KyAngel
Posted : 9/6/2011 11:24:51 PM
[quote=Connie]
Topper is a registered Paint...from the Dakotas. He does have a quarter horse body, western paint as opposed to the TB type. He is mellow, has a lot of drive in the rear, and a very soft mouth. I posted a picture of him on general chat the other day, but will add it here to make it easier to find.
Baron was a bay gaited I had almost 20 years ago. (has it really been that long?) He came up from the Carolinas on a load of horses someone sent to my dealer. He was a little barn sour, but so wonderfully smooth gaited that after riding him for over an hour I knew his barn sourness was of a workable kind. He would go anywhere, trusted me, was unafraid of whatever we came across, could gait along with cantering quarter horses, he was just a super horse. Sadly, I boarded him out and they fed him bad feed and he died a slow, painful death. I have been looking for one just like him since then. I doubt that Topper will ever be able to gait at those speeds, but if he can just keep up with Harley, he will do. Harley is joyful, but calm and quiet under saddle.
Have a super day. Love the name of your location.
Connie, Topper is a handsome boy ! I love his body type since I have a real weakness for a stocky built horse. When a horse has a lot of drive from the rear they tend to be really smooth. He'll probally be able to travel quite a distance without overtiring himself and will gradually become capable of faster speeds. How old is he ? My 7 year old stallion has been clocked at speeds in excess of 25 mph going uphill with me and I weigh in at 220. The gait he does is a rack , which he does in speed racking and style racking classes as well as trail pleasure classes too. I love the speed but I also love the elegance of a nice floaty runwalk.
Hunterseat, Your boy is cute too ! A lot of people around here buy standardbred horses to cross with their gaited mares. The resulting offspring (if gaited at all )tend to be really fast gaited horses and are usually really good in speed racking classes and gaited trail racing as well. If you want to discourage pacing you can work him on loose soil such as a freshly plowed and disked field or in tall grass. This will discourage and break up the lateral movement of the pace. Also working him up steep hills will discourage pacing just remember to not to ask for speed down the hill as this encourages the pace.A few year ago when I was training a 3 year old mare that was really pacey I worked her over poles set about 18 inches apart to break up the lateral movement of the pace in addition to working her in really tall grass. That mare finally quit pacing and became a pretty smooth mare. Just be sure that if you do still want him to trot then continue the pole work and he'll develope a strong trot instead of his smooth saddle gait. A person can take a smooth gaited horse and make it trotty by working it over poles daily until it gets the foot fall pattern right. My poor goofy stepson Levi learned about pole trailing the hard way. I had been training horses for a friend of mine and he kept insisting that he could train a horse if I'd let him do it. I didn't want to just turn him loose without consulting the horse's owner so I got permission from him to let my stepson have a go at it. Levi was 18 and of couse he knew ABSOLUTELY everything there was to know about training horses. LOL! He started working a pretty 3 year old filly with a real sweet temperment .....and the 
aciest thing. that ever was. He worked slowly and steadily for a while and when he realized that I was'nt breathing down his nech to boss him started his OWN program. After almost a month he came to me asking for help. It seems that little filly had quit pacing but was now so trotty her legs were like jackhammers. He was ready to give up saying she was hopeless. I finally got the whole story out of him between insults aimed at the poor horse. He had been working her over poles for an hour a day ,every day for almost a month. He had stopped her pacing and taught her to trot. LOL! We had to start all over to break the trotting habit that he had taught her. LOL! At least he waited a while before claiming to know it all at least a week or so anyways.