The Attributes of a Good Polo Pony



Speed, intelligence and agility by themselves, do not make a good polo pony. He must be clever. He must be able to dodge and swerve while going full speed, and to wheel and turn on the proverbial dime. Besides this, he must be able to follow the ball, and instinctively put his rider in a good position to hit it. He must be completely steady and unaffected by the waving mallets and yelling crowds. In addition, and no less important, he must have much courage, and not flinch from contact, sometimes violent, with another mount.







Monday, February 21, 2011

Tess/Pachita in VA 3 months later

Tess/Pachita at New Holland


March 2010 Stony Bridge Farm assisted in the rescue of a polo horse at the New Holland Auction in PA. She was called Tess. After a short rehab, she was adopted by a very nice family in VA. A groom saw Tess and recognized her as Pachita. Pachita had belonged to a high-goal polo pro. I guess she didn't turn fast enough, so he dumped her at the auction. Another perfectly good "unwanted horse" with a lazy, irresponsible owner. The Unwanted Horse Coalition, a division of the American Horse Council, describes an Unwanted Horse, as follows:

HORSES THAT FAIL TO MEET OWNERS EXPECTATION
>UNATTRACTIVE
>NOT ATHLETIC
>UNMARKETABLE
>WRONG COLOR
>BARREN/INFERTILE
>COST TOO MUCH TO CARE FOR

NORMAL, HEALTHY HORSES OF VARIOUS AGES
AND BREEDS

HORSES THAT ARE OLD

HORSES THAT ARE INCURABLY LAME

HORSES THAT HAVE BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS

HORSES THAT ARE DANGEROUS

UN-ADOPTABLE FERAL HORSES

I don't know about you, but the descriptions I hate the most are those under the heading "Fails to meet the owners expectations" Maybe not their expectaions, but an ugly, barren Paint mare with a lot of white is OK for me!!

Planning for 2011


We experienced 2 days of temps in the 50s last week, so Winter blankets got to come-off. Everyone rolled in the mud almost immediately. It reminds me of how I feel at the end of the day when I take off my workboots. AHHHH! It seemed that no sooner were the blankets off and the horses were all muddy, when we got a terrible rainstorm, with thunder, lightning, and high winds. Mark and Tom dashed outside to get the blankets back on the poor horses. Even though I was born and raised in New England, I still have this odd belief that on March 1st, the weather will get warm and sunny. Well that date is only one week away, and I guess its time to be realistic--it ain't getting warm anytime soon. So, what do you do during your winter "down-time". This assumes you don't travel south in the winter. I try to catch up on paperwork,research, and correspondence I also try to spend some time enjoying my hobbies other than horses. Mark has reffed a couple of arena polo games at UCONN. He's also taking some classes at the local community college. He must be planning to someday have a job that is non polo related, like something that pays real money.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Dressage Anyone??


We have had an unusual amount of snow this winter. The top rail of the riding ring is 5 ft. off the ground, and there are 5 rails. With 3 feet of snow in the riding ring, it looks like I'll be changing my discipline to dressage!

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Missing Horse

"Left for college in the fall of 2009. Gave my Morgan mare to someone with the agreement that she would be taken care of, and would not be leaving that location. Horse is no longer at that location, and information as to her whereabouts will not be given." Read on this blogsite, Sept. 27, 2010 "Where has Your Horse Been?"
As a lawyer once told me, even with contracts and agreements on the sale of your horses, once all the legal steps are taken, and the legal fees are paid, your horse will be long gone, or dead!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011