LOVE Arabs. BRILLIANT horses, but a bit 'different' - they don't forget insults easily, and highly intelligent. My mare would take care of developmentally-delayed children at RDA one day, do a fifty-miler at the weekend, visit the Alzheimer's daycare centre a couple of days later and be a great dramatic actress when on a casual ride locally. She was bombproof in traffic and broken to harness so she could harrow the paddocks and the sand school ... I bought her directly from the breeder as a 2yo; her half-sister became a national champion but my mare was MY champion and companion for over 25 years. So MANY happy memories.
I used to live minutes from Varian Arabians and loved watching the babies in the spring and going thru the barns during the open houses. They were exquisitely beautiful.
This is a beautiful horse. I am not a fan of Egyptian Arabians but the Polish bred animals USUALLY have a sound mind and body with good confirmation. For having been gelded so short of time he is showing he is NOT an idiot. He is being respectful of your space and uses his body very well. His attitude is Arabian but he is not flippant at all.he did well with the whip on his body without hysterics or fear his watching the box on the ground shows intelligence and curiosity more than fear. He is More worries about those 4 LEGGED COW THINGS. LOL
My girl also. She didn't like spoiled children (could sense them a mile away), yet so gentle with an infant. Never be mean to her - she would make sure to wait for the opportunity to get revenge.😀 Mine was a feral/rescue, but had her for 30 years. Got her as a 2 yr old. Better than a guard dog. We'd play tag, hide and seek, etc. Best companion.
Absolutely handsome, smart guy!! Many years ago I worked at an Arabian horse ranch. I am very impressed with this guy. Even after just being gelded and in a new environment he is behaving like a gentleman. Looking forward to his progress!
That is one gorgeous, smart, and kind Arabian…SO typical of the breed when started with kindness. The Bedouin gave the world an amazing gift in these “drinkers of the wind”.
I'm not usually a fan of Arabians. This one is lovely. He moves beautifully. He's curious, smart, polite, and only a little bit of a pill. It's going to be very interesting to see how he progresses.
@@laurels.6532 I agree about the sturdy build. Thank goodness his legs are mor than toothpicks. Once he works a bit his behind will round out beautifully. It's already got a great shape. HIs chest is lovely as well. And he's using his brain.
He’s my dream horse. Sensible but not sedate. He’ll keep you on your toes just enough to be fun. I’ve always loved hot blooded breeds. When I was younger and had more guts than sense, I’d usually be the first person tossed up onto a fresh off the track thoroughbred. I loved it.
My Arabian gelding was the love of my life!! Willing, intelligent and bomb-proof 😂 My daughter learned to ride on him and we both won saddles in our respective divisions. Truly my “heart horse”, and even now, all these years later, the standard by which all others were judged. I miss him😢
When I was younger we had a Arabian mare that my dad took out to 1000 acre ranch in West Texas and she outworked every quarter horse on the cattle ranch with stamina.she came off the JHRose Ranch was a cowboys horse great mare. I think this boy just still struggling with hormones still but that will go👍
Which is why we use them for 100 mile endurance races! My best distance horse was an Appaloosa Arab cross, I always said the Arab part was my secret weapon, bc my horse was colored like an App!
Tim I absolutely love and enjoy watching you work every horse. He is a good boy. Beautiful 😍 I bred and train arabians myself. You are a great trainer. ❤❤❤
You’ve probably worked with most existing horse breeds, but I hadn’t seen any of your videos with an Arabian before. Really looking forward to watching his training!
Hi TIM I always enjoy your videos .Anyway I was riding a 2 year old colt last Saturday and was 90 minutes into the ride when I think he stumbled because I was air born wondering where did the horse go I could see blue sky above me and know Iam going to hit the ground very soon stayed relaxed as I could and took the hit on the center of my back pain shooting down to the lower back I still had the reins in my hands turned over on my belly and the colt dragged me back a couple of feet and then stopped then I got up and got on him in a lot of pain I still had to ride him back to the barn another 90 minutes so 3 hour ride and Iam 63 never had a fall like it and hope I never do .
