• Welcome to the Chronicle Forums.
    Please complete your profile. The forums and the rest of www.chronofhorse.com has single sign-in, so your log in information for one will automatically work for the other. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed here are the views of the individual and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of The Chronicle of the Horse.

Announcement

Collapse

Forum rules and no-advertising policy

As a participant on this forum, it is your responsibility to know and follow our rules. Please read this message in its entirety.

Board Rules

1. You’re responsible for what you say.
As outlined in Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, The Chronicle of the Horse and its affiliates, as well Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd., the developers of vBulletin, are not legally responsible for statements made in the forums.

This is a public forum viewed by a wide spectrum of people, so please be mindful of what you say and who might be reading it—details of personal disputes are likely better handled privately. While posters are legally responsible for their statements, the moderators may in their discretion remove or edit posts that violate these rules. Users have the ability to modify or delete their own messages after posting, but administrators generally will not delete posts, threads or accounts upon request.

Outright inflammatory, vulgar, harassing, malicious or otherwise inappropriate statements and criminal charges unsubstantiated by a reputable news source or legal documentation will not be tolerated and will be dealt with at the discretion of the moderators.

Credible threats of suicide will be reported to the police along with identifying user information at our disposal, in addition to referring the user to suicide helpline resources such as 1-800-SUICIDE or 1-800-273-TALK.

2. Conversations in horse-related forums should be horse-related.
The forums are a wonderful source of information and support for members of the horse community. While it’s understandably tempting to share information or search for input on other topics upon which members might have a similar level of knowledge, members must maintain the focus on horses.

3. Keep conversations productive, on topic and civil.
Discussion and disagreement are inevitable and encouraged; personal insults, diatribes and sniping comments are unproductive and unacceptable. Whether a subject is light-hearted or serious, keep posts focused on the current topic and of general interest to other participants of that thread. Utilize the private message feature or personal email where appropriate to address side topics or personal issues not related to the topic at large.

4. No advertising in the discussion forums.
Posts in the discussion forums directly or indirectly advertising horses, jobs, items or services for sale or wanted will be removed at the discretion of the moderators. Use of the private messaging feature or email addresses obtained through users’ profiles for unsolicited advertising is not permitted.

Company representatives may participate in discussions and answer questions about their products or services, or suggest their products on recent threads if they fulfill the criteria of a query. False "testimonials" provided by company affiliates posing as general consumers are not appropriate, and self-promotion of sales, ad campaigns, etc. through the discussion forums is not allowed.

Paid advertising is available on our classifieds site and through the purchase of banner ads. The tightly monitored Giveaways forum permits free listings of genuinely free horses and items available or wanted (on a limited basis). Items offered for trade are not allowed.

Advertising Policy Specifics
When in doubt of whether something you want to post constitutes advertising, please contact a moderator privately in advance for further clarification. Refer to the following points for general guidelines:

Horses – Only general discussion about the buying, leasing, selling and pricing of horses is permitted. If the post contains, or links to, the type of specific information typically found in a sales or wanted ad, and it’s related to a horse for sale, regardless of who’s selling it, it doesn’t belong in the discussion forums.

Stallions – Board members may ask for suggestions on breeding stallion recommendations. Stallion owners may reply to such queries by suggesting their own stallions, only if their horse fits the specific criteria of the original poster. Excessive promotion of a stallion by its owner or related parties is not permitted and will be addressed at the discretion of the moderators.

Services – Members may use the forums to ask for general recommendations of trainers, barns, shippers, farriers, etc., and other members may answer those requests by suggesting themselves or their company, if their services fulfill the specific criteria of the original post. Members may not solicit other members for business if it is not in response to a direct, genuine query.

Products – While members may ask for general opinions and suggestions on equipment, trailers, trucks, etc., they may not list the specific attributes for which they are in the market, as such posts serve as wanted ads.

Event Announcements – Members may post one notification of an upcoming event that may be of interest to fellow members, if the original poster does not benefit financially from the event. Such threads may not be “bumped” excessively. Premium members may post their own notices in the Event Announcements forum.

Charities/Rescues – Announcements for charitable or fundraising events can only be made for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organizations. Special exceptions may be made, at the moderators’ discretion and direction, for board-related events or fundraising activities in extraordinary circumstances.

Occasional posts regarding horses available for adoption through IRS-registered horse rescue or placement programs are permitted in the appropriate forums, but these threads may be limited at the discretion of the moderators. Individuals may not advertise or make announcements for horses in need of rescue, placement or adoption unless the horse is available through a recognized rescue or placement agency or government-run entity or the thread fits the criteria for and is located in the Giveaways forum.

5. Do not post copyrighted photographs unless you have purchased that photo and have permission to do so.

6. Respect other members.
As members are often passionate about their beliefs and intentions can easily be misinterpreted in this type of environment, try to explore or resolve the inevitable disagreements that arise in the course of threads calmly and rationally.

