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The Historic State Stud Celle in Germany offering Lingh fresh semen throughout the EU

By decree of Georg II, Elector of Hanover and King of Great Britain, too, the Celle National State Stud was founded on July 27, 1735.

In 1800, approx. 100 stallions were available to the breeders, sent out to roughly 50 service stations every year. Today, the stallion stock includes 140 stud stallions, among them 10 thoroughbreds and 2 Anglo-Arabians. And there are 40 three-year-old young stallions at the Stallion Performance Testing Station Adelheidsdorf, completing their 11 months lasting training and passing their stallion performance test at the age of 3 ½.

Already in 1927 a stallion performance test was established at Celle one year before the stallion testing center at Zwion in East-Prussia was founded. Over the years the performance test was always adapted to the breeding goal. Since 1974 the test was totally renewed and now scores for character, temperament as well as the basic movements, the jumping talent and cross-country are given. Besides the 11 month test of the state owned stallions the State Stud offers 70-days-tests as well as 30-days-tests. Also the testing of the draught horses takes place at Adelheidsdorf.

Contact

Niedersächsisches Landgestüt Celle

Spörckenstraße 10, 29221 Celle

Tel: COUNTRY CODE  49     0 51 41 / 92 94 – 0

Fax: 0 51 41 / 92 94 – 31

e-mail: poststelle@lgst-celle.niedersachsen.de

Leitung: Dr. Axel Brockmann

More details and information to visit Landgestut Celle to follow. Website photos and contact info under construction.

THINKING OF LINGH FOR YOUR MARE ?

Lingh and Edward

Lingh and Edward

“To put Lingh’s 2009 breeding performance in clear perspective: he produced last year an excellent 87.5% pregnancy rate. Only a few mares of the whole group he covered did not get pregnant as expected. Exciting and encouraging too for Lingh breeders is the fact that many of the mares that are now in foal are older dressage mares that were never bred before. It’s nice to be able to say that Lingh made a lot of breeders very happy this year! When he got a cold and his motility dropped to a level that Flyinge reported was no longer acceptable to ship to his large number of booked mares, Flyinge asked mare owners to ship their mares in to Flyinge for breeding. At this time, nine mares were bred at Flyinge and 9 got pregnant at Flyinge. Flyinge also managed to ship off a few doses of cooled semen to 10 mares in Sweden during this time and of those 10 mares, 8 are pregnant. We lost most of the April and May bookings to these circumstances. That was LAST YEAR ! Lingh is happier and healthier than ever, and is waiting for his mares !  :-))

Write to me at info@offieldfarms.com if you have questions or concerns. I can have you speak directly with Susanne Hassler or Karl Henrik-Heimdahl about your mare, her reproductive health and if Lingh is a good match.

The best advice I can give for mare owners outside the Scandic area is to breed to Lingh early in the spring season.  The new Export Station can accommodate those early requests easily.  I am looking forward to seeing the new foals this spring.  Stay tuned !“

BREEDING INTERNS and MENTORSHIP

The KWPN-NA representative Tish Quirk was our special guest at the World Cup in April 2009 giving us her time on Saturday morning to speak to the breeders in Las Vegas.  She is encouraging trainers, breeders and students around the world to begin mentorships with Breeders in order to take over the reins from retiring breeders.  Tish is looking to help place interested young people into this fascinating career.  Please contact Tish at her website Tishquirk.com http://www.tishquirk.com/aboutus.html
Tish_trophy_07_resize_000
Tish became an expert in matters of breeding, pregnant mare care, foaling, and raising and training young horses. She has been named Silver Stirrup National Breeder of the Year by the Performance Horse Registry. She has been named Leading Handler in the Sallie B. Wheeler/USEF National Hunter Breeding Championships West. She and her husband John were inducted into the Spruce Meadows Hall of Fame. Tish is currently the owner and manager of Tish Quirk Equine Services, a full-service stallion management, breeding, foaling, training and teaching business in Rancho Santa Fe, California. She stands two Best Of Luck sons, Just The Best and More Than Luck.

