I grew up in South Texas and remember going on driving tours of the King Ranch. I still look for King Ranch horses in pedigrees. Congratulations to the ranch that breeds such awesome horses.
When I seen wimpy the first registered quarter horse you showed in your video he's looked exactly like my wimpy to the T my wimpy was a Bay and I had a beautiful Sorrel Colt with a white boldface is called and he was so big and beautiful the vet said he was the biggest Colt that he'd ever seen. When I look at him he looks just like my wimpy I miss him so much
I owned a wimpy stud his great-great-grandfather wedgie original wimpy the first registered quarter horse in the United States . My horses name was whippy barns . He was born in Blackshear Georgia he was the greatest horse and he was gentle and you could ride him with mares and geldings and it didn't bother him. I could even let my little children ride him and this was in the seventies when I own him. But I end up getting a divorce and I couldn't afford to feed him so I sold him. I do not know where he went from there but I had him for about 10 years. He was the most beautiful horse you ever seen so muscled up you can sit on him and all you would see was roles of muscles in his neck it was so beautiful and so powerful looking. He was very very fast . We used to enter him in the races that we had in our home town called Cracker Day and he would always win. And there was a lot of good horses in that race he was just such a good horse for a stud really well-mannered. Who ever trained him did a great job. We had lots of Foles out of him we used him for stud and it never bothered him to be around other horses when you were riding. I even would ride him in our Christmas parade with lots of other mares and geldings he was always good he was very smart. I sure do miss him though and all my horses that I have had. It makes me feel sad when I see people with horses because I want one so bad
That chestnut horse with the white hairs over it's rump in the foreground - at the 3:05 mark - PROVES an Appaloosa background in it's pedigree. Many of the first QH registered were UNmarked Appaloosas but had the Appaloosa traits like white scelera of the eye, striped hooves at the bottom of solid coloured legs, etc. I read a whole article about it in the Appaloosa Journal coming 30 years ago. There is NO such thing as 'QH striped feet' - that's AN APPALOOSA TRAIT THAT'S BEEN PASSED DOWN FROM DECADES AGO before either registry was started. When BOTH the registries were being started those who did that looked for a particular 'type' for a QH to be registered. One of the first foundation sires registered as an Appaloosa was 'Joker B'. A VERY nicely marked Appaloosa out of two registered solid coloured 'QHs' ! Just saying.
@@haroldkreye8770 Yes, he was - I owned one of his great granddaughters some years back now, and her physical build /coat pattern appearance was very similar to his - he'd passed them on very nicely ! :) There is no shame in the fact that Appaloosas and Quarter horses share many common bloodlines, going back decades. They are both excellent working breeds - 'none better under leather' as far as I'm concerned ! :)
@@voiceofreason7856 In Argentina, the Appaloosa and the Paint have crossed many times in the evolution of the Criollo breed. Their coloring is extremely loud.
I DONT CARE if it’s Cowboy Attire. Spurs ARE NOT! NEEDED ON WELL TRAINED HORSES. (AND THEY SHOULD ALL BE WELL TRAINED. ) WHICH MEANS SPIRS ARE NOT NEEDED. JUST AS WHIPS ON THOROUGHBREDS )
MY QUATER HORSES COMING FROM KING RANCH THANKS TIO KLEBERT THE BEST 🐴🐮🤠🙌🇺🇸
LOVE LOVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE KING RANCH ~~~~NANCY IN TEXAS
My last horse was AQHA "Kings Rodeo Star" buckskin gelding , had a mare that was a descent of little peppy
I grew up in South Texas and remember going on driving tours of the King Ranch. I still look for King Ranch horses in pedigrees. Congratulations to the ranch that breeds such awesome horses.
Awesome 🤩
When I seen wimpy the first registered quarter horse you showed in your video he's looked exactly like my wimpy to the T my wimpy was a Bay and I had a beautiful Sorrel Colt with a white boldface is called and he was so big and beautiful the vet said he was the biggest Colt that he'd ever seen. When I look at him he looks just like my wimpy I miss him so much
Impresionante saludos desde acapulco mexico
Enjoyed this !! Chas.,SC
I owned a wimpy stud his great-great-grandfather wedgie original wimpy the first registered quarter horse in the United States . My horses name was whippy barns . He was born in Blackshear Georgia he was the greatest horse and he was gentle and you could ride him with mares and geldings and it didn't bother him. I could even let my little children ride him and this was in the seventies when I own him. But I end up getting a divorce and I couldn't afford to feed him so I sold him. I do not know where he went from there but I had him for about 10 years. He was the most beautiful horse you ever seen so muscled up you can sit on him and all you would see was roles of muscles in his neck it was so beautiful and so powerful looking. He was very very fast . We used to enter him in the races that we had in our home town called Cracker Day and he would always win. And there was a lot of good horses in that race he was just such a good horse for a stud really well-mannered. Who ever trained him did a great job. We had lots of Foles out of him we used him for stud and it never bothered him to be around other horses when you were riding. I even would ride him in our Christmas parade with lots of other mares and geldings he was always good he was very smart. I sure do miss him though and all my horses that I have had. It makes me feel sad when I see people with horses because I want one so bad
By 1968 went to visit King Ranch ,as an animal husbandry student of TA&M.
Awesome
🐎🐎🐎🐎🐎🐎🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
That chestnut horse with the white hairs over it's rump in the foreground - at the 3:05 mark - PROVES an Appaloosa background in it's pedigree. Many of the first QH registered were UNmarked Appaloosas but had the Appaloosa traits like white scelera of the eye, striped hooves at the bottom of solid coloured legs, etc. I read a whole article about it in the Appaloosa Journal coming 30 years ago. There is NO such thing as 'QH striped feet' - that's AN APPALOOSA TRAIT THAT'S BEEN PASSED DOWN FROM DECADES AGO before either registry was started. When BOTH the registries were being started those who did that looked for a particular 'type' for a QH to be registered. One of the first foundation sires registered as an Appaloosa was 'Joker B'. A VERY nicely marked Appaloosa out of two registered solid coloured 'QHs' ! Just saying.
Joker B was absolute perfection.
@@haroldkreye8770 Yes, he was - I owned one of his great granddaughters some years back now, and her physical build /coat pattern appearance was very similar to his - he'd passed them on very nicely ! :) There is no shame in the fact that Appaloosas and Quarter horses share many common bloodlines, going back decades. They are both excellent working breeds - 'none better under leather' as far as I'm concerned ! :)
@@voiceofreason7856 In Argentina, the Appaloosa and the Paint have crossed many times in the evolution of the Criollo breed. Their coloring is extremely loud.
Treat workers like shit there though
I DONT CARE if it’s Cowboy Attire. Spurs ARE NOT! NEEDED ON WELL TRAINED HORSES. (AND THEY SHOULD ALL BE WELL TRAINED. ) WHICH MEANS SPIRS ARE NOT NEEDED. JUST AS WHIPS ON THOROUGHBREDS )
Its easy to see you know nothing of working with horses
You don't shit Girl
If you don't know what your talking about , quit yapping
yawn
God that narrators voice is annoying
Jealous are we?