He is a very handsome young man, when I was Younger( 20s-30s) now I am 70, I trained alot of Aarbs you are so correct you can not tire them, they are very smart, but also high spirited, but if started right. What wver you teach them thet remeber, so if taught wrong tgey repeat. Not their pronlem it is yours. So enjoying watching you work this fellow
I say my best friend in high school taught me to ride, on her little Arab mare (colored like an Appaloosa), but thats not actually true. That little horse taught me to ride. The horse knew what i could do and took care of me when i needed it, dropped her shoulder and dumped me in the grass on purpose when i wasnt paying attention, then stood over me, alternately chortling and laughing, then nuzzling me to make sure i wasnt hurt. The horse was the teacher. I learned then about the minds of Arabian horses, and have respected them ever since.
That is JUST how my (3/4 Polish, 1/4 English Crabbet) Arab mare was. She dropped my niece (who 'thought' she could 'ride') into a soft, shallow, muddy pool and trotted home proudly; there were witnesses who told me _all_ about it - it was hilarious. She would never, ever ever, have even _thought_ of doing that when the horse-mad kids with developmental delays were riding her at RDA group. She would, instead, stand stock-still if she felt her rider becoming unbalanced, and would not change her pace until _she_ felt they were secure enough in the saddle. No, I did not teach her to do that. She gave those girls so much delight; some of them were at mainstream schools and it was a real ego-boost for them when they had a photo of themselves _riding an Arabian_ to show their main-stream friends who 'just' rode riding-school ponies (nothing wrong with a riding school pony, of course, but it's not a dramatic actor of an Arab with a 3ft long mane and flaring nostrils ...).
Every horse i have owned has had some Arabian or purebred..ai t nothing like them. So glad that you have some understanding of what they are....they are in a clas of their own when it comes to training them
He is so gracefully beautiful, and he is trying to figure out those odd looking horse-mixes in the next corral. Looking forward to what you will discover tomorrow.
The work with his feet showed that he has been trained for showing, because he knew what was expected in his stance, returning to the square position every time. I like that when he was being lunged, one ear was locked on the cows, the other one swiveled back and forth between Tim and the cows.
AWE!❤❤❤❤ He is a stunning beauty! So gorgeous! I love the white on the end of his beautiful tail😊. These are my favorite horses😊 They are very clever, gentle, well mannered due to they will never run u over! What I love most is their spirit❤❤. And u can ride them all day & they never get tired. Never a dull moment with these beauties😊😊 Such a gorgeous big baby!
God he’s beautiful lovely walk very smart. Loved horses all my life but he’s the most beautiful horse. I’ve seen in a long time. Looking forward to see how you get on with him. Thanks for uploading.
Arabians are extremely smart horses very much want to please the handler. Had a Arab mare she was smart athletic and could go all day and was ready to ride longer. She was very nice horse did trails did jumping an could work cows on her. Absolutely a gorgeous horse very nice boy he'll Excell at whatever he's trained for.
What a beauty! Arabians are my favorite. Usually high strung and high headed, if not trained well, but to me they are beautiful! Did the new owner say what he will be used for? For not having a lot of history, just being gelded, having a new owner and now in a new space with a new trainer, I think he did great. I’m looking forward to seeing his progress.
Yep, they're phenomenal. They can make great cow horses, too. My Arabs have handled the blistering summers and -30F winters much better than any of my stock horses.
I agree 1000% . The best and most sensible horse I have ever had was an Arabian stallion that had raced , then stood at stud. I could ride him anywhere BAREBACK ! What a GREAT horse !!!!! He was Polish by Monarch AH.
@@casdragon_5939I'm 58 and when I was 11, I was blessed to get a 10 year old 1/2 polish arab mare and 1/2 quarter horse mare. 14.1 and built like a tank. I foxhunted, did junior jumpers, speed events, trail riding and worked cows with her. She did it all very well. She stayed sound her entire life until she died at 35. ❤
Polish x Egyptian is a fantastic cross: I bred my last Arabian from an Egyptian desert bred mare, he passed at 35 yrs old, so gentle and kind even as a stallion. Hated water and I could never in his whole life…get him to walk through a puddle…he would skirt around one. And we have plenty of puddles in the UK! I adored him.