Tish is the Chairman of the United States Hunter and Jumper Association (USHJA) Breeders Committee, is on the USHJA Board of Directors and serves on the USHJA Hunter Breeding Task Force. She has served on the Board of Directors of the International Hunter Futurity and on the Board of Advisors for the North American Dutch Warmblood Registry (KWPN-NA). She is a charter and founder member of the International Jumper Futurity. She holds lifetime memberships in the United States Equestrian Federation (USEF), the Pacific Coast Horse Shows Association (PCHA) and the USHJA. She is a member of the California Professional Horseman’s Association, the KWPN-NA, the North American Oldenburg/International Sporthorse Registry (OLD/ISR), the Rheinland Pfalz-saar International (RPSI) registry and the American Hanoverian Society.

Tool Box Symposium Receives USDF University Accreditation

There is still much work to accomplish, but if you have interest in attending please contact us today. Click on the Tool Box button on the left side of the website for more information.  USDF accreditation info will follow.

“USDF has approved your University accreditation application form for the Dressage Tool Box Symposium program with various instructors including Hilary Clayton to be held on May 14 – 16, 2010 in Harbor Bay, MI.  The course number is #101757 for a maximum of 2.5 credit(s).”

RIP ELLINGHTON, we miss you already !

Dear Friends & Family,

Sadly, Ellinghton was put down yesterday morning. He has been buried on the
ranch where we live. Last Thursday night his digestion stopped working
again. Dr. Greg Parks, his primary veterinarian, worked daily to save him,
to no avail.

Ellinghton’s autopsy revealed that a fourth surgery would not have helped.
We also learned that no new post-surgical adhesions had formed since the
third surgery – nothing was kinking his intestines this time around. His
intestines simply stopped functioning.

The vets have concluded that Ellinghton’s original impaction of toxic wild
acorns (resulting in this crisis beginning November 14), caused irreparable
neurological/ physiological damage to his colon, and that this was the
primary reason he needed almost constant veterinary intervention to pass
manure ever since.

Ellinghton had a great week last week. We were so excited, believing that
everyone’s efforts had finally succeeded. He seemed again a completely
normal and comfortable colt, leaping and frolicking and playing with us,
enthusiastically devouring lush green pasture grass, and growing bigger and
stronger each day. The week before had been almost as great. We thought he
was finally in the clear.

Because Ellinghton has required full-time care and monitoring all this time,
his struggle indeed become our entire focus this winter; everything else in
our lives came to a complete stop. Thank you so much for your moral support
throughout, it has really helped.

x0x0x0,
Catherine

Welcome to the First 2010 Tiamo Trocadero Foal !

News from Hilltop Farm …..It’s really cold in America in many places. It’s always a decision about when your foals are born.  We welcome the first foal that belongs to Cynthia.  We will add details as we receive them.

“We had our Tiamo Trocadero foal born yesterday…I missed the delievery (sneaky early mare) probably about 4 am.  He is a bay colt with 2 hind socks and a star.  He and mom and doing well.  Of course, our power had to be off due to the massive storms we have had recently…It went off around 1 am before his was born and didn’t come on until very late the last night…so of no use were all the electric IR heaters I had for her stall!  I am attaching a quick photo from the barn, not sure when I will get him outside to take a proper picture as we have so much snow. ”

The Miracle of Life

The Miracle of Life

Welcome German Breeders !

I want to welcome the mare owners from Germany that have been in touch to inquire about Lingh!

He is being represented by Landgestut Celle. I have long admired this stallion station for  years and I am thrilled that the breeders in Germany will have access to Lingh through Celle. I am working on the representation of Lingh within their website now, and hope to have him on their site soon. Here is the link to the site.  The website is:  http://landgestuetcelle.de

Do Lingh babies jump ? Post your photos here.

