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2011 Arabian Horse Times Ad

 

Lawrence Ad

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Thank you Nicole, Lori and Carey Lawrence for you continued support throughout the years! We are so proud of your many accomplishments in the 2011 Show Season!

 

2011 Kiesner Training Nominations

Congratulations to Sarah Beth Womble and her recent nomination for Junior English Rider of the Year by APAHA!

The results will be announced at the APAHA Dinner that will be held the last Sunday of the 2012 Scottsdale Horse Show in Scottsdale, Arizona.

That same night Joel Kiesner will be inducted into the APAHA Hall of Fame. Joel has won English Trainer of the year in 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009. He also was honored in 2003 as the USEF Equestrian of Honor and in 2006 was the APAHA Horseman of the year.

We are so proud of Sarah Beth and Joel. If you would like to attend the dinner at Scottsdale please contact Ashton Kiesner so that she may order tickets.

Once again Joel Kiesner is nominated for English Trainer of the Year by the Arabain Horse Times Readers Choice Awards. Please watch for the results that will be announced before the Scottsdale show begins.

We are honored for these awards and so proud of all of our riders and their many accomplishments throughout 2011!

 

2011 US Nationals

 

 

Team Kiesner had a great US Nationals! We brought home 20 National Top Tens, 3 Reserve National Championships, and 2 National Championships! Congratulations to our wonderful clients for a very successful and fun show!

 

US Nationals Photo Album

 

2011 Youth Nationals

 

 Youth Main

 

 

Congratulations to all our amazing youth riders that rocked Albuquerque in July! We ended up with 3 National Championships, 4 Reserve National Championships and 14 Natinoal Tops Tens!

 

Youth Nationals 2011 Photo Album

 

 

 

 

 

 

 








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USEF 10 Questions With!

Welcome to the second of many USEF features profiling various people in equestrian sport - athletes, trainers and more. The profiles are published regularly in the United States Equestrian Federation's Week in Review e-newsletter. 

This week meet Joel Kiesner whose lifelong experience has evolved into training methods focused on maximizing the best assets and talent of the Arabian horse. His exceptional talent and abilities have resulted in numerous awards - Professional Horseman of the Year in 2006 by the Arabian Professional, and Saddle Seat Trainer Male of the Year for 2006, 2005 and 2003 by the Amateur Horseman Association. Kiesner also has won every major national title in English, country, park and driving.
 
Joel Kiesner and Afires HeirJoe Kiesner - 10 fun facts

Nickname: My wife calls me Boog.
Favorite food: Sushi.
Favorite city: Scottsdale.
Role models: A lot of them are in my business and are my fiercest competitors. I wouldn't want to name names because I wouldn't want to leave anyone out.  The only one who is a role model in every way would be Jesus.
Favorite beverage:  Starbucks Crème de Latte.
Favorite horse:  My daughter's pony Peaches, there is no greater gift from a horse than to take care of your child.
Favorite movie:  “Gladiator” or “Lord of the Rings.”
Dislike:  I don't like to get too slowed down.
Favorite thing about living in the Great Smoky Mountains: The weather is tremendous.  The views are fantastic. We love living here.

And here are 10 questions some USEF Facebook fans want to know:

1) Mike-Christa Kannenberg, Edmonton, Alberta: What I love about Joel's horses is that they have such a steady head and with a fairly loose rein. Is there a specific technique you use to achieve the steady head and the horse being off the bit?
Yes, there is. It's very specific. For horses to carry themselves smoothly … I like to think they are not only moving from their head, but their bodies, too. That comes from them thinking that they need to be going forward into their heads and forward into the bridle all the time. It doesn't just come from their face. If you think about it that way, the opposite will happen. If my horses are becoming unsteady and moving around too much, I know they are not getting to the bridle enough.

2)
Cynthia D. Alexander Garrett: How do you go about picking that "special" one horse to train?

There are certain things I look for in horses that I sort of can't live without. I start with physical traits because I usually find the horses when they are very, very young and it's hard to tell what their personalities are.  I look for a well-proportioned body. It doesn't have to be perfect but well-proportioned. And a really well set neck. You can have a perfect body and a poorly placed neck and we will struggle forever for our horses to do what they do. I also look for loose, symmetrical and fluid motion, without any hesitation in their legs, just really fluid. They don't have to have perfect legs but they have to have legs that don't look like they are going to break.

