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Jody

BAR BAR 2 said:
They all go back to something if you dig deep enough Katrina. Your efforts at justification are commendable, but keep in mind that the AQHA wasn't started till the 40's. I know a guy here who had to put down an impressive horse. Well, he has a band of sheep too and thought he could kill two birds with one stone, so to speak. He took the horse out to the pasture that he was having coyote troubles and put it down. He was planning on shootin the coyotes at night when they came in to feed on the carcass. The kicker was, apparently they don't even like Impressive bred horses. They never even touched it.

:lol: :lol:
 
Justin said:
BAR BAR 2 said:
They all go back to something if you dig deep enough Katrina. Your efforts at justification are commendable, but keep in mind that the AQHA wasn't started till the 40's. I know a guy here who had to put down an impressive horse. Well, he has a band of sheep too and thought he could kill two birds with one stone, so to speak. He took the horse out to the pasture that he was having coyote troubles and put it down. He was planning on shootin the coyotes at night when they came in to feed on the carcass. The kicker was, apparently they don't even like Impressive bred horses. They never even touched it.

:lol: :lol:


Now that was just hateful... :D :D :D I'm gonna quit this post because I think your blood pressure is rising.......And I don't want you to get sick over this... Have your darling give ya a massage and just relax... :D :D :D
 
BAR BAR 2 said:
Damn Katrina, you just keep diggin' that hole a little deeper. My ex was a leggy redhead with nice lines. Lots of fun to look at and not a brain in her head. Care to venture a guess as to her name?

Last name Mc Donald by chance?????? That was my 1st wifes and she's as you described above damn easy on the eye's but it all ended there.
 
katrina said:
doesn't impressive go back to three bars???



Just saying.. :wink: :twisted:

Too damn many go back to Three Bars, but that blood is so thin now it's like it's not even there anymore. There are and were a helluva lot of stud horses that SHOULD have been gelded. But in the horse biz, buying the back cover of the Quarter Horse Journal for years and years will eventually achieve the desired results. Hell, that old Texican Carl Miles bought the back cover of the Appaloosa News promoting that two-bit Prince Plaudit for over 20 years, and Prince Plaudit was as counterfeit as they came, but the same propaganda, month after month, and buying off judges at the shows, and hell, even Tony the Pony will become the next big thing if enough folks read it and believe it.

The best stud my dad ever bought came from Center, Texas. He was an appaloosa, but was double bred King Ranch, going back to the Old Sorrell on the top and bottom side, and was as cowy as they came. Back in the old days, a horse could be double registered, registered with the AQHA and the Appaloosa Horse Club at the same time. Norell's Little Red was a prime example of this. Dewey Norell had him registered AQHA, but when my Grand Dad bought him in about 1950 for $5,000, he was registered with the Appy club then, and his name was changed to "Cooterville, Norell's Little Red", the Cooterville denoting he was owned by my Grandfather. Little Red sired a stud my Dad owned who went on to sire 16 World Champion halter and performance appaloosas, including one mare who won $20,000 on the track as a two-year old and then went on to win the world at halter as a three-year old.
 
katrina said:
doesn't impressive go back to three bars???



Just saying.. :wink: :twisted:

Indeed, three times, making him line bred :wink:

Was intended to be a racehorse, but won the AQHA World as a yearling, and was worth to much to risk wrecking him as a runner.

Looks like a bunch of you fellows have had different Impressive horses than the ones we have. Ours are just great :) The best babysitting horse I've ever met goes to Impressive on her daddy's side. And one of the best riding horses I've ever had the pleasure of riding is out of a daughter of Impressive; she's a natural cutter, too (a little big at 15.2, but will lay back her ears and squat to head off a beef like those 14.0 hand ponies they show on RFD-TV :D ). And the toughest, most resilient horse I ever rode was our big gray stallion that traced three times to Jackie Bee and four times to Impressive (through Kid Clu, Mr. Conclusion, and Coosa). And that big gray stallion would pack my then-4-year-old daughter around on his back like an old gelding (here she is on him: http://www.chimeneaqh.com/images/DSC04845.JPG the paint behind her is a stud, too...)