Lingh's brother, Fairbanks jumping

Lingh's brother, Fairbanks jumping

Colic :36 pounds of acorns and acorn shells are dangerous for your horses. A story about a very brave Lingh foal

This is a cautionary story about a woman …Catherine and a little LINGH FOAL named Ellinghton that together are not giving up.  Eating the wrong foods out in pastures and fields is becoming more and more common. It is difficult to become an expert on every tree and grass in your neighborhood, but if its possible….become your own expert….get a book, ask your local farm expert….become “all-knowing” about the edible life on your horse farm.   Our heartfelt best wishes go out to Ellinghton for speedy recoveries…..our horses are soooo fragile!

I have been in touch with Catherine for a few days. I asked her if she would share her story about this amazing young Lingh colt. It’s a long story, one that many of us have lived through in our horse lives. What makes this story a bit different is that the doctors have preformed three surgeries. This is one tough colt.

El after 3rd surgery with Catherine 2009

“Yes…little Ellinghton has been in dire trouble for about 2 months, including 3 back-to-back colic surgeries. Started with me building him a beautiful pasture, so that he could grow up really stretching out with plenty of room to run and build strong limbs. I built the pasture fence to include three beautiful old oak trees inside, for shade. Our Santa Ynez Valley horse county is filled with millions of beautiful oaks – everyone has oaks in their pastures. Before the resulting crisis with Ellinghton, I didn’t know anything about the dangers of acorns – or that some horses like them enough to eat tons of them! Seems acorn colic is a well known problem in the veterinary community, but none of my many horse friends, all with oak trees in their pastures, knew anything about it until now either.

One morning in November, three days after turning Ellinghton out into his new pasture, I noticed that he was not enthusiastic about his breakfast. I called my excellent farm vet immediately. By the time my very experienced vet arrived 30 minutes later, Ellinghton had gone down twice, laying down and stretching out onto his back. Not quite a normal colic look, actually.
But that’s what I assumed it was. The vet did all the usual diagnostic tests for colic; then prescribed a special soap for Ellinghton’s skin, as he thought Ellinghton was rolling to scratch some itchy skin on his back. He did have some spots of itchy skin, and yes perhaps he was just trying to scratch his back on the ground. I wanted to believe, but wasn’t convinced, and camped out by the pasture the rest of the day, and checked him every two hours throughout that night. He ate some of his hay off and on, then didn’t.

The next morning, Sunday at dawn, I put him in the trailer and hauled him to renowned Alamo Pintado Equine Medical Center, nearby. The incredible vets there put him through all the same colic tests, and a very careful ultrasound which I watched intently. I had to agree, all his vitals and blood work and ultrasound checked out perfectly. But I just knew he wasn’t himself, I’d spent so much time with the little guy since he was born. They tube-oiled him to be on the safe side. Then they sent us home with him, since everything looked fine.

That afternoon at home, I couldn’t stand it any longer. He was rolling, and I didn’t think he was just trying to scratch his back. I put him back into the trailer, and took him back to the Alamo Pintado hospital. They ran the tests again and although everything still looked perfect, they agreed that he was displaying some obvious colic symptoms by then. They kept him under close observation, continued oilings and started enemas. Because he seemed so healthy and perky, and hope ran high he would start pooping, it was three days before the decision to operate was made. No one wanted to operate unnecessarily – he was so alert, acted so normal most of the time (apparently he is just a super tough little boy, who just doesn’t want to show anyone his pain. Or at least at that point wasn’t ready to).

The surgery was incredible. The Alamo Pintado vets really are the best in the west. They pulled his large intestine out onto the table. It was
impacted with 36 pounds of acorns and acorn shells a dry impaction that most certainly never could have cleared on it’s own. I watched them carefully flush out the dry mass of starch, and watched the shells roll down the table into the waste bins. They sewed him back together. He was up on his feet and as sturdy as usual a few hours later.

But he had a hard time getting his peristalsis going again. By the time he started pooping again four days later, he has also developed post-surgical adhesions, we later learned, that had begun tugging and crimping at the outside of his intestinal wall. None of this showed up on ultrasound. As always, all his ultrasound and blood tests came back absolutely perfect. But he was in full colic display again, and after more days of no more manure, they opened him up again, removed an adhesion, and another impaction including more acorns that must have been still in his stomach during the first operation, then sewed him back up. As before, he was raring to go as soon as the anesthesia wore off.

