Superior Sporthorse

  • Home
  • Superior Sporthorse

Superior Sporthorse Breeding, Showing, and Training Facility. Pinto Warmblood, Friesian, and Arabian horses of Top Quality. Quality and Color with every breeding.
(5)

Superior Sporthorse is nestled on 160 acre farm in Michigan's beautiful Upper Peninsula. We Promote Quality Stallions and we breed top notch performance foals. Check out our page, our website and see what we have here. We concentrate on top notch horses with bloodlines, conformation, athletic abilities, and most important fantastic dispositions. We stand SALOMON SF, a premium Pinto Oldenburg Stallion that is HOMOZYGOUS for Pinto and Black.

Our Legend has won another National Championship!
14/09/2023

Our Legend has won another National Championship!

Thom and I would like to congratulate "Team Legend" on winning the National Championship in the Arabian/Half-Arabian/Anglo-Arabian Novice Jumper Class at the AHA Arabian Sport Horse Nationals a the WEC in Ohio this morning!!

Congratulations to owners Sara Bolnick and Kobe Pielow, youth rider Anleigh A., trainer Chrystal Wood, breeder Angel Portice, and the rest of the folks who are part of Team Legend!

AAA Legend ofthe Seas+// (Naibara Blaze Man x HSA Seamist) is twenty-one years old now and clearly still happily sound and athletic! We are so proud of his successes and deeply appreciative of his influence in our FCF herd!

A horse we bred.
25/07/2023

A horse we bred.

He's such a stud muffin.
15/07/2023

He's such a stud muffin.

Big beautiful Barock Pinto Friesian mare, Serenity standing to the left of her half sister.
04/07/2023

Big beautiful Barock Pinto Friesian mare, Serenity standing to the left of her half sister.

21/12/2021

After seeing multiple videos posted by various breeders bragging about their 2 ½ year olds/recently turned 3 year olds and sharing videos of them cantering around in the arena, I have decided to once again circulate the below article.

First of all, breeders *should* have the knowledge to understand a horse’s fragile and slow maturing musculoskeletal system. Breeders should not condone their own horses let along anyone’s horses being cantered around under saddle at an incredibly young age. Period. This sets a terrible example and is quite honestly animal abuse. Just because a horse does not object does not mean it is right. And quite frankly, most of the videos posted show animals that are already in pain or developing pain…

As breeders, we should strive to produce healthy and sound animals. We should promote horsemanship that produces long term soundness. No, starting a horse later does not guarantee soundness. But it certainly helps.

I am a firm believer in scientifically backed approaches to horsemanship. You can’t argue with science that has been proven time and time again. Let’s dispel some stupid rumors:

1. There is no such thing as a (skeletally) slow maturing horse or one that is fast maturing. No horse is skeletally mature before the age of 6. And that is on the low estimate for age.

2. Growth plates are not just in the knee. Every bone behind the skull has a growth plate. Not every single one needs to be converted to bone before starting. There is a schedule of when bone fuses…this is the information needed to know when to start a horse. Not their outward appearance. It is a known fact that during growth, proprioceptive awareness can regress, greatly increasing the risk of injury.

3. Starting a horse is not the same thing as riding a horse. Starting a horse does not mean cantering it 3-4 days a week in an arena.

4. Injecting a horse that is in pain does not mean you fixed a problem. You masked it.

5. You can build correct muscle and teach a horse how to move their body from the ground. This creates a solid foundation to work from once your horse is ready to actually be backed. Teach a horse to use its body correctly before backing and you’ll save yourself a lot of vet bills down the line.

Hocks are “late” for maturity. The growth plates on the tibial and fibular tarsals do not fuse until a horse is 3-3 ½. Ever wonder why so many horses seem to have hocks issues?? Horses need to learn to carry themselves and their own weight well before adding a rider.

The growth plates that are LAST to close are at the base of the neck. This area is where we ask a horse to raise the base of their neck and come round. If under too much stress, the growth plates can fracture or be permanently damaged.

There are DOZENS of activities you can do with a young horse to build healthy muscular development. None of them involve a saddle or your weight on their back. Teaching a horse to carry themselves correctly BEFORE adding a rider is essential and cannot be done in a week. A 2 ½ year old horse is a baby. Mentally and physically. We see far too many injured performance horses at VERY young ages - broken down and/or sour from work. It’s wrong. Period. They need slow and steady work and need time to recover from even the slightest of injuries.

PLEASE, if you are considering when you should start your horse and what that work load should look like, please read the below. There are some wonderful things you can do with your young developing horse. Please don’t rush a year out of greed.

http://www.equinestudies.org/ranger_2008/ranger_piece_2008_pdf1.pdf

I still have ONE left.
12/04/2021

I still have ONE left.

Address

MI

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 19:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 19:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 19:00
Thursday 09:00 - 19:00
Friday 09:00 - 19:00
Saturday 09:00 - 19:00

Telephone

+19066472046

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Superior Sporthorse posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Superior Sporthorse:

Videos

Shortcuts

  • Address
  • Telephone
  • Opening Hours
  • Alerts
  • Contact The Business
  • Videos
  • Claim ownership or report listing
  • Want your business to be the top-listed Pet Store/pet Service?

Share