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on trail: horse breeds
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| Mountain Horse Breeds |
| Story by Honi Roberts |
| These smooth-gaited horses of Kentucky make superior trail mounts. |

The good life in Vermont: A lovely Rocky Mountain mare, Adams Sara Jane, with her irresistible 2-day-old filly, CGF Triple Delight. They pair is owned by Cedar Grove Farm.
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Mountain Horses — Rocky Mountain Horses and Kentucky Mountain Horses — are
people horses perfect for trail riding. If you doubt this, just ask Mike and Kathy Hartong of Cedar Grove
Farm in rural Peacham, Vermont. "On summer evenings, we sit out on our stone patio, and within
minutes, our horses are lined up at the fence," Mike says with a chuckle. "It’s
uncanny; as if they want to listen to, or be a part of our conversation. Even
the babies just want to be where we are. Mountain Horses are the truly the
Golden Retrievers of the equine world."
The Hartongs, who own 14 Mountain Horses, were initially attracted
to the horses’ mellow temperaments, but soon discovered that the breed offered
so much more for the avid trail enthusiast: a naturally smooth gait,
intelligence and calm in challenging situations, and hardy constitutions that
make them easy keepers, even when long, frosty winters darken the Northeast
Kingdom.

Classic Farms Classics Shogun, a rare red chocolate roan stallion, is registered as both a Kentucky Mountain Saddle Horse and a Rocky Mountain Horse.
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Earlier in the year, when fall foliage ripens into lush reds and
oranges, the Hartongs often host as many as 20 friends and their Mountain Horses
at Cedar Grove Farm. They spend crisp autumn days exploring more than 30 square
miles of trails around the charming village that Yankee magazine called the best village in New England. Winter doesn’t put a
halt to the fun: Their Mountain Horses pull sleighs through the snow.
"I usually train youngsters myself," says Mike, a surgeon. "I
handle and imprint them at birth, as the mothers watch. There’s a lot of trust.
It’s a very gratifying experience."
Out of the national spotlight until just two decades ago, more and
more trail riders are discovering the Mountain Horse. "I’ve had people drive six
hours just to see one!" Mike says.
Humble Origins The Rocky Mountain Horse and the Kentucky Mountain Horse share the
same rich history and beginnings in the tranquil rolling hills of eastern
Kentucky. According to legend, an anonymous traveler from the Rocky Mountains
arrived in the area early last century. The traveler traded a handsome young
colt for supplies. Bred to local horses, the colt’s offspring were the beginning
of the Rocky Mountain Horse breed.
The next milestone occurred 50 years later, when horseman Sam
Tuttle’s stallion, Tobe, and his five sons were recognized as foundation sires
of the modern-day Rocky Mountain Horse. Strong-built, with a distinct, four-beat
gait, the horses became essential to Appalachian farms.
The strength and versatility of these horses became part of local
legend, but remained an eastern Kentucky secret until 1986, when the Rocky
Mountain Horse Association was formed in Mount Olivet, Kentucky, to maintain and
promote the breed.
Then, in 1989, Robert Robinson Jr. formed the Kentucky Mountain
Saddle Horse Association, based in Lexington, Kentucky, to document and preserve
the ancestry and rich heritage of the Mountain Saddle Horse.
"Junior Robinson didn’t fully buy into the Old Tobe theory," notes
Dave Stefanic, today the owner of the for-profit KMSHA registry and of Classic
Farm in Georgetown, Kentucky. "He believed there was an existing herd of gaited
horses in central Kentucky dating back to the 1890s, and that Old Tobe was just
one of several foundation stallions of the Kentucky Mountain breed."

Classic Farms Blackjack Cowboy, a young, up-and-coming black stallion, son of Classics Squirrel.
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Stefanic also owns the KMSHA’s subsidiary, the Spotted Mountain
Horse Association, which registers Mountain Horses that sport too much white to
meet the breed’s solid-color standard.
Early Kentucky Mountain Saddle Horses were small, so two size
classifications were created: pony size, 11 to 13.3 hands high; and horse size,
14 hands and up. There’s no predominant breed color, in contrast to the Rocky
Mountain Horses, which are renowned for their striking chocolate coats accented
by flaxen manes and tails. Many horses are registered with both the Rocky
Mountain and Kentucky Mountain Horse organizations.
In 1988, the Mountain Pleasure Horse Association was founded.
According to its informational materials, it registers "the Mountain Pleasure
Horse, the old-time gaited breed of horse that existed in Kentucky 160 years ago
and from which selective breeders developed the Tennessee Walking Horses,
American Saddlebred Horses and the Rocky Mountain Horses. Long before the other
gaited breeds were in existence, a particular type of horse was being bred on
the steep hillsides to work the fields and provide the best ride." The MPHA is a
closed registry, open only to horses with registered parents.
Surefooted Grace Gordon Rife of Stanton, Kentucky, organizes trail rides for a
third Mountain Horse registry, the Mountain Pleasure Horse Association. Rife,
owner of Upper Cane Creek Stables, is a big fan of the breed’s gliding gait and
willingness to please.
Among his favorite trails is the Gladie Creek Trail in the Red
River Gorge area of Kentucky’s Daniel Boone National Forest. It offers a variety
of terrain which, he says, the Mountain Horse tackles with surefooted grace.
"There’s water, from ankle to belly-deep, with hills to climb, and
valleys to meander through, and the Mountain Horse will carry you safely
wherever you ask him to go," Rife says. "Much of the Gladie Creek Trail is
ridden under a canopy of oak and beech trees, with pine and mountain laurels,
too, so it’s comfortable even in summer heat."