If you see a post that you feel violates the rules of the board, please click the “alert” button (exclamation point inside of a triangle) in the bottom left corner of the post, which will alert ONLY the moderators to the post in question. They will then take whatever action, or no action, as deemed appropriate for the situation at their discretion. Do not air grievances regarding other posters or the moderators in the discussion forums.

Please be advised that adding another user to your “Ignore” list via your User Control Panel can be a useful tactic, which blocks posts and private messages by members whose commentary you’d rather avoid reading.

7. We have the right to reproduce statements made in the forums.
The Chronicle of the Horse may copy, quote, link to or otherwise reproduce posts, or portions of posts, in print or online for advertising or editorial purposes, if attributed to their original authors, and by posting in this forum, you hereby grant to The Chronicle of the Horse a perpetual, non-exclusive license under copyright and other rights, to do so.

8. We reserve the right to enforce and amend the rules.
The moderators may delete, edit, move or close any post or thread at any time, or refrain from doing any of the foregoing, in their discretion, and may suspend or revoke a user’s membership privileges at any time to maintain adherence to the rules and the general spirit of the forum. These rules may be amended at any time to address the current needs of the board.

Please see our full Terms of Service and Privacy Policy for more information.

Thanks for being a part of the COTH forums!

(Revised 2/8/18)
See more
See less

stallions with Amatuer friendly brains...

Collapse
X
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #81
    Sea Accounts

    Sea Accounts has been in my barn a little over a month and a half now. He is the fourth stallion I have had and has changed my opinion of stallions in general. I have yet to put a chain on him in any situation...including hauling next to a mare in heat several times, having my junior student walk him up to the show ring and hold him ringside for me at every show, and for all other vet/farrier work,etc. He has the best mind of any horse I have had including geldings and mares. He goes to sleep in the x-c start box and ringside, and at the last show I had several people ask if we were going to market him to the hunter world after watching his stadium round.
    All of his offspring that I have met have had the same personality as well. I am planning on breeding 3 mares to him this spring for sale and for myself .

    Feel free to email me if anyone has any questions, he truly is a big sweet puppy dog.

    Christan
    www.trainoreventing.com
    www.trainoreventing.com

    Comment


    • #82
      Lacado is another nice amatuer stallion

      Lacado is very kind and from what we have seen his offspring are very kind and easy to work with. You can purchase a breeding to him less than at half price right now at the Northwest Sporthorse Stallion Service Auction. Visit the website and www.nwshba.com

      Comment


      • #83
        I think I have met more stallions with amateur friendly brains than not. As long as someone is knowledgable enough to deal with the occassional "stallion behavior", most stallions are not that different from mares. All of our stallions are ridden by amateurs and juniors.

        Comment


        • #84
          Lots of great stallions mentioned here. Depending upon your mare's physical and mental attributes and very important, your breeding goals and objectives, if you seek a stallion whose lineage consistently produces exceptional riding and performance horses (sire German Bundeschampion with scores of 10's for rideability, trainability and movement under Rudoph Zeilinger and Bettina Overesch), who have great minds and can be ridden by amateur and professional alike, you may want to take a look at the German Trakehner stallion, Happy Hour. Happy is handled, loved (incredibly so ), trained and ridden by an amateur just about every day and has also been ridden by some of the best pros (i.e., Lars Petersen, Linda Zang, Eric Chalemet),who consistently produces offspring with upper level potential and who inherit his incredible kind nature. Happy and his offspring are exceptionally kind, willing, sensible, uncomplicated, very rideable and trainable and also possess the conformation, gaits and movement for upper level performance. Very best wishes.
          \"HAPPY HOUR\" & Hawk\'s Run Trakehners
          http://www.happyhour1.com

          \"The only price of admission is curiosity.\"
          Proud Member of Team Barbaro!

          Comment


          • #85
            Originally posted by Seal Harbor View Post
            Tish's Just The Best is just that. She had to evacuate with 30 horses during the recent wild fires in CA - she had the boys next to each other in pipe corrals - they behaved impeccably in a very stressful situation.

            Fred's A Fine Romance is another lovely boy, with great manners and a lovely temperament which he passes on.
            I have seen pictures of Just the Best's get and they are gaspfully lovely! I havent had the pleasure of being around any of them though I wish I were! I heard they were fantastic in all the panic during the fires though, so he has my vote!


            I know A Fine Romance very well and have indeed had the pleasure to have worked around him and handled him, as well as at least half a dozen of his get. I also know of others who have his get and it seems universal that he passes on his calm, mature, common sense way to his babies (to say nothing of his powerful butt and ability to improve mares with his excellent conformation). While many of his get are doing well in eventing and show homes with more advanced riders and pros, I also know a couple of relatively green riders with Fred get that just love him. When they dont go to BNTs, the babies sometimes dont get heard about, but in Fred's case, the ones that have gone to ammy homes seem to be very good and well loved in their ammy homes which is definitely worth something too. Some people just want a very good horse for themselves to enjoy and Fred seems to fit that bill as well. Very multi-valued stallion IMHO.

            Comment

            Working...
            X