The ramblings and many adventures of a horse crazed city girl who collects model horses.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Got my grab bag!

Well, I came home from work to find my grab bag waiting for me. Here is the list of what I got:


  • Inolvidable (02' Breyerfest Celebration Horse)
  • Lady Liberty (07' Breyerfest Special Run)
  • Picture Perfect American Spotted Draft Mare
  • Sierra Blanco (Fall 07' Collector's Choice)
  • Patches (00' Breyerfest Special Run)
  • Buffalo (02' Breyerfest Special Run)
  • JAH 06' Mini Connoisseur Set
  • Mini Whinnies Canadian Rockies Show Jumping Derby


I definately think I got my money's worth. I'm contemplating ordering another one but first I have to find space for the ones I just got :)

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Would you like to see model horses in the Toy Hall Of Fame?

As quoted from Breyer's website:

Would you like to see model horses in the Toy Hall Of Fame?

All it takes is a click to vote for including Breyer! Go to http://www.strongmuseum.org/NTHoF/nominate.asp to make your opinion count!

Cast your ballot today. Entries close August 30, 2008.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

New JAH Subscription Promotion

I know we've all been drooling over Newsworthy since Breyer started giving sneakpeaks at the mold. If you subscribe to JAH and enter the word HUNTER into the subscription box, you'll be entered in a drawing to win him. The deadline is July 2nd so if you want to be entered you better get moving. The link below is the full story on Breyer's website.

http://www.breyerhorses.com/news/detail.php?eventid=628

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Breyer Grab Bags

So, word has it that Breyer is doing a grab bag. You pay $100 and get $250 worth of models. I heard about this on both Model Horse Blab and Fallen Leaves so it seems pretty reliable. I will order mine tomorrow and post with the results. Here are the particulars.


  • Call 1-800-444-4775
  • Talk to someone in customer service. They are only open until 4:00 eastern time and only on weekdays.
  • Give your name, address, credit card # and tell them where you heard about this.
  • You don't have to be in the collector's club or anything.
  • Each bag is $100 + S&H (around $12) and takes 3-4 weeks (maybe less) to get to you.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Riding Lessons by Sara Gruen



I picked this book up soley because it was half off at Target. I have to say that I was pleasantly surprised. It was engaging and technically accurate. This was Sara Gruen's first novel and I was impressed. As a genetics buff, I love the fact that the main horse is a white brindle :) I hate how her publisher keeps comparing her to Horse Whisperer. I think her writing definately stands out well enough on its own. This book gets four horse shoes!

Monday, June 9, 2008

New Custom!

I saw this little guy at the show I went to a few weeks ago. I couldn't resist when I saw he was for sale. He's the Breyer Bouncer mold customized to a honey bay using pastels. He's glossy too. I can't wait to get him home.




I was intending on buying Flash this weekend. That didn't happen because I wound up waiting over ten minutes to be rung up at a local tack store. This has happened several times at this store and I decided that they didn't deserve my model buying business. I did wind up buying the G3 Stablemate Highland Pony and Fresian from Target. I got the Patch Paint & Activity set too because the boyfriend wants to give customizing a shot. Is he great or what? :)

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Back from my first live show!

Well, after almost ten years of collecting I finally made it to my first live show. I didn't get any 1st or 2nd placings but I did come home with nine ribbons at the end of the day. It was pretty amazing to meet fellow collectors. I've never actually met another model horse collector in person before today. Pretty pathetic, huh? :)

I did have a bit of confusion, due to a beginners mistake on my part. My custom Fresian had won a NAN card in a draft class before I bought him so that is how I intended on showing him. However, I was informed that Fresians should actually be in the carriage breed class. That class had already been judged but the judge was nice enough to let me put him in "other draft".

Peter Stone released a couple of horses at the show but none of them really struck my fancy. I did pick up a Texas Trinket though. I'll shoot some pictures once I get home but here is what she looks like.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Vet Explains What Happened To Theodore O’Connor

Vet Explains What Happened To Theodore O’Connor

Renowned veterinarian Kent Allen DVM, who attended to the devastating injuries of international event pony Theodore O’Connor yesterday morning, explained what happened and why he had to be euthanized.

Allen, who practices near the Middleburg, Va. base of Team O’Connor and is a long-time friend and veterinarian, shared the story with thehorse.com. Here’s what he said.

"Karen and David (O'Connor) would have done anything to let this little guy have a shot."

Allen described the accident as “a freak thing” and said, "The right thing to do was euthanize him."

"He spooked at something while being ridden and bolted," Allen said.

"The rider came off and the horse ran toward the barn. He got into a freak accident and slid into the side of the barn and lacerated his right hind leg about 4 inches above the fetlock on the back of the leg. It looked like a knife cut it; he severed the superficial and deep digital flexor tendons, ligaments, cut both branches of the arterial blood supply, and nerves. My experience with injuries like this are that the chances of reattaching the vascular supply and nerve supply and reattaching the tendons and ligaments is almost zero The horse was remarkably calm and let me examine him completely,” Allen noted.

"Realistically, there was nothing we could do," he said. Allen said two other veterinarians were there, and agreed with the decision to euthanize the pony.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Loss of Theodore O'Connor

What a sad loss for the O'Connors, eventing and the horse world in general. My thoughts are with Karen and David.

May 28, 2008
Statement from Karen and David O’Connor regarding Theodore O'Connor:

It is with great sadness that we must announce Theodore O'Connor - "Teddy" - was humanely euthanized today, May 28, 2008, after an injury sustained in an accident at the O'Connor farm.

The injury consisted of a severe laceration to the hind leg which severed tendons and ligaments alike, and was a direct result from Teddy slipping after he spooked and bolted. Our staff attended to his needs, and Dr. A Kent Allen was there to exam the horse before it was determined that the injury was irrecoverable and impairing to Teddy's quality of life. This is a devastating loss for O'Connor Equestrian, and we appreciate all the prayers, support, thoughts, and sympathy during this difficult time.

