Thursday, January 13, 2011

Shagya: KS Rubin



Thursday January 13 2011

There are several things you notice immediately when you lay eyes on the Shagya stallion KS Rubin.


He's handsome, conformationally outstanding, and extremely disciplined and mild-tempered. As a 5-year-old, he was described as having a "charming personality." And he's friendly. "He gives good hugs!" says Deane Zahn, one of his riders in endurance competition.


And one would swear he has a sense of humor.

He's also flawlessly bred, and that's one of the reasons Katherine Voyer, of Oak Knoll Sporthorses bought him as a 5-year-old in 2005. With only one Arabian in his fourth generation, (a purebred Shagya is not allowed more than seven Arabian ancestors out of the sixteen in its fourth generation), you can't get much purer than that.

He'd been imported from Germany to Illinois by Donna Cross as a long yearling. Around that time, Katherine had been looking for a stallion to 'balance' the white hot racing Polish, and Polish-Egyptian cross Arabian mares she had been breeding and racing.

"I did a lot of research, and entertained every reasonable breed, and I ultimately settled on the Shagya."

The Shagya breed was developed in the 1700's at the Imperial Stud in Babolna, Hungary. The cavalry was in need of a mount with more intelligence, bigger bone, better feet, better training ability and temperament, and one that was an easy keeper. This sturdy new breed developed from the native Hungarian mares that were crossed with desert Arabians - and was named after Shagya, one of the most influential foundation desert Arabian stallions from Syria that was used in the beginning.


Today Shagyas are known for their athletic ability, their steady temperaments, their jumping ability, and as an 'improver' of other breeds of horses. The Shagya breed is still rare, with less than 250 horses existing in the U.S. and about 2000 worldwide; but most of those who own them are fiercely loyal to them and believe in their abilities. You can see this devotion in all of Rubin's 'girls.'

One of those girls is Carolyn Hock. Carolyn is one of those who is still a horse addict now, probably because she couldn't have one when she was growing up in the Mid-West. "We couldn't afford a horse, but we had a Pony Club down the road. I would beg, borrow, and steal to ride anything with four legs."


Later, when married, it was her husband Chris' fault. "He made the fatal mistake of saying, 'There's no reason why you can't buy a horse.'" At this, Carolyn and Chris both laugh. "We bought a horse from a garage sale," says Chris. "$400 for the saddle, and $100 for the horse!" 'Silver' turned out to be a fun Tennessee Walker-Appaloosa cross.

Eventually, as Fate would have it, Carolyn and Dottie McAdams, an endurance veterinarian and rider, crossed paths. Dottie talked Carolyn into riding her Arabians. "I said sure, since I was used to riding anything. The first time I got on an Arabian, I found myself in the dirt. I thought, 'Well! This is different!'" Carolyn was used to riding anything, but she wasn't used to Arabians spooking.

Carolyn naturally got into endurance riding because of Dottie: "It's all her fault, and I told her that!" And as whimsical Fate would have it again, the first endurance horse that Carolyn bought from Dottie, GT Sando, turned out to be her best.


Carolyn first saw Sando after Dottie bought him as a three-year-old from Lee and Garvin Tankersly. Carolyn recalls he looked like a cross between a giraffe and a deer. "But Dottie was able to see the potential in him. She taught me a lot about that."


Carolyn bought GT Sando at 5, when he was much better looking - especially on the endurance trail. In ten years of competition, they completed 2410 AERC miles together, finishing 38 of 44 starts, including 10 of 16 100-milers, one of those being the Tevis Cup. They also finished 11th in the 2003 Pan American Championships at Trout Lake, Washington, won Team Gold at the 2005 North American Championships at Fair Hill, Maryland, and finished the 2005 World Championship in Dubai.

It was these accomplishments that made long-time endurance rider Ruth Waltenspiel recommend to Katherine Voyer that she send KS Rubin to Carolyn Hock for endurance training.

Carolyn's response: "I don't do stallions."

She did agree to go look at Rubin, and found herself impressed with his extraordinary temperament and training. After Rubin had done a solid year of dressage training under Sue Eoff, Carolyn agreed to take him on for endurance.


He turned out to be a gem. "With stallions, you always have to pay attention, but Rubin's management was impeccable."

Deane Zahn, another of Rubin's 'girls,' agrees. "He's 100% compliant, intelligent. I'm a scientist grad student (and a recent convert to endurance from the dressage world, thanks to Carolyn) - I can really appreciate intelligence in a horse."

Deane has the majority of miles on KS Rubin so far - 630 of his 1465 miles - and she recalls a ride in Ridgecrest where a dog spooked Rubin (all riders in Ridgecrest know this naughty dog, who throws himself against a board fence when riders are going by, and have been almost spooked off their horses by him!) and she almost fell off. "Rubin didn't panic, didn't run off - I was hanging off the side of his neck. He just stood there and looked at me funny while I pulled myself back into the saddle. He took great care of me!"