The poop wait resumed, days passed and he was rolling as much as he was standing. But even when rolling, he was so perky, and if I came into the barn he would jump up and whinny for me. There was no clear moment to put him down.

Four days later still no poop, and this time he had swollen with gas to where he could hardly breathe. They punctured his side two days in a row to release the gas buildup. It was all about tranquilizers and pain killers, all of us waiting for him to start pooping. He pooped and then no more poop.  It seemed the time had come to put him down. A third surgery had been ruled out by most everyone. Then one of the main older vets there finally said why not try a third surgery, “The third time just might be the charm,” he said with a big relaxing smile on his face. I was sobbing every day by then, of course, seeing this bright little boy off and on acting completely normal then in intense pain. I was walking him day and night since we had first arrived there, endlessly around the hospital perimeter, struggling to pull him along. It was an exhausting, stressful ordeal, not knowing exactly what we should do.

I kept telling the vets to let me know if I should put him down. I didn’t want to put him down, of course, but didn’t want him to suffer. They insisted the obvious moment to put him down just hadn’t yet arrived.

We all decided to do this crazy third surgery, if nothing else to see what we could learn, possibly to resect him, and of course to put him down on the table, since he’d already be anesthetized, if he did not look good inside.

Two of the main vets worked on him with a large staff of interns helping. They didn’t charge us for the third surgery. They opened him up, immediately saw that the cause was yet another post-surgical adhesion that had completely crimped him. They decided that a resection was again not necessary. They removed the adhesion, uncrimped his intestine, and sewed him up. He looked healthy inside, and since they didn’t need to cut open his intestine to drain it this time, they hoped he’d heal even faster this time.

He jumped right up as usual after the drugs wore off, happy as a lark, until he began eating again and blocking. No poop. Four more days went by. He was again swelling with gas, finally looked like a helium balloon about to take off. We knew that within hours he would be down again and struggling to breathe. I was dragging him up and down a hill behind the hospital, trying to force him to trot, hoping to release some gas naturally, as they had decided not to do anymore punctures to his side this time around. We also tried the old cowboy colic remedy, with the vets’ agreeing it was worth a try. We put him in a trailer and hauled him to a terribly rough dirt road,
and raced around a long loop in circles, bumping and jolting him all over the trailer for an hour. I rode in the back with him hanging on for dear life.

We brought him back to the hospital, no apparent luck. That was a Sunday evening. The vets agreed he was to be put down that night, since he was quickly swelling hugely with gas again and we knew that in a few hours he would be in great distress. I sadly went home to feed the other horses dinner, before coming back to be with him when they put him down. While I was feeding, my cell phone rang, the vets were yelling on the other end of the line, he’d started pooping. By the time I got there, he’d pooped 11 times. Within another hour, 22 poops total.

A few days later he was blocked again, despite daily oilings of a gallon of mineral oil, and all sorts of IV drugs to keep his peristalsis going. The vets finally discharged him. I think he’d been there 10 weeks at that point. They shot him up with tranquilizer to get him in the trailer, as he was trying to roll. I guess I was to be hospice. They loaded me up with Banamine and tranquilizer shots, and waved goodbye. That was a couple days before Christmas.

I brought him home, and started hand-grazing him only, as nothing else had ever seemed to pass through him, no soaked pellets, no soaked hays, nothing. I decided I had always envied shepherds in other countries, and it was time to become one myself! The grass seemed to barely slip through, not as fast as it went in, but some passed. As he nevertheless continued to back up, the nights seemed to be all about flashlights and cold weather, trying to find the right spot to inject the tranquilizer while he rolled around on the ground, on my own, I was scared to death. But I was supposed to make the decisions now, as nothing else had worked. Either his peristalsis wasn’t kicking back into normal function, or he was partly kinked, or both.

The vets came out every 2 to 5 days to tube a gallon of oil down him. He would be good for another day or two before he was blocking again. This continued until just last Saturday, when he suddenly started pooping normally, for the very first time since all this began. It just happened overnight. The change was dramatic, almost from one moment to the next.