By the way, whomever posted the pedigree on the Perfect Premonition horse, that gelding is bred to be pretty and ride like a dream. The Mr. Conclusions are really nice movers; we used a stud out of a daughter of Mr. Conclusion that just floats on his feet when he moves (and Mr. Conclusion sired the only horse to win the AQHA World in halter and in western pleasure). And the Page Impressives tend to be big, stout, standup horses. The JD Parker horse of Terry Bradshaw's is (or was) a pretty good roping horse, and the James Caans (let alone the Blondys Dudes) make pretty nice riders. Just make sure he's negative for HYPP if you're not familiar with managing symptomatic horses.

Cheers.
 
Faster horses said:
That was a very interesting post, chimenea.
And that's gorgeous gray stallion your little girl is riding.
I could look at pictures like that all day...Thanks for sharing.

:oops: Thanks, FH
 
I was going on mostly the reputation they had in this country and the one I owned. I bought him as a 2 yr old stud and cut him in the fall after he had run with some mares where I got him from. My son broke him easily but he didn't have a lick of cow in him. I sold him to Tam's uncle for use in the Shriners Black horse patrol as a 3 yr old. He never had a mishap for 3 or 4 years after riding in all kinds of parades and drills until indoors at Hardin he blew up and broke the uncles pelvis. They never knew why but that's how it seems to happen with them. I don't think he was ever tested.
 
Big Muddy rancher said:
I was going on mostly the reputation they had in this country and the one I owned. I bought him as a 2 yr old stud and cut him in the fall after he had run with some mares where I got him from. My son broke him easily but he didn't have a lick of cow in him. I sold him to Tam's uncle for use in the Shriners Black horse patrol as a 3 yr old. He never had a mishap for 3 or 4 years after riding in all kinds of parades and drills until indoors at Hardin he blew up and broke the uncles pelvis. They never knew why but that's how it seems to happen with them. I don't think he was ever tested.

Ouch :shock:

Well, I won't even begin to speculate why a horse would come uncorked the way he did. Could be a lot of different things. I'm sure it wasn't fun being Tam's uncle for a while, though.

I doubt, however, that the bucking was caused by HYPP (if the horse was positive for the defect in the first place). If anything, HYPP (Hyperkalemic Partial Paralysis) will tend to knock a horse down because an attack will cause uncontrollable muscle spasms; a horse with a severe attack will tend to lose control of his back end first, and end up falling over. A horse with a mild attack looks like there are a handful of critters fighting under its skin. It's fairly unpleasant to watch, but it's a long ways from a bucking episode, since a horse with an attack won't have the muscle control to actually do much of anything other than stand there.

And I'm not saying Impressive horses are perfect, or that every horse that goes back to Impressive in his pedigree is great. Shoot, I'm not even saying that every Impressive horse is a baby sitter or that they don't buck. Believe me, they can and do buck, just like any other relatively sensitive horse. That big, gray horse my little girl was riding in the picture? Three years before that photo was taken, he bucked so hard and for so long the first time he was saddled in the round pen, that he wriggled the saddle pad loose, out from underneath the saddle. I have never seen a horse buck like that, before or since. But, of course, his only contact with humans prior to that (as a two year old) had been to rope him and knock him down for branding, to poke him with shots and stuff a hose into him for tube worming, and to run him into a trailer to go to a new home. And once he figured out that we weren't going to hurt him, he turned into a giant puppy dog, much to my daughter's (and my... ) delight. He could rope both ends (if you didn't mind heeling from so high up there) out of the box and would have been a really competitive team roping horse if we'd kept working with him in that regard. He'd do bridle less sliding stops, was one of the best pasture roping horses you'll find (faster than you would believe a horse that big has a right to be, could jump over anything you wanted to clear, and was absolutely fearless), and I never did find his bottom end on the endurance side. Shoot, he was so good-natured I could take him to breed a mare with nothing but a string around his neck, let alone a halter with a stud chain; that horse was so willing to please that I once pulled him away from a mare to which he was trying really hard to cuddle up to, with nothing but my hands and a strong vocal reprimand.