Another rider, Laura Hayes, echoed that phrase about her ride on KS Rubin in 2009. "The day I rode Rubin was the last day of Bryce. I had ridden two other horses that week that were not mine, the first one bucked me off on my head - I was barely in the saddle and came off the other side. I had a wicked head and neck ache all week The second, while a wonderful horse, caught a toe during a big trot and went down on my leg on a gravely road. I had a nasty road rash from above my knee to half way down my calf on the outside of my leg.

"By the time I got on Rubin I was really sore. He jogged through that 50 miles like he was carrying a child - I was hurt and pretty out of it. I couldn't get off when I normally would, and I think I was probably close
to useless to him as a partner. He didn't know me from Adam, but he took care of me and we finished. I haven't seen him since, and I went straight to bed I was so sore and tired, but when I do see him again, I
have to apologize to him and thank him for taking such good care of me!"

While he does behave very well, Rubin does notice the equine ladies on the trail... he is, after all, a stallion. "Sometimes he'll slooooooooooow down and drag along if a mare is behind him, or he'll speed right up if one is in front of him," Carolyn says. "He always knows where the ladies are! But if he starts thinking about anything other than working on the trail, that thought is stopped - and that's the extent of it."

"He does prefer redheads!" Deane says.


Katherine Voyer has never ridden her horse. A back injury has kept her off horses since before she got Rubin. She doesn't complain, but she does have that wistful look in her eye. "I'd like nothing better than to get on him and ride a 50 or 75 - just get on and go..."

But instead she contents herself with raising good horses and watching Rubin, her prized horse, continue to grow and develop.

KS Rubin is quietly amassing accomplishments as he trots down the trails. "We had two goals last year. One was the Jim Jones Award (for the highest mileage endurance stallion for the year), and one was to have a number of different riders on him, to show how rideable and manageable he is." Rubin finished second in the Jim Jones Award with 960 miles, and he carried 6 different riders to finishes, including two Young Riders.

In 2010, Katie Bran and Rubin finished 10th in the 75-mile North American Young Riders FEI ride; and Deane Zahn rode Rubin to a finish in the 75-mile Git R Done FEI ride. These finishes contributed to KS Rubin becoming the highest ranked FEI endurance Shagya stallion in the world for 2010. He's also the all-time endurance high-mileage Shagya stallion in North America.

KS Rubin is recorded in the RPSI (Rheinland Pfalz-Saar ) Stallion Book 2; he can be used as an outcross in the Hungarian Felver and Hungarian Sportlo books of the Hungarian Horse Association of America; and has been inspected and approved for Shagya breeding by the NASS (North American Shagya-Arabian Society) and ASAV (American Shagya Arabian Verband registry).


Due to his endurance competition, KS Rubin isn't breeding, but Katherine had him collected before he began his training, and frozen semen breedings are available. He has produced three outstanding-looking youngsters out of Katherine's Polish mares; four-year-old Renoirr is in training with Carolyn Hock and should make his first Limited Distance start in the fall of this year.

KS Rubin fits the typical characteristics of the Shagya breed description exactly: he's 15/16 Purebred, he's 15.1 hands, he's an excellent natural jumper (witnessed at his 2007 ATA Inspection), and he's very people oriented. "Rubin loves 'hands on' more than any other horse," Deane confirms. "He loves being touched, groomed, and handled."

And he already appears to have the ability to 'improve' breeds, if his three offspring Katherine owns are any indication. "I think three-year-old Rodinn is going to be even better than Renoirr!" Katherine says, with an unbiased gleam in her eyes.

KS Rubin still has many more endurance competition years ahead of him, and he'll be steadily working toward accomplishing more goals.

And a couple of young sons will soon be following in his footsteps, making their own marks.



KS Rubin gallery
KS Rubin 1/13/11


Renoirr gallery
Renoirr 1/13/11

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Warner Springs Ride Recap



Tuesday January 11 2011

For ride manager Terry Woolley Howe, putting on a ride is all about the volunteers. And she has a huge army of them helping at Warner Springs. She gets this army, she says, because the riders enjoy the ride. "When riders are happy, they treat the volunteers well; when volunteers are happy, they come to help, and the riders are happy."