Condolences may be sent to Karen and David O'Connor, Teddy's groom Max Corcoran, his breeder P.Wynn Norman, and the rest of his owners in the Theodore O'Connor Syndicate via email at teddy@oconnoreventteam.com.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Congress Joins Horse Racing Debate

I've been struggling with keeping my opinions out of the whole horse racing issue. The Eight Bells tragedy is still fresh in my mind and I hope she wasn't lost for naught. For now, I'll still to posting news stories as they develop.


Congress joins debate on racing, thoroughbred troubles
House panel to study drugs, breakdowns and breeding
By Andrew Wolfson • awolfson@courier-journal.com • May 24, 2008

First, it was steroids in baseball. Now Congress is turning its attention to the horse racing business.
Citing concerns that "leading officials in the sport" have failed to address longstanding concerns over the welfare of thoroughbred racehorses, a House panel has demanded that state racing commissions provide information on breakdowns, drug use and breeding.
Saying the public demise of Eight Belles in this year's Kentucky Derby shows that the "thoroughbred breed has become increasingly fragile," the leaders of the U.S. House Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection say they want answers by June 2.
The panel expects to hold a hearing sometime next month on the state of horse racing in the United States, said Kristin Walker, press secretary to U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield of Kentucky, its ranking minority member. Whitfield and subcommittee Chairman Bobby Rush, D-Chicago, made their demands in a letter sent this week to the Lexington-based Association of Racing Commissioners International, which represents 44 jurisdictions.

They ask the organization to identify by name every trainer who has been sanctioned for medication infractions during the past five years and for a list of the nature and severity of the injuries of every horse over that period.

They also ask if the racing commissioners would favor a comprehensive tracking system for track-related thoroughbred injuries and if they would support a central national body to govern horse racing, such as the one in the United Kingdom.

The letter does not reveal how the information will be used, but it does say that "we believe Congressional oversight should play a role in determining whether the special status of the sport under federal law is still warranted."

In 1978, Congress enacted the Interstate Horseracing Act, allowing racetracks to televise their races to off-track locations for wagering, then amended it in 2002 to allow wagering at home over the phone and Internet.

Alex Waldrop, chief executive of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, said yesterday that the "health and safety of our horses is a top priority for the thoroughbred racing industry, and we do appreciate Congressmen Rush's and Whitfield's interest in our sport."

He said he believes the commissioners' group will cooperate fully with the request. Waldrop said the NTRA supports an injury-reporting system but opposes a federal racing commission because there are already groups like his own and the commissioners' association to promote uniform regulations nationally.

"We believe that states are the right places to govern these issues," he said.
Waldrop testified before the subcommittee in February, when it examined how drug use in various sports, including horse racing, was affecting safety and the integrity of competition.
The congressmen's letter says that "many, if not most, racing experts believe that the thoroughbred breed has become increasingly ... incapable of withstanding ... the rigors of dirt racing on the track."

It cites charges that breeders are "biologically engineering horses to run very fast at a very early stage in their lives at the expense of long-term durability," and the use of race-day medications that allow unsound horses to compete and pass on their genetic infirmities to their offspring.
Officials with the Kentucky Horse Racing Authority, Racing Commissioners International and Churchill Downs could not be reached for comment.

Monday, May 26, 2008

My First Live Show!

I know...I've been a really bad blogger. I've just been so busy with work and school and everything else in my life. Good news is that I more than likely will be going to my first live show this weekend. I'm really looking forward to showing off some of the customs that I've accumulated lately. I'm waiting to hear back from the show holder to see if I can still get in. I'll be sure to post a full report if I do. :)

Friday, March 14, 2008

New Custom!

I am super excited because a brand new custom will be on her way to me soon. I have been wanting a custom like this forever and I finally found someone to remake a Henry Breyer model into the fjord mare of my dreams. I think that I will name her Jódís, which is a viking word for horse goddess. I think I am in love (just don't let my other customs know that, hehe).


At last count, she will be the 179th horse in my collection. Luckily 145 of those turned out to be stablemates :)

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Flicka



I was initially boycotting this movie because of the "disneyfication" of the story. There is very little in common with the classic My Friend Flicka that we have all come to know and love. With that being said, I love this movie. The cinematography is amazing. I think it is well done and has a believable story line that isn't dumbed down. I think the clincher for this movie is the sound track. Wild Horses, performed by Natasha Bedingfield, is one of those rare songs that actually makes me tear up when I hear it. I had to watch this movie by myself because of that one scene. This gets the coveted five horse shoe award!

Sorry for the hiatus

It has been forever since I've had a chance to post a new blog. I'm working and going to school which means very little time for horses, both model and real. I've added a few classics and stablemates here and there. The KB Toys in the Newport Center Mall had Breyers on sale so I stocked up. I'll have a TON of reviews coming soon.

At the moment, I am searching for a new college to attend. I haven't been able to take any science classes at St. Peter's College, which doesn't really work since I am a natural science major. I'm thinking Rutger's may be a good option but it is extremely difficult to get into. I am also job hunting. I work in a very small store where I am the only employee which means I've pretty much topped out when it comes to salary. My boyfriend and I have been dating for almost five years now and would really like to get our own place, but we can't until I have a better salary.

I may be interviewing at a high end health club soon so wish me luck on that. If I actually get normal working hours there, I may be able to get back to horseback riding. It's been a little over a year since I have been in the saddle and I'm having withdrawals. I'll be able to take my Girl Scout troop riding soon so atleast I'll get a trail ride in. Well, I think that's enough rambling for now but I promise to be more active in blogging.