I have had many Arabian horses and one thing I can tell you is you must be smarter than the horse. Like other breeds there are good bloodlines and not so good ones. Breeding matters but you got a really nice one here. His new owner must be so excited 😊.
Nice horse, he'll be a good riding partner, maybe even working cows. You're right about not wearing out an Arabian: They have no bottom, and are very sensitive and intelligent.
I really enjoy watching you work with different breeds. I have a 12 y/o Arab. He is my first Arabian. They are so smart! This guy looks like he is going to be a good one. He seems willing and curious. I can't wait to watch his progress!
Wowzerz he is somethin’!! I am not partial to arabians, but I like the way he is put together! Looking forward to see how you shape him up and what kind of learner he is 🤩. I hope his pretty serves him well in the DOES department 😊
My Arabians were Kellogg bred...this fella sure is nice! Pleasing personality and a good example of the type of Arabian I like! Wonder if he has any Fadjur bloodline in him??
@joannehuttenhoff2701 THE Agriculture College in Pomona CA is the original Kellogg Ranch. They have to breed Arabians to keep the grant of the property. Several years ago I think they completed restoration of Mr Kelloggs home up on the hill. Free horse show high lighting the Arabian horse is held evert Sat. Stables are original too.
@@donnac.1609 Yup I know all about that! A friend of mine went through that program many years ago. I'm in SoCal and should really go and check that out one of these days.
I think with you training him, he will be a very solid horse in the end. He seems just to be unsure, not nervy or fearful, which will most certainly make training easier. Gorgeous horse. Love his temperament and energy
I had an Arabian years ago. He had very stallion ish behaviour as a youngster, and he became a wonderful friend and partner . I think they can be a one person horse. My boy certainly was . This is a beautifu horse, I look forward to seeing you work with him!
I’d love to see papers. Maybe you mentioned his bloodlines, but I’d bet you have a guy with primarily Polish ancestry. Great brains, willing, great athletes not “china dolls” , and he may end up being the best cow horse on the place. Like an extremely bright child, they will definitely find mischief if they are bored. Lovely confirmation and way of going. Especially considering he was just gelded, he appears to have a head full of sense.
My absolute best show mare ever was Anglo Arab. Such a beautiful mare so responsive and always gave me the very best of herself. I've never had or ridden a full blood Arab but this young boy is absolutely gorgeous especially seeing as hes just been gelded and would still have alot of testosterone in his system. I think hed have been a sweet stud. I can't wait to see how far he comes with you. The new owner is going to be one lucky person ❤
One of my favorite horses I've ever trained was an anglo arabian. He was a fox hunter and I loved every minute I had him. He was sent to me because he was bucking with his owner. Turned out to be a fantastic horse.
So interesting Tim, thank you. Is this the first Arabian you've worked with? Gorgeous horse with beautiful conformation. When you put on the saddle pad, it seemed too big and I remembered that Arabians have one less spinal vertebrae and one less pair of ribs than any other breed! Also of course, that finely shaped head and tail carriage...will be watching his development.
I once had a beautiful 3 yr. Old TB stud colt right off the track. A trainer found him for me in Oregon, had him gelded, and shipped him to me in Alaska. My farrier had an equally nice Arab stallion; she could do anything she wanted with that horse. We traded horses for a few minutes and found both rode like Cadillacs and had similar dispositions. My very best riding experience, ever.
I love Arabians. We had Welsh ponies, Welsh/Arabs and a Welsh/Quarter horse cross that was a terrific all around girl’s event, show, hunt and trail horse. Fast and intelligent and willing and up for anything. When I got on him, he was quiet. As an older horse he served disabled children. They are the most beautiful animals and your horse is gorgeous.
