This entry was posted on 5/19/2007 12:15 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
Sunday May 13 - Monday May 14
This region here, the Hawkesbury district
of New South Wales, an hour or so from Sydney, is for horses and horse farms
like the Santa Ynez Valley in California, or Lexington in Kentucky. Lots of
horse people, lots of horse farms. While staying with the Males, I had a few
quick visits to 3 farms near Ron and Val’s place.
Ningadoo Arabian Stud
is owned by Justine Blunt and her daughter Claudia Reid. Justine and her husband
Gaire, (who passed away 2 yrs ago), bought a place a few kilometres down the
Colo River from Ron and Val’s. Justine thought it would be a great getaway, a
place to have nice picnics in the summer. They had no intention of having
horses, until they met Ron and Val (not so surprising!). Gaire, always game for
a go at something new, decided they’d all do a 40 km training ride. They rode
down the road to Ralvon, where the ride was taking place, and they couldn’t
figure out why there were so many buckets out everywhere. They hadn’t even
brought halters along. After the first 20 km loop, Justine’s and Gaire’s horses
vetted out - all of them, horses and humans exhausted, and Claudia didn’t think
she could possibly do another 20 km by herself, so she talked a neighbor into
floating her back home (just down the road!).
That was their first
introduction to endurance riding - and that might well have ended their foray
into endurance. But they kept at it, got hooked, and eventually decided to start
their own stud in 1989. At one time they had 50 horses on the place - stallions,
broodmares, horses in training; but now since Gaire died, they’ve scaled back to
22 or so horses, with two stallions, an Aethon son Koda, now 25 yrs old, and
Nangadoo Taban, now 12, who’s still competing in endurance. He was 3rd in the
2004 Quilty, and Best Conditioned. They consistently sell good horses to the
UAE, and Claudia herself has competed successfully all over Australia, and in
Tasmania and Abu Dhabi. They have a lovely little stretch of valley right along
the Colo River, lush green pastures and leaves turning golden on some of the
trees.
They are used to foreign buyers coming to look at the horses, so
one day when someone rang and said they were coming to look at horses, it was
routine as usual on a horse farm; Claudia had been out taking care of a horse
who’d cut himself up. She had just returned to the house covered in blood, when
this man came to the door, “Hi, I’m the Sultan (now King) of Malaysia,” he said
more or less. Claudia said, “Nobody told me the Sultan of Malaysia was coming! I
couldn’t have been any filthier if I tried!”
Next was Ray and Kerry
Smith’s River Oak Arabian Stud a few kilometres down the road in the other
direction. Ray worked for Ralvon Arabians for 10 years, and Kerry also worked
there as a secretary. Ron said that during the time Ray worked there, they’d had
some 200 horses on the farm, 4 employees, “everything full on,” with work,
breeding and broodmares and horses in training or showing, and they’d still find
time to sit and talk and laugh about old times. Ray had some broodmares and
would breed a few on the side for free and sell them for $15,000, $20,000
dollars, so “that was a good bonus for him,” says Ron. “We couldn’t have gotten
where we did without him, and he couldn’t have gotten to where he did without
us. It’s been great for both of us.”
Ray remembers his first endurance
ride many years ago. It was 75 miles, and he was whooped, and he thought, “Why
am I doing this!?” But as we die-hard endurance riders tend to do, he continued
on to finish the ride, and naturally got hooked. He’s finished a couple of
Quilties, and also had numerous champion show horses of his own breeding.
They’ve got some 65 or so horses on the place now, 7 or 8 stallions, including
the beautiful black River Oak Tabu, who’s by Arabian Park Egyptian Magnetic,
sire of Trevor Copland’s black stallion Egyptian Harmony, and Ningadoo Arabian’s
Ningadoo Taban, who I’d just seen. Tabu consistently produces successful halter
and performance show horses, and his get are also doing well as endurance horses
in the Middle East.
A few years ago Ray was diagnosed with cancer, so
he’s been out of riding for 20 months, but he’s now healthy and in remission,
and ready to start riding again. They’re quite busy now, as they’re having an
‘Open Barn’ on the weekend where many horses are for sale,
Next was
Mark and Lesley and son Brody Freeman’s Cedar Ridge Arabians. They got started
breeding Arabians just for fun, to have a nice horse or two for their kids to
ride in the pony club - and if they were going to breed Arabians, might as well
be some nice ones. One day neighbor Peter Cole, owner of Chip Chase Sadaqa,
invited Mark to ride with him. Mark wasn’t sure which of his horses to ride,
maybe Cedar Ridge Rob Roy. Peter asked the breeding of the horse, and when he
heard his breeding (Flash Design out of one of their first broodmares,
Stoodleigh Nikia), Peter said, “That’s a nice horse, you should do endurance on
him.” Mark said, “What’s endurance?”
Mark started riding with Peter
Cole, and eventually did his first ride on Rob Roy. Mark and Rob Roy’s 3rd ride
(and completion) was the Quilty. Mark was addicted! Over Rob Roy’s endurance
career, he accumulated over 9000 endurance kilometres. After finishing the
Quilty, he started winning rides; he finished his first 20 rides in a row in the
top 5 without a pull. He was the first horse to win at all distances: 80, 100,
120, 160, and 400 km. He holds the Shahzada record of 26 hrs and 42 minutes, and
he won it twice.
The Freeman’s son Brody was the one who had the idea to
turn their endurance hobby into a business. Now Mark and Lesley don’t ride so
much (they have about a dozen Quilties and a dozen Shahzadas between them) but
they enjoy strapping, and the breeding end of the business. They currently have
over 100 horses, and sell all their horses to clients in the Middle East,
because there’s no profit in selling them locally.
They lost their house
in the 2001 bush fires; they brush it off as if it was nothing, but it had to
have been terribly traumatic. It happened so fast they didn’t have time to think
what to get out of the house - they lost all their horse papers, photos,
everything. They had 5 minutes to jump in their car and leave; a friend who was
also fleeing the area stopped by and asked what she could grab. Mark and Lesley
told her to grab what she thought they’d want, and she thought to take their
Quilty buckles and endurance trophies on the way out the door. Luckily there
were only 2 horses on the place - the rest were on their other farm 2 hours away
- and someone picked those two horses up in a float on their way out.
For
a while, their street was lightheartedly - but with some truth - referred to by
Mark as “the endurance center of the universe” because between him and Lesley
and Peter Cole, and other endurance neighbors on the road, they’d had a lot of
wins and miles, Quilties and Shahzadas, between them.
They have a
beautiful place with a view on the back porch to the forest below and beyond,
some of it National Park. You can’t see any trace of the fires anymore; the
eucalyptus have quickly returned. When they first moved to their place many
years ago, there were only 2 houses. Now they’re surrounded by houses, and they
no longer have direct access to the forest land trails - they have to haul a
short distance away to get to the good and long training trails.
I’m
certainly not doing any of these farms justice with just a quick visit; they’re
just a sample of the tip of the iceberg in Australian endurance!
http://www.endurance.net/merri/stories/2007/05/quick-horse-farm-tour.html