Anyway, I've been bucked off (this is just bucked off, not even bucked with...) horses with breeding to Doc Bar, to Skipper W, to Impressive (including that big gray stud before he finally settled down... and he was big, too... 16.2, probably over 1400 pounds... that hurt, too, but fortunately there weren't any real injuries), been bucked off horses that are racing bred, and that are God-knows-what bred. Had a couple of close encounters with a Two Eyed Jack bred horse, too. I think any of them can buck, with or without reason.

But I will say this: I've never seen or had an Impressive horse buck for no reason (yet); I've always known why they bucked, and it was usually for a relatively good reason (of course, knowing why they bucked didn't keep me or some other folks from getting bucked off, but I've always known why they bucked when they bucked). And we haven't yet had one that just liked to buck and did it for sport or for fun (knock on all sorts of wood....). BMR, I know yours bucked for no apparent reason that one time, but we've had close to 40 of them in the past 15 years or so, and have never had that happen to us. Maybe we're just lucky. And I've neer had one come after me or anyone else aggressively when they pitch a rider (I've heard plenty of stories about Peppy San Badger and Hancock horses not just pitching a rider with a bucking fit, but taking a shot at them with both hind feet while the human was still airborne and rapidly en route to a close encounter with the ground).

So, are the Impressive bred horses perfect? Not remotely. Are there bad ones out there? Absolutely, though I don't think that percentage is higher than with other bloodlines. Are there a lot of them out there that look like beached whales, thanks to people trying to breed for a show horse? Yup, that's true, too. But most folks with real sense about a using horse can spot that one in 10 seconds and head down the road, and after you've had some practice you start to get a feel for which Impressive descendants are better built (and wired in the head...) for riding.

And, FH, this picture is for you. A different stallion, also Impressive bred (sire is Western Impress, daughter is by Mr Conclusion), being led by a then-5-year-old (maybe 6-year-old) girl, past a pen full of mares 15 feet to the left of where they're walking. Hope you guys have a great weekend.

DSC04897.JPG
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This is lots of fun guys..... Chimene, That Premonition gelding I heard is riding like an old broke gelding with only thirty days..... They say tons of heart and no quit... Smooth, but with his size not enough stride for english.. Whitch is okay for his owner.. Maybe a really, really tough western rider..... He is NH... All is brothers are..
 
katrina said:
This is lots of fun guys..... Chimene, That Premonition gelding I heard is riding like an old broke gelding with only thirty days..... They say tons of heart and no quit... Smooth, but with his size not enough stride for english.. Whitch is okay for his owner.. Maybe a really, really tough western rider..... He is NH... All is brothers are..

Hi Katrina, that's great. Is he yours? Send us some pictures :mrgreen:

The N/H thing doesn't worry me nearly as much as it used to. It's pretty manageable (if there's something to manage ... some of them never get tremors...) if you do even a little research.
 
Yeah.... I'm kinda on top of that.... He is mine... I love him....And everyone who is around him do too..... Turning him out to be a horse was the best for him.. He is sooo grown up now... Only three....
 
katrina said:
Yeah.... I'm kinda on top of that.... He is mine... I love him....And everyone who is around him do too..... Turning him out to be a horse was the best for him.. He is sooo grown up now... Only three....

Good deal! Show us some pictures :D
 
Katrina has a top-notch gelding there!

And katrina, your remark about
turning him out being good for him........you are right on!! You wouldn't
believe the people that don't agree with that, but every young horse
we have ever had always get turned out. I mean turned out so that
they aren't around buildings or people and every one of them came
in better than they were before they were turned out. Maybe it freshens
their mind...whatever it is, is good.
 
Katrina gee just saw this post, that mare just down the road a few miles. haven't read;;y looked need a beater ranch truck right now, Pal been a good fit for Tenny, We sold a 5 year old roan mare Tenny had last summer really think there was Hancock in the roan, she was gentle as a pup but she loved to buck. We bucked her out at a Jackson Hole rodeo, exhibition.... and she was the high score for the night, when they finally called back to buy her, we sold her to a rodeo family as a practice bucking horse. I really like roans, had some good cowy ones and some that went down the road quicker then I entered from Orbit.
My Grand dad brought some of the first register Quarter Horses into this area , he got them from Dr, Green, The Brooks Ranch and a couple other places out of Texas, Some registration numbers under 2599 and 5000. Sorry thing is the old Horse I buried last spring was the last of any of those horses line he brought home.
 

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