Some stallions have great dispositions. I didn't geld mine until he was 7, so I rode him from 3 to 7 as a stallion. About the only difference for mine was that he wasn't as spooky after gelding. He was a half Arab Pinto.
In our time and day we are assume that someone didn't do a good training if no video was produced to proof it. And we got proven wrong. Whomever did the initial training did a good job. We also shouldn't forget that he was an Arabian stallion at the time. I am looking forward to more videos (well, actually Tim, I enjoy all your videos :-) )
Would love to know his breeding. He is a great example of the Arabian horse's conformation. I really like that you praise and rub on him as much as you are.
THANK YOU! for telling people you can't wear an Arabian or Morgan down running them in the roundpen or lunge line. They just get hotter. So many trainers that use these techniques refuse to acknowledge that Saddle type horse don't work the same as the stock type. Trainers will label them as crazy and stupid. Again thank you for your excellent videos.
One way to help him past the attention problem would be to let him spend a day in the pen with them or next to them. He has obviously never seen a cow.
I would so love to have a horse like this one- smart, careful and so, so beautiful. You are doing a fantastic job with him and I look forward to the next video.
LOVE Arabs. BRILLIANT horses, but a bit 'different' - they don't forget insults easily, and highly intelligent. My mare would take care of developmentally-delayed children at RDA one day, do a fifty-miler at the weekend, visit the Alzheimer's daycare centre a couple of days later and be a great dramatic actress when on a casual ride locally.
She was bombproof in traffic and broken to harness so she could harrow the paddocks and the sand school ...
I bought her directly from the breeder as a 2yo; her half-sister became a national champion but my mare was MY champion and companion for over 25 years. So MANY happy memories.
I couldn’t agree more ! Arabs are super cool on every level !!
I used to live minutes from Varian Arabians and loved watching the babies in the spring and going thru the barns during the open houses. They were exquisitely beautiful.
This is a beautiful horse. I am not a fan of Egyptian Arabians but the Polish bred animals USUALLY have a sound mind and body with good confirmation. For having been gelded so short of time he is showing he is NOT an idiot. He is being respectful of your space and uses his body very well. His attitude is Arabian but he is not flippant at all.he did well with the whip on his body without hysterics or fear his watching the box on the ground shows intelligence and curiosity more than fear. He is More worries about those 4 LEGGED COW THINGS. LOL
My Straight Egyptian stallion would have jumped those boxes!
My girl also. She didn't like spoiled children (could sense them a mile away), yet so gentle with an infant. Never be mean to her - she would make sure to wait for the opportunity to get revenge.😀 Mine was a feral/rescue, but had her for 30 years. Got her as a 2 yr old. Better than a guard dog. We'd play tag, hide and seek, etc. Best companion.
What a beautiful horse. The new owner must be so happy to have him!
Absolutely handsome, smart guy!! Many years ago I worked at an Arabian horse ranch. I am very impressed with this guy. Even after just being gelded and in a new environment he is behaving like a gentleman. Looking forward to his progress!
By Arabian standards but not by QH standards.
That is one gorgeous, smart, and kind Arabian…SO typical of the breed when started with kindness. The Bedouin gave the world an amazing gift in these “drinkers of the wind”.
@@alexandra1marlowe -Not my poetry…very old description of this ancient breed, and quite apt. 😁
I have an Arabian mare that is now 16. One of the best horses I've ever owned for lots of reasons. No price would buy her.
Priceless! ❤
Wow! Only 5 seconds into video! What a Hunk! Gorgeous! Oooooh, do a good job horsey! I Will Be Following!❤❤❤❤❤🐎💖💖💖💖💖
That’s an elegant horse
Arabs are SO smart, and very people oriented for the most part.
I'm not usually a fan of Arabians. This one is lovely. He moves beautifully. He's curious, smart, polite, and only a little bit of a pill. It's going to be very interesting to see how he progresses.
I agree on all counts. He is a stunner and moves beautifully.
Yes agreed.
Totally agree. Arabs aren't my first pick either but I would take this one. He has a nice sturdy build too. Gorgeous.
