- Skills / Disciplines
- Experienced, Husband Safe, Trail, Trail Riding, Trail Class Competition
Additional Comments
Amira is a 13yo (2011), 14.3-15hh, Chestnut Mustang Mare. She’s a stout quarter horse appendix type build. She’s around 1000 pounds. She moves like a quarter horse. She’s been Anna’s main distance horse for 5 years.
Amira is solidly safe. Our 14 year old daughter trail rides her alone. She is not for a true beginner or someone timid. She has buttons and can be forward when traveling at speed with other horses. She can babysit someone at a walking trail ride, but if you’re trotting and cantering I would say advanced beginner for trot and intermediate for cantering and hunter pacing.... (read more) She does have a nice stop and one rein stop as well and will stand at a mounting block for you to get on.
The best fit for Amira is likely someone who wants to pleasure ride and trail ride, has an open boarding/stall situation and good turnout. She will need a blanket in the winter as she doesn’t grow a giant coat and gets cold preferring to stand out in the weather. She’s low man in the pasture and not mare-ish. None of that squeal and kick crap going on with this mare. Would be better if she doesn’t have lush green turnout as she would likely get fat. Currently barefoot and trail ridden in boots. When competing, she was in 4 shoes.
We bought Amira in January of 2018; she was 7 and had potential. Amira was captured as a yearling from the Stone Cabin herd in Nevada, sold on a BLM internet auction, bought by a woman in Rhode island as a 4 year old, and sent to Jeremy Reid for training in 2017 as a 6yo. We have owned Amira since Jan 2018 and have her BLM title.
Amira has been trail ridden extensively and competed in 25-30 mile Limited Distance rides in distance competition, completing 575 miles of competition. Historically during the riding season she averaged 25 miles a week or so on trail. She rides WTC in the arena, backs up, turns on her haunches and forehand, leg yields and side passes. Our kids have jumped her (not recently) and she finds it exciting and gets rather forward. Our kids took her to pony club camp a few times and she did fine. We’ve played with some games type stuff and she’s fine with it, but not fast.
Amira trailers great, loads and backs off the trailer. She has traveled to rides as far away as 6 hours and always did fine in the trailer. She rides out alone or in a group. She prefers a smaller group and to not be last in line. She leads or rides in line just fine. Travels through water and over bridges.
In August 2023, Amira had an injury to her left hind tendon sheath after a distance ride (she was lame at the finish). The tendon was not involved, but there was a lot of swelling, fluid and fibrin in her tendon sheath. We ultra-sounded her twice and did prostride injections. Amira has fully recovered from this and can consistently ride over 15 miles a week, including 12-15 miles as a long ride, however, we believe she should retire from endurance competitions with the fast pace and be a trail/pleasure horse.
As far as management, Amira is an easy keeper, she lives out with a run in stall available, has a netted hay hut and she eats a lb of ration balancer a day. We also feed some flax and magnesium.
Amira does best with solid fencing. We have wire fencing with a top board in most places and electric up top. If it’s electric only, it needs to be good quality and hot. She has walked through electric at rides, but stays in pasture divided by electric at home. She straight ties to the trailer and cross ties in the aisle with no issue.
Amira does not like to be stalled. She is fine in a stall with a run out attached. She is fine stalled overnight in a fully closed stall if she can see others. We stall her during winter storms with no issue, but she will churn up the stall.