It's about 15 years now that Terry has put on the Warner Springs ride in the rolling foothills of Palomar Mountain (the 2004 National Championship was held here). She also puts on the Descanso and Manzanita rides in the area. This one takes place on a piece of the Pacific Crest Trail, and part of the Warner Springs Ranch property, a resort a wee bit past its glory days since its establishment in 1844. It has cottages, an airport with glider rides, a golf course, and horse boarding; and it had a spa, bath and body boutique, tennis and golf pro shops. The property was recently sold, but has hung in litigation for some time (Terry wasn't sure she would be putting on the ride this year), and the resort is operating on a skeleton crew. However, the highlight of the resort, the pool-sized hot spring, is still open and fully accessible!


Ridecamp was in a horse campground under huge magnificent old oak trees, as were the vet checks.


Volunteers created a heavenly stop for horses and riders - hay, carrots, and hot bran mash artfully laid out under the massive trees. There was a heavenly spread of human sustenance too, for the hungry riders and volunteers - coffee, gatorade, donuts, sandwiches, egg salad, chips, fruit.


A couple of girls walked around with trays of donuts, treats and drinks, at your service.


147 riders hit the trails on a cool, partly overcast (but no rain!) Saturday - 93 of them in the 25-miler, 54 in the 50-miler. Twenty-five (!) riders did not finish the LD, and of those, all but two were overtime. "I have never had so many people overtime," Terry said. "At the pre-ride meeting I told everyone to take their time and enjoy the wonderful weather, the beautiful scenery and the cookie stops, and they evidently took it to heart.  I told them unless they were actually going for points, it really didn't matter when they finished beceause their completion award would automatically convert to a participation award."


The LD winner was Geneva Pina on her Thoroughbred ex-racehorse Pie. She had a huge cheering section at the awards dinner.


Lynne Glazer, who is usually behind the lens of her cameras shooting endurance rides, rode in one for the first time in 4 years. She rode the extraordinarily handsome stallion Biscotti+ ("Jimmy"), owned by Cynthia Binder, in the 25 miler, to his 16th ride completion. I felt some big pressure taking her photo, since she got some great ones of me at Tevis!


46 riders finished the 50, with Janet Worts on GC Finese winning first place and Best Condition. It was their 40th ride together with 39 finishes, and their 8th win in their 8-seaon partnership. Two Tevis buckles have come out that also.

The hot springs pool was available to all, and after the two awards dinners Saturday evening, the pool was full of "ooooh!"s and "aaaaah!"s of deliriously relaxed riders and crews.

Nobody really knows for certain if the horses did or did not have their own spa time in the pool during the night:
http://merritravels.endurance.net/2011/01/toons-warner-springs-2011.html

Monday, January 10, 2011

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Resolution Ride Day 3 - A Golden Day



Wednesday January 5 2011

It was so cold this morning, that the water tank that Steve hauled all the way to the top of the climb on loop 1 was frozen. Fortunately there was a large puddle of ice - thick ice that took some serious beating to break apart - that yielded enough water for some of the 38 horses on the 55 miler to drink from. It was chilly, but the sun burned golden and bright for the third and last day of the Resolution Ride.


Dennis Summers and "Lola" (OMR Tsunami) were the first up the hill, Dennis running on foot leading her. Dennis is a runner, having done marathons and Ride N Ties. For those people thinking that hot horses shouldn't drink copious amounts of ice water, Lola proved that theory wrong. She tanked up in big gulps before Dennis ran on with her, up and over and down the next hill before hopping on her to trot on down the trail back toward camp.


Christoph Schork on DWA Powerball, and his gang of three were close on Dennis and Lola's heels, with Dana Weary and Maximum Heat next.


Bringing up the rear at the top of the canyon was Kandace French and her lovely blond Tennessee Walker, Duke of Shadow Canyon. It was only their fourth endurance ride - their third being yesterday - and after finishing this one today and having a great time, you'll surely see more of them on the endurance trails.


Laura Hayes, who flew in from New York, finally got to ride today. Somewhat coincidentally, she got to ride a Rushcreek horse owned by Jim and Cindy Brown. She is somewhat obsessed with them, having ridden many of them (including Rushcreek Nerf to a Tevis finish last year), owning several of them, and having visited Rushcreek Ranch in Nebraska many times. You know how a mother will pull out a wallet with dozens of photos of her child for you to see? Laura will open up her computer with folders and folders of eye-candy-Rushcreek horses from Rushcreek Arabians for you to look at.

This Rushcreek Thor happened to be one that Laura had bought 6 raffle tickets on, to try to win him at last year's AERC National Championship raffle. Jim and Cindy Brown won him, and Laura was the one who happened to drive him to the Browns. Today she and Thor finished his second 50 mile ride.


Bruce Burhham of Manti, Utah finished his third day in a row on "Hotsie". Accompanying him on days 1 and 2 was a neighbor Sierra Cox on her first endurance rides on Bruce's horse "Libby." Sierra had been invited here by another Utah rider who'd backed out at the last minute, so Bruce offered her one of his horses. "Sierra grew up on horses, ran barrels, worked on a dude ranch, she breaks horses. I asked her, 'How'd you like to come and sit on a horse for 50 miles?' and she sat on one for 100 miles. Now she's hooked!"