@@laurels.6532 I love Arabians, apart from being beautiful, they are so sweet and intelligent. Of course full of stamina and energetic.
@@laurels.6532 I agree about the sturdy build. Thank goodness his legs are mor than toothpicks. Once he works a bit his behind will round out beautifully. It's already got a great shape. HIs chest is lovely as well. And he's using his brain.
He’s my dream horse. Sensible but not sedate. He’ll keep you on your toes just enough to be fun. I’ve always loved hot blooded breeds. When I was younger and had more guts than sense, I’d usually be the first person tossed up onto a fresh off the track thoroughbred. I loved it.
Good morning guys, great start. Thanks for video Tim.
My Arabian gelding was the love of my life!! Willing, intelligent and bomb-proof 😂 My daughter learned to ride on him and we both won saddles in our respective divisions. Truly my “heart horse”, and even now, all these years later, the standard by which all others were judged. I miss him😢
When I was younger we had a Arabian mare that my dad took out to 1000 acre ranch in West Texas and she outworked every quarter horse on the cattle ranch with stamina.she came off the JHRose Ranch was a cowboys horse great mare. I think this boy just still struggling with hormones still but that will go👍
He is stunning! Can't wait to see more
Which is why we use them for 100 mile endurance races! My best distance horse was an Appaloosa Arab cross, I always said the Arab part was my secret weapon, bc my horse was colored like an App!
Tim I absolutely love and enjoy watching you work every horse.
He is a good boy. Beautiful 😍
I bred and train arabians myself. You are a great trainer. ❤❤❤
You’ve probably worked with most existing horse breeds, but I hadn’t seen any of your videos with an Arabian before. Really looking forward to watching his training!
What a good boy. He is going to make someone a great forever horse!
They are just the most beautiful movers.
Hi TIM I always enjoy your videos .Anyway I was riding a 2 year old colt last Saturday and was 90 minutes into the ride when I think he stumbled because I was air born wondering where did the horse go I could see blue sky above me and know Iam going to hit the ground very soon stayed relaxed as I could and took the hit on the center of my back pain shooting down to the lower back I still had the reins in my hands turned over on my belly and the colt dragged me back a couple of feet and then stopped then I got up and got on him in a lot of pain I still had to ride him back to the barn another 90 minutes so 3 hour ride and Iam 63 never had a fall like it and hope I never do .
He is a very handsome young man, when I was Younger( 20s-30s) now I am 70, I trained alot of Aarbs you are so correct you can not tire them, they are very smart, but also high spirited, but if started right. What wver you teach them thet remeber, so if taught wrong tgey repeat. Not their pronlem it is yours.
So enjoying watching you work this fellow
Such a gorgeous horse ❤.
Oh wow !! He’s super gorgeous and going to be one fun horse to ride !!! I think he’s going to be alittle easier than you think.
I say my best friend in high school taught me to ride, on her little Arab mare (colored like an Appaloosa), but thats not actually true. That little horse taught me to ride. The horse knew what i could do and took care of me when i needed it, dropped her shoulder and dumped me in the grass on purpose when i wasnt paying attention, then stood over me, alternately chortling and laughing, then nuzzling me to make sure i wasnt hurt. The horse was the teacher. I learned then about the minds of Arabian horses, and have respected them ever since.
That is JUST how my (3/4 Polish, 1/4 English Crabbet) Arab mare was. She dropped my niece (who 'thought' she could 'ride') into a soft, shallow, muddy pool and trotted home proudly; there were witnesses who told me _all_ about it - it was hilarious. She would never, ever ever, have even _thought_ of doing that when the horse-mad kids with developmental delays were riding her at RDA group. She would, instead, stand stock-still if she felt her rider becoming unbalanced, and would not change her pace until _she_ felt they were secure enough in the saddle. No, I did not teach her to do that.
She gave those girls so much delight; some of them were at mainstream schools and it was a real ego-boost for them when they had a photo of themselves _riding an Arabian_ to show their main-stream friends who 'just' rode riding-school ponies (nothing wrong with a riding school pony, of course, but it's not a dramatic actor of an Arab with a 3ft long mane and flaring nostrils ...).