Last Sunday, the following day, he started leaping and frolicking, and kicking up his heels, just like a normal colt. It is like a miracle.

The vets now think he indeed likely had a partial kink from another post-surgical adhesion. We had been waiting to see if it would fully kink (death, since further surgery would be pointless), or if by slim chance his insides might re-arrange themselves, of their own accord, and unkink him. They told me that was not unheard of.

Apparently that’s what happened. I thought we were in for a much longer haul, to tell you the truth. This oiling every few days was working to unplug him, and so I thought that might just go on indefinitely. It was so scary, each time wondering if it would be the last time it worked.

But now he seems totally normal.

I really can’t believe it. I am crossing my fingers that things don’t re-shift in there, to re-kink him.

A tremendous thank-you to Dr. Greg Parks, Ellinghton’s primary vet throughout the crisis, and Dr. Mark Rick, both of Alamo Pintado Equine, who together performed the surgeries. Alamo’s staff of 40, including many more veterinarians, interns, and assistants, all took shifts at one time or another to work on Ellinghton during his six weeks in the intensive care unit. Ellinghton needed the help and kindness of every one of them. Dr. Parks, Ellinghton’s primary vet at Alamo, worked on him at all hours, and later took my frightened calls even over his holidays on Christmas and New Years days. Dr. Parks is also the breeding specialist who handles the breeding of my mare to Lingh. His colleague Dr. Mark Rick, a longtime Alamo Pintado veterinarian, urged us all to consider the third surgery, and along with Dr. Parks, offered to perform that intensive third surgery at no charge. I am so grateful to him too.

This is an acorn, most likely impossible to digest

This is an acorn, most likely impossible to digest

The also-great-news is that I sold my almost-Grand-Prix pony (an incredible dynamo!), just the day AFTER we took out several loans to pay for the 6 enormously expensive weeks in hospital. To the first person who ever tried her. I knew that would happen, she is amazing. Her sale completely paid for ALL of Ellinghton’s struggles, and we were able to immediately pay off our Ellinghton bank loans. I can’t think of a better resolution – whether he lived or died, – we didn’t have to carry such a heavy financial burden into our future. Whew!!!! :)))”

THE NEXT DAY

“Right now I look at him and seem him fast forwarding into a big beautiful loyal stallion, and can’t imagine this too won’t pass…
So far it always has.
He’s the toughest little man I’ve ever seen.”

“Ellinghton apparently began vacuuming up acorns – perhaps in this very picture. His lengthy colic ordeal began three days after I took this photo.”

photo

THE NEXT DAY

A little sunshine therapy – he loves sunshine.

"He loves Sunshine"

"He loves Sunshine"

“We’re out grazing. Vets said I could go ahead and let him enjoy an afternoon of eating. He’s on three pain killers and so is a little bit hungry at the moment, off and on, but still in some distress. Last night was very bad, had to tranquilize him every few hours. This morning vets decided again to wait just a little longer, until the next time he starts to roll, probably this afternoon. Meanwhile he gets to be out at his favorite spit. He got a fouth morning of oil and enema today, no luck still. Any other horse would be so long gone….
He was a dream for so long, then when he was born he was more wonderful and fun than I even imagined. We are even more bonded after these last couple months of struggle…”

Ellinghton

Ellinghton

What Breeding Dreams Are Made Of

What Breeding Dreams Are Made Of

Swedish Mare Owners

I am hoping to become involved with the upcoming news of the new Lingh foals this spring….email me please with photos and updates about your mares.  We want pictures !!  Thank you so much !  Karin

Hexagon's Louisville is in Holland – His Beautiful Life (some text in Dutch)