"I'll be back!" Sierra said.


Dennis Summers and Lola won the 55 again today. When I asked Sue Summers about the mare's breeding, she said "Do you want my story, or Dennis'? Dennis says she's 3/4 Arabian and 1/4 Thoroughbred, but she's 3/4 Arabian and 1/4 Appaloosa, but Dennis won't fess up to the Appy." Lola was a little too much for her previous owners when Dennis and Sue got her as an unbroke 4-year-old four years ago, but she's turned into "a nice little horse." This was her fourth win in a row, and she also got Best Condition, her third one in her last four races.

All 20 riders finished the 25 miler, with Aileen Baca winning the 25, and her husband Leonard finishing second. All but two horses finished the 55.


Four horses and riders finished all 155 miles of the endurance ride, with Bruce Burnham winning the overall 3-day, and Jennifer Redmon winning overall Best Condition with her 8-year-old Appaloosa Chelsea Costar.

And so concluded the first 3-day Resolution Ride in sunny, hot chilly Arizona. There was plenty of weather to choose from, the trails were in excellent condition, the Sonoran desert scenery unique and spectacular - it was a great way to welcome in the New Year.



Many more photos can be seen here!
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2010ResolutionRide/index.html

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Resolution Ride Day 2 - A Cool Day



Sunday January 2 2011

In the early morning, long before you can see any horses and riders, from far across the desert comes the sound of cantering hooves. You can hear this when the wind isn't gusting to 30 mph like the day before, and your teeth aren't chattering loud enough to drown the wind out, while waiting to direct 40 riders in the 50 miler at crossroads.

Ice half an inch thick coated water buckets in camp and water puddles on the trails, ("what is up with this weather!?"), and didn't start to thaw until 10 AM, but the absence of wind made for great conditions for the horses. Some riders were stripped down to 2 layers for their last loop - while I kept three and four on all day, even in the sunshine.


Head vet Stacey Sickler - a vet who plays polo and sews completely severed tendons back together, (resulting in Kevin Myers' horse Far acheiving a (so far) 4-season, 1700+ miles, 29 for 29 record, including Tevis and four other hundreds) - still hadn't quite thawed out from the Friday vet-in's rain, but she kept her hands wrapped around a cup of Starbucks coffee, and she kept a great sense of humor all weekend.


A fast group of 6 horses and riders stuck together through the first 20 miles of loop 1, but it was Sue Summers and Tani Bates who eventually pulled away to win the 50 miler by 13 minutes. "We had to work at it!" Sue said. Tani rode the Summers' 19-year-old "Rosie", (SHA Ebony Rose), an 11-season, 2600-mile horse, one with 17 (!!) best conditions in her 44-start career. Tani and her husband Mark had flown down from Washington. Tani had two other local horses lined up to ride, but because one horse (owned by Clydea Hastie) met a gate he didn't like, and the other horse (owned by Carol Giles) met a cactus he didn't like, Rosie was Tani's only ride over the weekend, but an exciting one it turned out to be.

Sue rode Mags Motivator, a 9-season, 1800+ mile horse, who's finished 31 of his 33 starts, including 8 of 8 100-milers, with 7 first places and 3 Best Conditions.

You couldn't do much better being a Summers endurance horse - the Summers have had some outstanding ones throughout their long-mileage careers (14,000 miles for Dennis, 15,000 for Sue). They do prefer riding fast, but they race the horses sparingly - hence the many years of competition and number of top ten finishes that many of their horses consistently produce. The Summers currently have about half a dozen retired 20+-year-old horses at their home, living the good life.


Pat Murray was another who came from the Pacific Northwest to ride. She rode Clydea Hastie's horse Frozen Assets - a Tevis finisher last year. Clydea and Ashquar's Dream (who finished the Big Horn 100 in 5th in 2010) finished 10th and Pat and Frozen Assets finished 11th. Both ladies sat out the wicked weather on day 1 - not because they are wimps (9600-mile and 12,800-mile riders like Clydea and Pat are not wimps), but because they didn't feel like riding in the wicked weather.

12 of 13 riders finished the 25, with Lawrence Serrano winning on his 12-year-old Thoroughbred Tess. The 6th place finisher was Peter Hommertzheim. Peter (of the healing broken bones) was in some kind of agony after yesterday's finish in the 50, but he still got on his mule Big Kate and rode and finished the 25 today.



Many, many more photos can be seen here!
http://www.endurance.net/international/USA/2010ResolutionRide/index.html