Bayview Park Warmblood Stud | Pet
Bayview Park Warmblood Stud
Phone: +61 423 207 461
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22.01.2022 How correct is this!!
22.01.2022 The beautiful Bayview Park Schocolade
15.01.2022 Trainee Rider Opportunity Our stables are located at Ingleside, Sydney’s Northern Beaches, where we breed and compete Warmblood horses in dressage. We have two girls at the moment who ride/ train/ compete our horses, under the instruction of Sam Loane, who is an FEI rider, but has had to take time out to have babies. We have a vacancy for one more rider. This is not a paid position, the girls get free lessons /riding and training on top quality horses with expenses paid in ex...change for their work/time. We have a DeNiro gelding who has been broken in, and then spelled to grow, who is now ready to be brought back into work. We are looking for someone who is highly motivated and already a competent rider, (some competition experience would be an advantage) to help train him. If this is something you would be interested in, send me your details with a rough outline of your experience and any photos, competition results and videos. Julie Loane Loane Equestrian Centre See more
14.01.2022 Bayviewpark Starlight being a star!! 4th ride
11.01.2022 Wow what a morning Bayview Park Starlight lived up to her name! First ever competition and she was a super star!!! Big future for this young pony Warmblood!
10.01.2022 Warning : venting post coming up Can we stop a minute and debate the elephant in the room, when it comes to selling and buying horses : the Infamous x-rays.... As soon as I hear the word x-ray now, I want to lick the cap of a tube of Gastroguard and pop a Xanax because I know that whether I’m the one buying a horse in Europe or selling one in the US, doom will be impending as soon as we are going to deal with the x-rays. Back in the days, when digital x-rays didn’t exist, you would go pick up the best jumping horse you could afford, show the horse and sell it. If he was not 3 legged lame during the clinical exam, you could count on money coming to your bank account. But in 2019, horse buying/selling is a whole different ball game. Forget about buying the best horse, you need to buy the horse with the best x-rays. This is now the #1 criteria of choice ... then if the horse is half decent, bingo. But you are actually better off buying an average horse with textbook x-rays than buying the next Olympic winner with a blemish. And I found this new reality kind of sad ... First step is to get the European vet to approve the x-rays (which means that 75% of the horses will actually fail that first screen...) when you get 40+ views, something will most likely turn up. From there you have 3 options; you pass on the horse, you buy the horse and do plastic surgery on the joint to remove a chip that will most likely never cause any lameness issues but will upset the buyer, or you are lucky enough to go to the next stage. Step 2 you get your US vet to look at the x-rays... Most likely, the US vet will find new stuff that the Euro vet didn’t pick up. To the point where you wonder if the vets in Europe even get a course in x-ray reading at vet school, because the standards here and over there are SOOOO different. So now x-rays have been seen and Okayed by 2 professionals... but this was actually the easy part. The hard part is to have the client’s vet on board. Every buyer wants their vet to tell them the horse will never be lame, and every vet wants to cover their butt and will not commit to say that the horse will never be lame. And that is the sticky part! So now we have xrays which can be sent and reviewed by 6 or 7 vets and every single one of them will come up with a different interpretation. To the point where I believe that the Rorschach inkblot test is actually less subjective than a set of horse x-rays. We have clients who spends thousands and thousands of dollars on failed vettings, and become more sour about the process than a girl shopping for a swimsuit after Thanksgiving and the Christmas holidays.... Call me lucky, but out of all the vet bills I have paid over the years (and when I even think about the total, I figure I could easily afford a penthouse in NYC), I have dealt with broken legs, abscesses, colics, EPM, soft tissue injuries, catastrophic wounds, aneurism, pneumonia, and all sorts of things ... but I must be the luckiest girl on the planet because I have never had issues with any findings on xrays gone bad. I cringe when I see people jumping every day in bad footing, I have to bite my tongue when I see the shoeing job on a lot of horses but I, for one will not shy away from acceptable but less than perfect xrays on my personal horses. For my sale horses, I have to go through the nit-pick process and still it’s not a reliable process. So 2 years ago I bought a young horse with crap xrays, and because of the current mentality, I bought him for a song. Two years later I have people offering me 6 figures for him, because in the ring he is actually much better than all the horses with clean xrays. So people... instead of worrying about what might happen in 2 years, 4 years or 10 years from now, take a chance and go buy the horse that makes your heart pitter patter, not the one that your vet thinks might be sound 12 years from now ... Owning a horse is a day by day commitment, so Carpe Diem and stop obsessing about the x-rays. The end...
09.01.2022 Michelle , our student from Spring Valley Farm in VA sent this nice foal dental timeline. Thanks!
09.01.2022 Surgeon Luis Rubio-Martinez proudly displaying the 12KG Granulosa Cell Tumour that he so expertly removed from one of our mares. It was discovered when she was ...being prepared for ET - and to think she was jumping GP in January - what a thing to carry around. Thanks to Sussex Equine Hospital and Ed Lyall for looking after her so well. #ET #embryotransfer #sussexequine #BEthebest #granulosacelltumour
08.01.2022 Northern Warmblood dressage mare breed or ride. Elementary Dressage Mare Beautiful natured 16.2hh 15yrs This mare is quality all the way, and would suit a gentle rider wanting to have a safe horse to ride. She has also produce two beautiful foals, receiving premium awards with ACE Tour, and was a lovely mother having no trouble with conception or birthing.... She has been ridden by a 14 year old and a 70 year old and is only for sale because of drought conditions, to a good home only. $4,000. Call Julie 0412993077 See more
02.01.2022 Competitive dressage is recognized as one of the three equestrian Olympic disciplines. Special classes like the musical freestyle offer creativity and individua...l expression for the exhibitors and have become spectator favorites! This winning Grand Prix Freestyle performed by Adrienne Lyle and Salvino earned them a personal best score of 83.560% this past summer at CHIO Aachen! If you compete in dressage, post a photo in the comments below! Video via ClipMyHorse.TV USA Learn more about this discipline: https://www.usef.org/compete/disciplines/dressage During the month of February we are highlighting all 29 of USEF's recognized breeds & disciplines! Follow along because we want to hear from YOU!