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Warrabel Morgan Stud | Animal breed



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Warrabel Morgan Stud

Phone: +61 408 740 710



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23.01.2022 Wishing all our wonderful friends a safe and happy Christmas. Hope the coming 2021 is kind to you all and that we don't forget how fragile the very special things in life can be. XX



21.01.2022 A precious family photo taken not too long before our Merlin left to have a new life living on the Central Coast NSW with Kim Heber. Illoura Serendipity with Haymeron Park Merlin Hawk and their progeny, Warrabel Rienzi. (geld)

20.01.2022 Being held at nice facility. Should be a good event.

10.01.2022 In December we had a very quick but enjoyable visit from Nila Latimer and her friend Kim. Nila was on a mission to help Kim find her own Morgan horse. Merlin has been with us at Warrabel since he was 6 mths old and has been shown as a Stallion and then as a gelding, both in hand and under saddle. We've had quite a journey together attending clinics, shows and trail rides. He has been the safe 'go to' mount for any occasion. At 5yrs of age we decided it would be a better life ...for him and me (showing him on my own) if he was gelded. We had semen collected and Merlin moved into a new stage of his riding life. He's taken me and Peter safely through many adventures and has always been trustworthy. When Nila first approached me, it was to enquire after Merlins son, Warrabel Rienzi but he had only been under saddle for 6mths. After much discussion and thought, we agreed that Merlin would definitely be a more suitable mount for Kim. It was great to meet Kim and have the opportunity to see how well she got on with Merlin. So, Merlin has now gone on to have a life of 'one on one' love and attention with a wonderful new owner and rider with plenty of green grass and new friends. See more



08.01.2022 Quote of the day: Attitude is a choice. Happiness is a choice. Optimism is a choice. Kindness is a choice. Giving is a choice. Respect is a choice. Whatever choice you make makes you. Choose wisely. Roy T. Bennett Have a great day everyone

06.01.2022 Dear members, Right now, many of us are thinking of our members in Western Australia that are currently being affected by devastating bushfires. Some have been... forced to evacuate as well as help evacuate friends and neighbours. Property and stock have been lost and there is widespread damage, all on top of a recent COVID-19 lockdown. Tragically, I am aware of one member who has lost her property to fire. I know that in times such as these, we can feel helpless. For anyone wishing to offer help and assistance Horseland Midland is collecting donations and organising care packages to those in affected areas. They can be contacted via email: [email protected] or phone (08) 9274 5155 MHAA President on behalf of the Board

03.01.2022 Most horses pass from one human to another - some horsemen and women are patient and forgiving, others are rigorous and demanding, others are cruel, others are ...ignorant. Horses have to learn how to, at the minimum, walk, trot, canter, gallop, go on trails and maybe jump, to be treated by the vet, all with sense and good manners. Talented Thoroughbreds must learn how to win races, and if they can't do that, they must learn how to negotiate courses and jump over strange obstacles without touching them, or do complicated dance like movements or control cattle or accommodate severely handicapped children and adults in therapy work. Many horses learn all of these things in the course of a single lifetime. Besides this, they learn to understand and fit into the successive social systems of other horses they meet along the way. A horse's life is rather like twenty years in foster care, or in and out of prison, while at the same time changing schools over and over and discovering that not only do the other students already have their own social groups, but that what you learned at the old school hasn't much application at the new one. We do not require as much of any other species, including humans. That horses frequently excel, that they exceed the expectations of their owners and trainers in such circumstances, is as much a testament to their intelligence and adaptability as to their relationship skills or their natural generosity or their inborn nature. That they sometimes manifest the same symptoms as abandoned orphans - distress, strange behaviors, anger, fear - is less surprising than that they usually don't. No one expects a child, or even a dog to develop its intellectual capacities living in a box 23 hours a day and then doing controlled exercises the remaining one. Mammal minds develop through social interaction and stimulation. A horse that seems "stupid", "slow", "stubborn", etc. might just have not gotten the chance to learn! Take care of your horses and treasure them. Written by Jane Smiley See more



02.01.2022 https://www.youtube.com/watch I was very happy when I received this lovely video of Merlin from his new owner, Kim. This was a training session and he is being ridden by Rachael Ireland. He's looking awesome!

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