3) Megan Manning, Arizona (who shows Arabians):  Obviously show horses need to be kept in a safe environment as to not harm themselves, but do your horses ever get out in a pasture to play without pads and weights on their feet so they can enjoy just being a horse?
Yes, they do. We've got a flat sand paddock that we turn them out in during the day. When I turn them out I always  turn them out with their plates on, and maybe one leather pad. All winter long they get to be turned out ,and after Nationals. In  the middle of the show season they don't get turned out as much.

4)
Mallory Krumm, Nicholasville, KY: What has been your biggest challenge to overcome in all the years you have been riding and how did you overcome that challenge?
Life is a process and as soon as you as overcome one challenge you are on to the next one. There are several hurdles to get over. You really have to know how to train horses,  which is an ongoing process and I am still learning. Challenge No. 2 is getting your first real good horse that lets other people know, 'That guy really can train.' Challenge No. 3 is keeping the ball rolling. It's a tough lifestyle. Training horses for a living and showing, it's every single day. There also are challenges with the horse, which is the easy one, there are challenges with people. And it's challenging balancing it all with your family life. I have a  5- and 10-year-old.

5) Beth Kuykendall Lowrey, Arkansas: What feeding program do you use to keep your horses healthy, ulcer free, and in good condition? When you travel with them do you do anything different to keep them healthy?
We feed alfalfa and grass hay depending on what the horse needs. We feed Strategy as well as whole oats when required. We feed Platinum Performance which I have used for about 10 years now. We love Platinum. We feed rice bran as well if they need weight but not energy. We also feed some Ulcer-Guard to horses that scope clean but I still think  they could have better health and possess better temperament. We scope our horses routinely. If there is any change in condition, if their coat is not up to par, and I know  their feeding and training program is all appropriate. Any change and we get them scoped. At the beginning of the yea r we find out what we may be dealing with and do follow-up checks to make sure their stomachs are in good order.
When we travel we give probiotics and oral electrolytes a couple days early. And when I go to Scottsdale, for example, we do it in three legs so the horses don't get over tired. I untie them so they can eat off the ground. Every time we stop we temp them and make sure they are all happy, and we keep them well-hydrated.

6)
Also from Beth of Arkansas: Do you use special products to produce and maintain the long thick full manes and tails?

It starts with a good feeding program. We use Mane 'n Tail and Healthy HairCare. We also redo their tails once a month so they don't rot inside the bags. Whoever does it puts a date on it and signs it so we know who is responsible for that tail. Don't do it too close to the bone, one or two fists away from the bone.

7) Whitney Wright: With your young horses, how do you go about starting them for long productive show careers?
The first thing we do is get them in the barn, get them used to people. Gain their trust. Start teaching them to lunge a little bit, get them used to some tack. Just in general getting them comfortable with the training barn situation. Learning about the walker. Then we just start the process real slow, usually as really young 3-year-olds. How mature they are physically and mentally depends on how far they get. Very few of them will stay in training throughout the whole year. Even the mature ones get short works, weekends off, months off. Because we think any one of these horses might be a superstar, we're just very, very careful with them and don't ever go too far.

8) Leslie Berro: What is being done to address the abuses in the Arabian show world and how do you act as a role model by preventing such things in your training program?
You really, then, want my whole philosophy on life. We are, as human beings, put here to share the earth with everything and everybody else. We are, however, the only ones with brains and opposing thumbs. We have made most animals, especially dogs, cats and horses, our domain and our partners/servants. There's somewhere in between. I make a living on training horses to other people's satisfaction. Personally, I have a set of morals and guidelines that allow me to make decision and guide me in making decisions on where to go, what is too much and what is acceptable. I've thought a lot about this and those guidelines comes from nature.

 The questions that I ask myself are, 'Is this sustainable? Can it go on? Can I ask a horse to do something and is it physically or mentally possible - or good - for that horse every day?' If it's mentally good for that horse to do and it will build the horse up mentally, that's the right thing to do. Physically, if what I am doing everyday to this horse is going to break it down as opposed to making it stronger or better, than it's not the right thing to do. People can force animals into doing almost anything.  You name it, we ask it and they do it. I don't know why God made such a creature for us. They're incredible. I do this for a living but it is my life's work, and it's my passion and it's a craft. I take a lot of pride in what I do, and try never to force but rather work with their natural tendencies.  Xenophon said, “ Nothing forced is ever beautiful.” 