Jane Gean aboard Cisco, a Spotted Mountain Horse gelding owned by Jane Dalrymple, who was introduced to gaited horses after a back injury. The Mountain Horses smooth gaits were just what the doctor ordered.
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A Family Affair
Like his father and grandfather before him, H.T. Derickson owns
and operates Van Bert Farm in Stanton, Kentucky. One of the country’s largest
breeders of Mountain Horses, Derickson remembers the day, almost a half century
ago, that Sam Tuttle brought his stallion, Tobe, to his farm.
"Mr. Tuttle drove his cattle truck onto our driveway, with nine or
ten horses in the back, including ol’ Tobe," he says. "He unloaded them down our
cattle chute, then my father and I watched as he jumped on bareback, and rode
Tobe up and down the gravel in front of our barn. Tobe wasn’t big, but he was
strong-built, with a very smooth four-beat gait. My father bred one mare to him,
and that offspring became the foundation sire of our Rocky Mountain herd."
Today, with his children and grandchildren helping run the farm,
Derickson continues to share the history of the breed and the insights of a
lifetime spent with horses. Old friends as well as newcomers to the breed find
the welcome mat is always out at Van Bert Farm.
Derickson’s daughter, Vanessa Crowe, also deeply involved with
Mountain Horses, serves as executive director of United Mountain Horse, Inc. Not
a registry, the UMH and its affiliate, the American Gaited Mountain Horse
Association, support and promote all Mountain Horses.
"We have compiled a tremendous data base of information on horses
and bloodlines," Crowe says. "In sharing it, we hope to encourage
better-informed breeding practices. It’s a great tool for breeders, and we hope
it’ll also help prospective buyers with their decisions."
The UMH/AGMH has recently purchased 182 acres, part of an historic
farm, near Clay City, Kentucky, where they plan to construct a Mountain Horse
Equestrian Center.

Sarah Bushong-Weeks of 8th Heaven Gaited Horses bonds with Bravo Banjo, a handsome Rocky Mountain Horse with a flaxen mane and tail.
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Trail Partners
Sometimes, horses bring people together; Mountain Horses did just
that for Jane Gean and Sharon Dalrymple. Jane and her husband, Bob, own
Dreamcatcher Enterprises in Lexington, Kentucky; she met Dalrymple in 1999.
"I grew up watching Roy Rogers and the Lone Ranger," Dalrymple
remembers. "I’d worked in the family business for over 30 years when I decided
it was time to follow my heart and get a horse. I bought my first, a Quarter
Horse, when I was 48 years old."
Unfortunately, she had a riding accident and broke bones in her
back. Suddenly, jogging her horse was excruciatingly painful. A friend suggested
gaited horses.
"But I didn’t know what a gaited horse was!" Dalrymple says. "I
sought out three different gaited breeds, but none of them captured my
imagination. Then I saw Jane’s website. I drove to meet her, got on a Mountain
Horse, and everything clicked! Her horses had a gentle disposition, smooth gait,
and there wasn’t a wasted movement as they traveled down the trail. I realized:
I can do this.
"I just fell in love with the Mountain Horse. And for a while, I
thought I needed to raise enough for everybody in the country to own one!"
In actuality, Jane Gean and Sharon Dalrymple pooled their
resources to create a Mountain Horse breeding business. At one time, they had 85
horses.
"Jane grew up with horses and had practical knowledge, and I had
the business experience," Dalrymple says. "Every birth was a miracle. When a
baby was due, I slept in the barn and imprinted the foals. It was a magical
experience. We raised wonderful Mountain Horses."
Recently, Dalrymple heeded the call of the White Mountains of
eastern Arizona and purchased a ranch located at 7,200 feet elevation, nestled
in Ponderosa pines. She named it Rocky Range Ranch.
"We sold many of our horses, and I brought eight horses to
Arizona, and left eight with Jane and Bob," Dalrymple says. "Jane also found me
the horse of my dreams, a Spotted Mountain Horse gelding named Cisco, who’s the
smoothest horse I’ve ever ridden."
A recent ride took Dalrymple to trails near Tombstone, Arizona,
and the Tombstone Livery. She highly recommends it, along with the Big Horse
Mountains in Wyoming. "Wonderful riding," she exclaims. "Both make you feel like
you’re in the Old West. And a Mountain Horse is just the partner to take you
there!"

