalry as they prepare for the royal wedding, plus check out our interview with Irish eventer Padraig McCarthy.

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