Louisville in Florida before the Freestyle Championships

Louisville at Hassler Dressage

December 9th, 2009

Offield Farms’ KWPN stallion Hexagon’s Louisville/Burgraff will be returning to his birthplace before the end of the year.Louisville will stand at stud in the  Netherlands at Stal Hexagon and have the opportunity to directly influence the mare base of that region and other parts of the  Europe. Hassler Dressage has been proud to manage Hexagon’s  Louisville  over the past few years and we will dearly miss his charismatic presence and enormously kind nature in our stable every day. We appreciate how much it will mean to Louisville’s breeder Leunus van Lieren to have Louisville retire at ‘home’ and to have the opportunity to produce more top offspring like Hexagon’s Wonderella and Hexagon’s Welnetta, both top mares which have shone for their sire Louisville in international sport.  Hassler Dressage will continue to manage mares to Hexagon’s  Louisville  through frozen semen. ” I am really excited that Louisville will return to Holland .  I have watched his babies grow up in Holland, and there are a couple older colts here in the US .   I am thrilled that Louisville passes on to his mares his incredible character and work ethic.  He was, after Lingh, my favorite ride, as he was as light as a feather, as steady as the Rock of Gibraltar and the MOST FUN HORSE TO RIDE I EVER HAD ! I want to thank Mike Etherly for helping me purchase him, we must have seen 50 Grand Prix horses on that trip and it was at Stal Hexagon that we saw Louisville for the first time.  I encourage any breeder to look at him carefully for their mares.”

Bron: Offieldfarms

It’s official, Hexagon’s Louisville has made his way back to Holland.  It’s a long journey crossing from America but Louisville arrived safely through the hands of Tim Dutta and his Dutta Corporation Equine Transport. Thank you Tim!!  Leunus and I have been working on this transition for months, making sure that the timing was ideal for getting Louisville to Holland in time for the 2010 breeding season.  I have had great feedback from the mare owners here in the U.S. who have bred to Louisville and I encourage our North American breeders to continue accessing this amazingly generous stallion though frozen season.

Many people have asked me why Louisville is primarily a breeding stallions and no longer in competition. His career-ending injury followed the days of the Freestyle Championships in Wellington, prior to the 2005 World Cup in Las Vegas.  When I arrived at the stable one morning, Mike Etherly, my coach, told me that Louisville had been injured in his paddock that morning. He had bucked and played and injured his stifle.  This injury required surgery. With the help of Hassler Dressage and their qualified team, we brought Louisville back to optimum health day by day, week by week.  It’s been a difficult journey and my heartfelt thanks go out to the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center and Unionville Equine where Louis had the very best equine attention. He will never be able to load his hindquarters for upper level work, and it’s very risky for him to be turned out again, but he is kept comfortable and ridden lightly twice a day. He loves life. Aptly named “King Louis” at the Hassler’s beautiful stables in Maryland, he was the favorite horse to work with by both staff and attending vets!  Ashley Madison,  groom and rider wrote to me recently:

Hi Karin,

I will gather those things to send to you.  I want to thank you so much for the opportunity to work with and care for Louie the past few years.  I know I don’t have to tell you, he is so special.  He has touched my soul, I have so many wonderful memories with him at the farm and will miss him dearly.  Thank you again for allowing me to be a small part of his beautiful life.

-Ashley

I respectfully acknowledge the care which Louis received over recent years.  His excellent condition and healthy attitude today is a strong testimony to that care. Louis was a lucky horse to have the Hasslers and their level of service that cared enough about his well-being to provide for his needs on an optimal level.  When Louis’ sport career came to an end with his stifle injury and subsequent surgery, as is typical in such cases over time, arthritis has set into the joint. Louis’ arthritis has indeed required intensive supportive treatment—all very standard and appropriate to support an active breeding stallion who must rely on the comfort of his hind end to breed. In addition, thanks to the therapeutic support we provided Louis, we were able to keep him in an exercise program which supported his overall physical condition to the high standard in which he arrived back in the Netherlands.

Hexagon's Louisville - An honor to ride him !

Hexagon's Louisville - An honor to ride him !

I am very excited that Leunus and Erika and Hexagon Stables have welcomed back Louis with open arms. The neighborhood is visiting their barn to visit Louis; stories are being written about the famous horse that left Zeeland and has returned home again.  He whinnies each morning when Leunus arrives at his stable and I am very satisfied that it is a beautiful life for my beloved Louis.