Every horse i have owned has had some Arabian or purebred..ai t nothing like them. So glad that you have some understanding of what they are....they are in a clas of their own when it comes to training them
Stunning horse!!
He is so gracefully beautiful, and he is trying to figure out those odd looking horse-mixes in the next corral.
Looking forward to what you will discover tomorrow.
Gelded 3 days ago as a 7/8 year old. Can’t believe it! My stallion same age was in pain for days and very distressed.he is beautiful.
That is not unusual when they are not made to move around enough. That is why we planned it this way with Sabre.
❤ Hes so pretty.
Haha I literally went to comment just this ❤
He is beautiful. He looks like he will be a good one after you are finished.
The work with his feet showed that he has been trained for showing, because he knew what was expected in his stance, returning to the square position every time. I like that when he was being lunged, one ear was locked on the cows, the other one swiveled back and forth between Tim and the cows.
He's beautiful!
AWE!❤❤❤❤ He is a stunning beauty! So gorgeous! I love the white on the end of his beautiful tail😊. These are my favorite horses😊 They are very clever, gentle, well mannered due to they will never run u over! What I love most is their spirit❤❤. And u can ride them all day & they never get tired. Never a dull moment with these beauties😊😊 Such a gorgeous big baby!
He's a good boy ❤
Good Lord this horse is gorgeous!
Can’t wait to see how he comes along. He’ll be a great partner once he gives you his full attention!
God he’s beautiful lovely walk very smart. Loved horses all my life but he’s the most beautiful horse. I’ve seen in a long time. Looking forward to see how you get on with him. Thanks for uploading.
Arabians are extremely smart horses very much want to please the handler. Had a Arab mare she was smart athletic and could go all day and was ready to ride longer.
She was very nice horse did trails did jumping an could work cows on her.
Absolutely a gorgeous horse very nice boy he'll Excell at whatever he's trained for.
Bless his heart. So much to handle in just a few days. And gelded too❤❤
Arabians, Paso finos and some TB will laugh at you when you pass out from exhaustion trying to wear them down in a round pen lol.
What a beauty! Arabians are my favorite. Usually high strung and high headed, if not trained well, but to me they are beautiful!
Did the new owner say what he will be used for?
For not having a lot of history, just being gelded, having a new owner and now in a new space with a new trainer, I think he did great.
I’m looking forward to seeing his progress.
Awe! He is such a sweet good boy!❤❤❤❤👍 👍. I hope his new owner well be good & kind to him because he is precious, & special.
Beautiful horse...so much spirit!!!
I want him. Lol he his beautiful
What a stunning horse. I am looking forward to seeing his progress.
A friend of mine swears by the Polish Arabian lines. That they’re bred for temperament & working ability.
Yep, they're phenomenal. They can make great cow horses, too. My Arabs have handled the blistering summers and -30F winters much better than any of my stock horses.
Much prefer the Polish and Russian lines over the Egyptian personally
I agree 1000% . The best and most sensible horse I have ever had was an Arabian stallion that had raced , then stood at stud. I could ride him anywhere BAREBACK ! What a GREAT horse !!!!! He was Polish by Monarch AH.
@@casdragon_5939I'm 58 and when I was 11, I was blessed to get a 10 year old 1/2 polish arab mare and 1/2 quarter horse mare. 14.1 and built like a tank.
I foxhunted, did junior jumpers, speed events, trail riding and worked cows with her. She did it all very well. She stayed sound her entire life until she died at 35. ❤
Polish x Egyptian is a fantastic cross: I bred my last Arabian from an Egyptian desert bred mare, he passed at 35 yrs old, so gentle and kind even as a stallion. Hated water and I could never in his whole life…get him to walk through a puddle…he would skirt around one. And we have plenty of puddles in the UK! I adored him.
A real Pearl of the Desert, a beauty hope he comes right
Beautiful!