9) Anne Grupposo Morgan, Florida:  Would you alter your saddle seat training methods for either the horse or the rider depending on the breed of horse?
They're all a little bit different. I think all horses basically have to do the same thing. For example, they have to be able to move away from your leg in a responsive and agile way. The only question is what language do you use?  Sometimes I have to take different methods to do the same thing. If I am talking to a horse and it is not speaking the language I am speaking, then I need to try to figure out what language they are speaking and deliver them the message that way.

10) Chris Brigham Wagner, Vancouver, WA:  I have owned Arabians all of my life, and I want a new saddle-seat horse.  I'm looking at 1/2s but maybe I should go back to just purebreds, what do you think?
I love purebreds and I grew up with Arabians. They certainly are the smartest and they can be reasoned with more than some of the other crosses that I have run into. You can make mistakes with purebreds and back up and fix it, and sometimes with the halfbreds it's harder to talk them out of it. For a saddle seat horse and a purebred Arabian just make sure you get a nice tall neck.








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Aria AvivaAria Aviva SOLD
(Baske Afire x Las Veghaz)

2007 Bay Mare

 

Congratulations to Roger Johnson of Pilot Point, TX, on the purchase of Aria Aviva 

 








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Majestic BeyMajestic Bey - SOLD
(Majesteit x Aphroditie)

2007 Half-Arabian Bay Gelding

 

Congratulations to Jenna Plenert of British Columbia on the purchase of Majestic Bey.

 

 

 

 








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KD Expressionheir KD Expressionheir - SOLD

(IXL Noble Express x Eliza LA)

2006 Bay Gelding

Congratulations to the McElliott Family, of Kansas, on the purchase of KD Expression Heir.








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ROL Fire CrackerROL FirecrackerSOLD


Congratulations to the Womble Family, of Georgia, on the purchase of ROL Fire Cracker.

 








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Brave and NobleBrave And NobleSOLD
(IXL Noble Express+ x Sweet Bravada V)

2004 Bay Stallion

 

Congratulation to the Rahimi family, of MN, on the purchase of Brave and Noble.








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Guns Afire+ and Lori Lawrence Guns Afire+SOLD
(Afire Bey V x HL Glitter NGold)

2002 Chestnut Gelding

Congratulations to the Barker family of Utah on the purchase of Guns Afire

 

 

 








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Ameristar NAAmeristar NASOLD
(Naibara Justice x Naibara Sugaree)

1999 Bay Gelding

 

Congratulations to the Gray family of NV on the purchase of Ameristar NA.








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Siereusly Hot WHSiereusly Hot WHSOLD
(Baske Afire x Siere Usi)

2005 H/A Bay  Gelding

 

Congratulations to the Womble
Family of Georgia on the purchase of Siereusly Hot WH.

 

 








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Blackjack LOABlackjack LOASOLD

Blackjack LOA -  SOLD

Congratulations to  Dazzon Arabians, LLC on the purchase of Black Jack LOA.

We wish you continued success with BJ.








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Stardust BCStardust BCSOLD

Congratulations to Devine Training on the purchase of Stardust BC. We look forward to seeing in the winners circle.








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WCF Berry Especielle

WCF Berry Especielle SOLD
(Bayberry Bey x  Bi Mi Gifts of Wine)

Congratulations to Jennifer Lonchar who recently purchased Berry Especielle for her daughter! Berry will be in training with Lisa Jo White.

1999 Half-Arabian Grey Mare

By a Hucklebey Berry son and out of a very nice saddlebred mare.

She is a big country mare that is perfect for a jr. rider and equitation. She has a very upright neck and very easy to equitate on. This is as very nice mare, worth looking at.
 

2011
Youth Nationals -  Top Ten in Walk Trot 10 & Under Equitation, UPHA and Pleasure
Region 12 -  Champion Pleasure.

2007  Youth Nationals:
Top Ten Country Walk/Trot 10 & Under
Top Ten Saddle Seat Equitation Walk/Trot 10 & Under










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