Tomas T-Buccaneer, 8th Heaven Farms' majestic senior stallion, has an up-close-and-personal chat with his son, Buccaneer
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Versatility Plus
When Vernon Stamper looks over the 28 broodmares in his pastures,
he sees Mountain Horses with some of the same bloodlines his great-grandfather
used in his herd more than 100 years ago. The fifth-generation horseman, owner
of Overlook Stables in Sharpsburg, Kentucky, is an eloquent spokesman for the
breed, full of fun and folk wisdom.
"I breed selectively, keeping the old bloodlines alive, because
they are a treasure," he says. "The Mountain Horse has the sweet temperament of
a puppy dog and the physical abilities of the best all-around horse you can
imagine. They have the smoothest gait you can find, a deep reservoir of stamina,
and are surefooted and quiet."
Stamper starts all his colts on trails. "What better way to
exercise youngsters and muscle them up?" he asks. "They’re exposed to trail
obstacles and wildlife, and we never ride the same trail twice. We take our
time, and give them a solid foundation that lasts a lifetime. And we always have
some trail savvy horses available for sale."
Distinctive Personalities Two sorrel half-sister mares from Vernon and Joyce Stamper’s farm
are part of Sarah Bushong-Weeks’ foundation herd at 8th Heaven Gaited Horses in
Castle Rock, Colorado. They’re both out of his mare, memorably named Stampers
Peaches.
"Miss Butterfinger and Mountain Marriage (known as M&M) each
have distinctive personalities, but both make the cutest babies and are super
mothers," Bushong-Weeks says.
Just a few short years ago, she decided to follow her lifelong
passion for horses and create an equestrian haven; a calm, safe environment
where horses and humans had the opportunity to develop lasting partnerships.
"Quick-fix techniques, like harsh bits, chains, or chemicals, are
just not acceptable," Bushong-Weeks says. "We’re not wedded to any one training
method, but we use those taught by Pat Parelli, John Lyons, and Mark Rashid,
among others, as well as Roger Kyle, our talented trainer.
"Each horse is unique, and we tailor the training to enhance their
special talents. Rigid, uncompromising training doesn’t allow for the uniqueness
of the horse and limits a rider’s ability to use the horse for different
activities. We train for the well-rounded horse."
Bushong-Weeks’ pride and joy is Tomas T, her 8-year-old Rocky
Mountain Horse stallion. "He’s athletic and self-assured, with a beautiful,
baroque arch to his neck," she says. "He’s been recognized as the ‘epitome of
the Rocky Mountain Horse’ by the United Mountain Horse Association. My biggest
challenge is taking his photograph; his nose is always all over the lens! I’m
pretty sure that if he could, he’d make himself comfy in my living room."
Shopping Savvy Derickson offers terrific advice for anyone contemplating
purchasing a Mountain Horse:
• Learn the cues.
Take time to learn where your horse’s "control buttons" are located. Each animal
is individual, so learn what specific cues your horse answers
to.
• Learn the gaits.
Particularly if you’re new to gaited horses, learn how to ask for the
appropriate gait, how to recognize it, and how to maintain proper form in the
gait.
• Find a good farrier. Contact owners of gaited horses in your area to find a farrier who works
with gaited horses. Like any specialty, experience and common sense are
valuable.
• Choose a kind bit.
Select your bit deliberately, and use it wisely. A bit is as severe as
the hands it’s in; even D-ring snaffles can injure sensitive mouth
tissue. If you’re unsure which bit to use, consult a qualified trainer or
certified riding instructor.
• Choose a saddle with care. The average Mountain Horse has rounded, not
prominent, withers, so many saddles are too narrow and will pinch at the
shoulders. Derickson uses a Canadian trooper saddle. Its tree sits on either
side of the backbone (like a cavalry saddle) with a metal arch connecting the
sides. It exerts no pressure on the backbone and shoulders. The savvy Derickson
says this saddle type has eliminated sore backs.
• Enjoy! Then enjoy one of the
best friends a trail rider can have: the Mountain Horse!
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Stumble It!
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Mountain Horse Breeds
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| Tennessee Walking Horse Breed |
| Evolution of the breed:
In the mid-1800s, a new breed of horse began to emerge from the bountiful,
bluegrass region of middle Tennessee. Bred by farmers to till the fields during
the week, these horses were also expected to provide them a comfortable ride on
weekends, and... | read |
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