Is this his first time doing this Mr tim he is doing a good job with you hi is doing good 👍 🐴🐴🐴🐴🐎🐎 tim
Wow you Sir are an amazing trainer , I’m very impressed how patient you are . That is a beautiful Arabian for sure…❤
He’s gorgeous!
He is gorgeous! I love the way he moves. I really enjoy watching you work with the horses. You always explain what your doing.
He is lovely❤
I have had many Arabian horses and one thing I can tell you is you must be smarter than the horse. Like other breeds there are good bloodlines and not so good ones. Breeding matters but you got a really nice one here. His new owner must be so excited 😊.
He's a sweetie, a handsome boy
Nice horse, he'll be a good riding partner, maybe even working cows. You're right about not wearing out an Arabian: They have no bottom, and are very sensitive and intelligent.
I really enjoy watching you work with different breeds. I have a 12 y/o Arab. He is my first Arabian. They are so smart! This guy looks like he is going to be a good one. He seems willing and curious. I can't wait to watch his progress!
Beautiful horse
Wowzerz he is somethin’!! I am not partial to arabians, but I like the way he is put together! Looking forward to see how you shape him up and what kind of learner he is 🤩. I hope his pretty serves him well in the DOES department 😊
My Arabians were Kellogg bred...this fella sure is nice! Pleasing personality and a good example of the type of Arabian I like! Wonder if he has any Fadjur bloodline in him??
Kellogg would be the K in CMK Arabians! Love them!!
@joannehuttenhoff2701 THE Agriculture College in Pomona CA is the original Kellogg Ranch. They have to breed Arabians to keep the grant of the property. Several years ago I think they completed restoration of Mr Kelloggs home up on the hill. Free horse show high lighting the Arabian horse is held evert Sat. Stables are original too.
@@donnac.1609 Yup I know all about that! A friend of mine went through that program many years ago. I'm in SoCal and should really go and check that out one of these days.
I think with you training him, he will be a very solid horse in the end. He seems just to be unsure, not nervy or fearful, which will most certainly make training easier. Gorgeous horse. Love his temperament and energy
Beautiful! This horse is a real gentleman. I hope he ends up with a job he loves.
What a beautiful, intelligent boy!
I love your calm demeanor and the many steps that you take to get him used to new things.
Nice looking place, treasure it❤
He is gorgeous
He’s a nice horse! Great potential to work with!! He really needs to focus on you but he’s a good boy!
I had an Arabian years ago. He had very stallion ish behaviour as a youngster, and he became a wonderful friend and partner . I think they can be a one person horse. My boy certainly was . This is a beautifu horse, I look forward to seeing you work with him!
I’d love to see papers. Maybe you mentioned his bloodlines, but I’d bet you have a guy with primarily Polish ancestry. Great brains, willing, great athletes not “china dolls” , and he may end up being the best cow horse on the place. Like an extremely bright child, they will definitely find mischief if they are bored. Lovely confirmation and way of going. Especially considering he was just gelded, he appears to have a head full of sense.
he is a son of Aftershock out of a daughter of Bask Flame
100 % Polish bred.
@@Conniegosling-ur1hlthey tend to be taller and stockier correct? This fella makes me want to own one lol
Polish generally have heavier bone and a little bigger body.
They are solid.
@@timandersonhorsetrainingAnd Bask was one of the finest Arabians brought to the States. His family tree is one of Poland's finest, if I recall.
Beautiful 😍!
Add this to your wide range of breeds you’ve worked with. ❤
I really appreciate the way you explain what you are doing and how the horse is responding. This was a great video
He has good confirmation.
Nice face❤
My gosh he’s pretty!
That is my dream horse! All I need is to become a millionaire to get one and a place to keep it!! 😂😂
Remembering a boss who had a 1/2 Arab and that horse was 25 and still doing well. This horse potentially has many good years ahead.
