Starting Point Stables - training & boarding stables. Arabian breeder.

FEF New Attitude - Arabian Mare

Pedigree

FEF New Attitude, Arabian MareWe acquired Atty from the stable I worked at in FL. I've known her since she was 3, but did not purchase her myself until around 2003 as a 9 year old, where I brought her up to NC.

In 2004 I bred her to a friends Spanish Mustang stallion, Cayuse Gold, for her first foal. The pair produced a very sweet filly, BP Bea Attitude (registration pending). Atty is booked to WO Welsh's MISTY MOUNTAIN BRYNMOR a 14.2-ish Cremello Welsh Cob. That foal is guaranteed Palomino, aprox 14.2 hands, big bodied, triple registered (Half Arabian, Half Welsh, Palomino) and is sure to be fancy. We are very excited and only wished we had done it this past spring! 2008 seems like forever.

Atty has had very little show experience, and before I purchased her, she had very little formal training. To date she has not done much in the show arena. 2 weeks after she began the weaning process from her foal, my son Zak showed her at her first show (small, open local type show). While she didn't sweep any classes, she did gather a few 3rds and 4ths in a ring full of Quarter Horses. She behaved, and that is what matters.

FEF New Attitude - Champion and Reserve Champion Sport Horse, Dressage and HunterIn July of 2006, Zak took her to the Region 12 Youth Jamboree, where the placings were a different story. In his walk-trot division, the mare took Grand Champion in the walk-trot hunter division, placing either 2nd or 1st in the majority of their 6 classes, that had to have had at least 10 other kids.

In Dressage (eq class, intro 1, intro 2) they got Reserve Champion in a field of about 4, placing a 1st, 2nd and 3rd.

Sport Horse division they got another Reserve Champion (2 in hand classes, under saddle she placed 1st).




FEF New Attitude, Arabian in Sport Horse Division

FEF New Attitude and Zak in Sport Horse Under Saddle

FEF New Attitude - Dressage

 

Recently Atty has been hitting the trails, and went to her first 'endurance' experience at the Biltmore in Asheville, where I used her in the beginners introduction to endurance clinic. Atty can easily do a 20+ mile ride right now, and we are slowly working up and hope to do our first 30 mile endurance event this winter or spring. She is very easy to keep fit, she has 'go', and is much happier out on the trail than in the arena.

LINKS OF INTERESTBoarding in North Carolina, Starting Point Stables

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