For more information on Hexagon’s Louisville as a choice for your mare, click on his name on the left side of the website. I have posted many stories about his offspring under this New News.

Veel belangstelling voor Hexagons Louisville
Hexagons Louisville maakt het goed.
Hij heeft geen last van jetlag-verschijnselen en hij blijkt snel gewend te zijn aan zijn “nieuwe – oude” omgeving.
Het Hexagonteam zal de aandacht  zoals hij die in Amerika kreeg, niet helemaal  kunnen evenaren.
Tot in detail bijgehouden logboeken en DVD-opnamen tonen ons dat er dagelijks zeer intensief  nauwgezet voor hem gezorgd werd.
Deze zorg was volledig op zijn behoeften en karakter afgestemd.
Toch heeft Louisville niet te klagen over  belangstelling.
Er kwamen al veel mensen naar naar hem kijken.
Een aantal  van hen wil met hem fokken. Het feit dat Louisville in Duitsland is goedgekeurd, speelt hierbij naast alle goede eigenschappen en kenmerken, natuurlijk een rol.
Ook zullen de uitstekende prestaties van Hexagons Wellnetta wellicht van invloed zijn.

Wij zijn natuurlijk erg blij dat Karen Offield (Offieldfarms; www.offieldfarms.com <http://www.offieldfarms.com> )
en Hasslerdresage (www.hasslerdressage.com <http://www.hasslerdressage.com> ) ons in de gelegenheid
gesteld hebben Louisville weer bij ons op te nemen én met hem te fokken.

PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR AVAILABLE FOR EQUINE AND LEGAL ASSISTANCE

Suzanne McComas is a private investigator who has worked all across the country in high profile civil and criminal cases at both the state and federal level.  Her passion for her work is equal only to her love of horses.  Suzanne is available for any of our clients & contacts at a reasonable rate concerning locate work, investigation into fraud, or any other matters where you need information from someone with professionalism, discretion, and a knowledge of our equine industry. www.zzagency.com (417) 458-3100IMG_0032


Dressage Tool Box Symposium Bay Harbor, Michigan May 14 (evening) 15th and 16th. CHECK THE TOOL BOX BUTTON ON LEFT SIDE OF THIS WEBSITE FOR UPDATED CLINIC INFO

Click here for a PDF so you can download multiple copies, one registration per person…

DTB_PDF1 this link will take you to another page, pls click on the underlined DTB PDF1 link again……

tool box good jpg pg1tool box good jpg pg2

Welcome Fairbanks ! Here he is, headed to the 70 day testing.

The 2009 Oldenburg champion colt by Flemmingh has been given a name. The Flemmingh x Inselfurst champion, purchased by Doug and Louise Leatherdale, has been named Fairbanks. The eager colt shows great promise and we are very happy that Lingh’s sire Flemmingh was represented as a champion in Germany at the Oldenburg event. If you have any photographs to contribute, please send them to us at info@offieldfarms.com.
Flemmingh

LINGH as a YOUNG HORSE by Norbert Gieling WATCH FOR YOUNG LINGH COLTS FOR SALE, coming soon to Horses For Sale

Several years ago, I saw this wonderful 4 years old stallion in a small dark barn in Holland. It was just broken and the first time I saw it move, it was without a rider, running around in the dark indoor.

I asked the owner what kind of a horse this is. I liked it a lot and would love to see it go under saddle. At that time I was looking for good young horses for several clients of mine.

So, I got to see it under saddle and loved it even more. What a great talent this horse showed already at 4 years old and just broken I thought. So, I video taped it and sent the video to a lady in the USA who had bought a very good horse from me before and she was looking for another one. I also had told a good friend of mine in The Netherlands about the young stallion I had seen. In the past I had found good horses for my friend as well and he had told me that if I ever see another good young horse, I should call him. So I did.

We went back and saw the stallion again. On the way back home, he didn’t say much. He knew that I had sent a tape to my client in the USA and that I was waiting for an answer. The only thing he said when I dropped him of at his house again was, that if my client decides not to buy this 4 years old green stallion I should call him again, he maybe might be interested.

