Featuring…Heels Down Magazine

What do you get when you take magazines like Vogue or Cosmopolitan and transform them into something for equestrians?

You get Heels Down Magazine, a young adult rider’s “monthly guide to the latest equestrian fashion trends, riding how-tos, and celebrity styles.” Everything from style tips to riding exercises to informative articles is packed inside a convenient digital package, ready to be downloaded onto your nearest device of choice, and all for under $4! With a plethora of equestrians working together to produce the issues’ content and design, Heels Down is created by riders, for riders.Continue reading “Featuring…Heels Down Magazine”

TOA Blog Hop 1: History of the Horse

This blog hop probably has the cutest reasoning behind it. Beka from The Owl Approves is hosting an 18 week blog hop, one for every week until her horse’s 18th birthday! I have made it my mission to participate in all 18 hops, so bring it on.

ForBeka

Week one focuses on the history of our horses, asking “Before you met, where was your horse?  Who bred him/her?  What do you know about his sire and his dam?  What do you know where he came from?  Tell me about the time before he had a trainer.

Axcent’s history is a mysterious one. And one that is close to impossible to look up.

His sire is Axiom, a former Class I stallion from Germany who was imported to the United States and only had a small crop of foals before he was gelded to be a Children’s Hunter. His dam is Blades Sweet Gem, an unraced thoroughbred three generations away from Bold Ruler. Both pretty boring and photo-less (I did manage to scrounge up photos of Axiom but they were from a professional photographer and I am not about to dabble in plagiarism).

Ax’s big “claim to fame” is in the next generation back on his father’s side. His grand-sire is the one and only Argentinus. He is a very well known Hanoverian stallion in Germany with a plethora of awards and achievements. In 1996 he was the youngest millionaire, measured by the prize money his off-spring won, among Germany’s stallions and is now the most successful sire still active in breeding in Germany. He was known for producing top level performance horses in both showjumping and dressage. In 2005 he was named Hanoverian Stallion of the Year and he passed away to cancer two years later.

argentinus
Argentinus

 

argentinus
And some more…because he is so gorgeous and I couldn’t pick just one.

 

I have no clue as to who bred him, but I do know that it was somewhere in the North Carolina/Virginia area.

This is where his history gets murky. A woman was purchasing horses to be trained and re-sold by two trainers in Virginia and Ax happened to be one of them. Said trainers turned out to be caught in a case of conspiracy to commit fraud and swindle of livestock, and the woman was then stuck with her horses and had nothing to do with them. A few years later he was sold to his last owner, I’ll call her M, who trained with my high school equestrian team coach, G. M was boarding Ax at our current barn when we first moved our other two horses there. The opportunity came to lease him for the summer of 2013, and in the meantime he was sold to G when M purchased a new horse. I ended up purchasing him that August, and here we are now.

Ax and his past owner.

 

There you have it, the history of Southern Axcent. Or at least as much as I can dig up.

-TC

Check out the other blog hoppers here: An InLinkz Link-up!

Product Review: Bio-Groom Quick Clean Waterless Shampoo

If you read my A Horse Box Unboxing, you know that one of the items inside was the Bio-Groom Quick Clean Waterless Shampoo. Originally, I wasn’t going to review this product, but when a friend of mine was looking for a water-less shampoo and asked my opinion on it, I figured why not just write a post about it.Continue reading “Product Review: Bio-Groom Quick Clean Waterless Shampoo”

No Stirrup November: Week Four

This year I have decided that I will be participating in the infamous No Stirrup November, but I didn’t drop the irons for every ride for the entire month. Instead, I followed my own rules for the sake of my horse and myself.

Week by week, I have been documenting my adventures in NSN. Check out week oneweek two, and week three!Continue reading “No Stirrup November: Week Four”