My absolute best show mare ever was Anglo Arab. Such a beautiful mare so responsive and always gave me the very best of herself. I've never had or ridden a full blood Arab but this young boy is absolutely gorgeous especially seeing as hes just been gelded and would still have alot of testosterone in his system. I think hed have been a sweet stud. I can't wait to see how far he comes with you. The new owner is going to be one lucky person ❤
One of my favorite horses I've ever trained was an anglo arabian. He was a fox hunter and I loved every minute I had him. He was sent to me because he was bucking with his owner. Turned out to be a fantastic horse.
So interesting Tim, thank you. Is this the first Arabian you've worked with? Gorgeous horse with beautiful conformation. When you put on the saddle pad, it seemed too big and I remembered that Arabians have one less spinal vertebrae and one less pair of ribs than any other breed! Also of course, that finely shaped head and tail carriage...will be watching his development.
Interesting! Thanks for sharing!
Agreed. I had to search for a proper fitting western saddle when I had my girl years ago. Regular saddles and the trees will ruin their backs.
I once had a beautiful 3 yr. Old TB stud colt right off the track. A trainer found him for me in Oregon, had him gelded, and shipped him to me in Alaska. My farrier had an equally nice Arab stallion; she could do anything she wanted with that horse. We traded horses for a few minutes and found both rode like Cadillacs and had similar dispositions. My very best riding experience, ever.
Level headed for such busy environment
I love Arabians. We had Welsh ponies, Welsh/Arabs and a Welsh/Quarter horse cross that was a terrific all around girl’s event, show, hunt and trail horse. Fast and intelligent and willing and up for anything. When I got on him, he was quiet. As an older horse he served disabled children. They are the most beautiful animals and your horse is gorgeous.
My first horse was an Arab/Welsh cross. What I wouldn't give to find one for my granddaughter.
Hel always behave like a stallion. But you
No that. 🤭😉love your channel. Love your training. ✨🫶
After a few months, his testosterone levels will drop and he will settle into gelding life.
He was never used for breeding so that will help us too.
@@Conniegosling-ur1hl that will certainly help. 👍✨
Some stallions have great dispositions. I didn't geld mine until he was 7, so I rode him from 3 to 7 as a stallion. About the only difference for mine was that he wasn't as spooky after gelding. He was a half Arab Pinto.
Oh I see - it's the sun on end of his tail, I thought it was white😳. He is a stunning beauty!
How this fidgety horse became more and more quiet within minutes.
I see curious, not fidgety at all, IMHO.
Beautiful
Catching up your videos, love this horse, he does look full of energy but very respectful of you. He should come along nice and fast.
You did a great job working with him.
In our time and day we are assume that someone didn't do a good training if no video was produced to proof it.
And we got proven wrong. Whomever did the initial training did a good job. We also shouldn't forget that he was an Arabian stallion at the time. I am looking forward to more videos (well, actually Tim, I enjoy all your videos :-) )
Wow he has a great set of legs on him.
I love Arabians. Smartest horses ever.
Nice quiet work.
I had one chanel that energy they are so smart probably smarter than trainers is love kindness slow walk with her . She can be awesome
Would love to know his breeding. He is a great example of the Arabian horse's conformation. I really like that you praise and rub on him as much as you are.
His breeding is in already in the comments. Don't remember off the top of my head.
@@timandersonhorsetraining Thank you I will look again. Happy New Year.
What a beautiful animal. I love Arabians. They not only have amazing stamina they are smart and athletic.
THANK YOU! for telling people you can't wear an Arabian or Morgan down running them in the roundpen or lunge line.
They just get hotter.
So many trainers that use these techniques refuse to acknowledge that Saddle type horse don't work the same as the stock type.
Trainers will label them as crazy and stupid.
Again thank you for your excellent videos.
One way to help him past the attention problem would be to let him spend a day in the pen with them or next to them. He has obviously never seen a cow.
I would so love to have a horse like this one- smart, careful and so, so beautiful. You are doing a fantastic job with him and I look forward to the next video.
very nice work...
❤❤❤
I love Arabian horses. I love the pure Arabian horse, I love their spirit, they are the most beautiful horses I have ever seen.