After a few days, my US client got back to me and told me that she liked it a lot, but had also seen a different horse that she preferred. Too bad I thought, since I had not seen such a good horse for a long time. So I called my good Dutch friend again and told him about her decision.

The only thing he said was; “OK, then I’ll buy it”!!!

WOW, I had not expected a decision from him so soon, but this was great news. We then went back to the barn one more time and we purchased the stallion.

Now, the problem was, he had this wonderful stallion that had passed the vet check with flying colors, but he had no rider for it. He first thought that this horse would be for his daughter, but decided different after a few days. My friend then told me that there is this great young guy riding and training at their barn and he would like to have him train the stallion for him. The trainer’s name was Edward Gal and of course the horse I am talking about is LINGH!!!

Several years later, when I was at the 2005 Worldcup Dressage in Las Vegas watching Edward and Lingh in the opening Grand Prix (the first time he beat Anky with Salinero), this story went through my mind again, I had goose bumps during the whole ride and I could not talk for several moments!! What a great moment this was for me.

This is the beauty about horses I think.

Today, when I was looking at your website _www.lingh.nl_ (http://www.lingh.nl/) , I saw your question “send us your stories of Lingh”, so I thought I should share this story with you! It’s a real story and we all know what happened after this!!! GOOD LUCK KARIN!!! WHAT A HORSE!!!

Regards,
Norbert Gieling

Send us your stories of Lingh

A Rule for 2010

When in trouble, look straight ahead and say nothing....

When in trouble, look straight ahead and say nothing....

STORY CONTEST- A FREE BREEDING TO LINGH!!, "Making Dreams Come True"

PLEASE CONTACT ME IF YOU HAVE AN INTEREST IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROJECT, I AM LOOKING FOR AN EDITOR AND INTERNS FOR TRANSLATIONS.

Breeders are now making up their minds and must choose a stallion for their mares.

To help them decide, we are sponsoring a writing and story contest that will show us the passions and intentions of mare owners, the dreams of the children of owning their own foals, and also the goals of serious breeders from top sport and what they think about before choosing their stallion.

I am hoping that by sponsoring this contest we can involve horse lovers from around the world in a wonderful discussion about passion and dreams of horse ownership and the anticipation of what it means in breeding a champion or breeding your mare who you have grown up with ! Perhaps the grandparents will have a special story that you can submit to us !

SUBMIT TO INFO@OFFIELDFARMS.COM: a story about your dreams of breeding a special foal. The story can be  written in any language. We are looking for creativity, originality, and story telling. It can be a poem or a short story. A maximum number of words is 1000.

LET’S TRY TO MAKE THOSE DREAMS COME TRUE !  More details to follow….

Matts, Lingh and Karin at Flyinge

Matts, Lingh and Karin at Flyinge

I asked my young friend Tai to enter…here is her ENTRY:

FOAL BY TAI, AGE 11

IF I COULD HAVE A FOAL, I WOULD WANT A FOAL THAT WAS SWEET AND GENTlE. I WOULD WANT IT TO BE A BLACK OR CHESTNUT COLOR. I WOULD ALSO WANT IT TO BE VERY TALL (16.3-17 HANDS.) I WOULD WANT HIM TO BE A BOY.  ALSO,  I WOULD WANT HIM TO BE A JUMPER AND A DRESSAGE HORSE. I WOULD WANT HIM TO BE VERY FAST TOO !  THAT IS WHAT KIND OF FOAL I WANT.

THE STORIES CAN BE MUCH LONGER – UP TO 1500 WORDS !

A Great Tip for 2010


Great Tips For 2010

1.  Stay out of trouble.

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Happy New Year, enjoy every minute of what is left of 2009 !!

Love, from Cabo and Grappa !!

7K8H0554

Winter JOY

I found this beautiful winter poem and thought it might be a comfort to you. It was to me, and it’s very well written.

“Winter” … a poem by Abigail Elizabeth McIntyre

Shit ! It’s Cold.

The End