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Special Double Issue of Canadian Horse Journal
Citation preview
1CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
PM #40009439 A Special Issue of
DISPLAY UNTIL AUGUST 31, 2016
Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Suite 201, 2400 Bevan Ave., Sidney, BC V8L 1W1
$7.95
7CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
C O N T E N T S
2016Canada’s Horse Industry At Your FingertipsA SPECIAL ISSUE OF
INSIDE10 Editor’s Desk
70 How To Horsekeeping Step-by-step instructions for tasks every horse person should know how to tackle
101 Canadian Therapeutic Riding Association News Looking back, looking forward
102 Index to Advertisers
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FEATURES
HORSE HEALTH
12 Sable Island Horses and Drug-Resistant Bacteria
The isolated herd is helping researchers study acquired antimicrobial resistance.
14 Stem Cells Could Speed Equine Healing
Researchers are studying the potential use of stem cells on wound healing in horses.
HORSE INDUSTRY
16 An Inside Look at Equine Cloning Why are horses cloned, how is it done, and is cloning coming of age?
22 The Legal Side of Horse Auctions A look at the risks and rewards of buying
at an auction
76 Schleese Saddlery Service and Saddlefit 4 Life®
Dedicated to improving the comfort and well-being of horse and rider
80 Herbs for Horses Driven by purity, research and passion
84 Strathcona Ventures Committed to quality products for the equine
and livestock industries
8 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
C O N T E N T S
2016Canada’s Horse Industry At Your FingertipsA SPECIAL ISSUE OF
SPECIAL FEATURES
28 Riding Beneath the Northern Lights
From ancient fossils to today’s horses of Yukon and their people
40 Heritage Ranches of Canada
Tradition and history interwoven in the folklore of explorers, fur traders, gold seekers and settlers.
56 A Carriage Ride Through History
From pony cart to coronation coach, the colourful story of the horse-drawn vehicle.
PRODUCTS & SERVICES
87 The Marketplace Your comprehensive source for products, services, breeds, stallions, and more.
93, 95, 97, 99, 100 New & Noteworthy Products & Reviews A collection of products available in Canada from horse industry businesses.
40 56
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12 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
Could bacteria resistant to antimicrobial drugs routinely used in both
human and veterinary medicine be found in wild horses on a remote island in the Atlantic Ocean?
By answering this question, Dr. Joe Rubin and members of his research team at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine (WCVM) hope to gain a better understanding of how bacteria carrying acquired resistance genes are passed between humans, domestic animals, and wildlife species.
Their research has two major players: the horses living on Sable Island and the “bugs” — specifically Escherichia coli (E. coli) that these horses carry in their guts.
Sable Island, located 160 kilo-metres off Canada’s Atlantic coast, is home to a population of over 500 feral horses – one of only a handful of wild horse populations in the world. The herd is des-cended from horses brought to the island in the late 1700s and has been protected by law from hu-man interference since the 1960s.
Sable Island Horses and DRUG-RESISTANT BACTERIA
By Mary Timonin
Sable Island’s herd of over 500 feral horses, one of only a handful of wild horse populations in the world, is providing an opportunity for researchers to study acquired antimicrobial resistance. PH
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16 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
CLONING
H O R S E I N D U S T R Y
CLONING An Inside Look at
17CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
CLONING
recent poll on the Canadian Horse Journal website asked the question: Should equines
be cloned?Some 83 percent of respondents said no, not until
more research has been done; 16 percent said maybe, in special situations with strict parameters; just two percent said yes and that clones should be allowed to be registered.
Once the darling concept of science fiction writers, cloning trotted onto the world stage on February 22, 1997 when it was announced that Dolly the sheep, a ewe cloned at the Roslin Institute in Midlothian, Scotland, had been born on July 5, 1996. Dolly was the first mammal to have been successfully cloned from an adult cell. She lived at the Institute until her death in 2003.
Dolly kicked the scientific barn doors down to open the way for all manner of cloned mammals. Along came “twins” of cats, rats, deer, cattle, fruit flies, rabbits, and others. Then, on May 4, 2003, the first equine and first mule, Idaho Gem, was born at the University of Idaho. He was quickly followed by two cloned “siblings,” Utah Pioneer born on June 9, and Idaho Star born on July 27.
Idaho Gem came along just a couple of weeks before the birth of the first cloned horse, Prometea, a Haflinger foal born May 28, 2003, at the Laboratory of Reproductive Technology, Cremona, Italy. The first cloned horse in North America, Paris Texas, was produced by Texas A&M University in 2005.
In 2006, the premier barrel racing gelding, Scamper, was cloned and his “twin” stallion became the first cloned horse to stand at stud in the US In 2010, a Criollo horse was born in Argentina, the first horse clone produced in South America.
But what really is cloning, and is the cloned horse literally identical to the original animal?
“We take advantage of two things,” explains Dr. Katrin Hinrichs, professor and Patsy Link Chair in mare reproductive studies at the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. “One, the nucleus of every cell in the body has the same DNA which codes for how to produce the entire animal. Two, the oocyte (egg) is ready to make an embryo, packed full of everything that will be needed for that embryo for the first three to four days of development. The basic procedure is just a variation on what happens normally at fertilization. Normally, the egg has half of a complement of DNA and the sperm enters the egg and brings in the other half of the needed DNA. Then, with a complete set of DNA, the egg starts to develop into an embryo. In cloning, we remove the DNA from the egg then introduce a cell [from the donor horse] that carries a full complement of DNA. Then we signal the egg to start to develop into an embryo.”
Hinrichs explains that, while there are no changes to the genetics (DNA) of the cloned horse, the genes in the clone could be used differently – turned on more, or less, than they were in the original. Therefore, to a varying extent, the clone will differ somewhat from the original.
CLONING
By Margaret Evans
A On September 15, 2008, the French genetic bank, Cryozootech, announced the birth of the colt Gemini, a clone of the Thorough-bred gelding, Gem Twist, regarded as one of the best show jumpers in history. In 2012, the first foal of Gemini was born.
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22 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
H O R S E I N D U S T R Y
Buying a horse is an important decision that usually involves careful planning, consideration, and research. Buying a
horse at an auction can remove or reduce the ability to exercise due diligence in the buying process.
“Deals” and good quality horses can be found at auctions; however, when at-tending an auction, buyers may be over-come with excitement for what appears to be a great bargain or sympathy for an ob-viously mistreated horse, and make a pur-chase they later regret.
While there is nothing wrong with wanting to score a deal or rescue a horse,
auction buyers should be aware of the legal obligations imposed upon buyers, consignors, and auction houses so they can protect their legal rights and, to the greatest extent possible, make informed decisions.
Know the Type of Auction You Are Attending
There may be a considerable difference between the local monthly auction and premium sport horse import auctions or major breed auctions.
The latter types of auctions tend to provide detailed sales programs containing extensive descriptions and photographs of
the horses offered for sale, including their pedigrees and show records. Potential bidders may also be provided with an opportunity to ride the horses prior to the auction. In some instances, these auctions may have also pre-screened the horses for health and soundness, in which case there may be vet check results available for review as well. Armed with this additional information, buyers at these types of auctions may bid more confidently.
Buyers at local auctions will often receive little to no advance information about the horses offered for sale. Horses at these auctions are generally presented “as
The RISKS and REWARDS of
Buying at an Auction By Karen WeslowskiMiller Thomson, LLP, Vancouver, BC
In general, the legal maxim Caveat emptor or “let the buyer beware” applies to any kind of horse purchase and sale.
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23CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
An auctioneer’s claims that a horse is suitable for any rider is a subjective description and open to interpretation. If the horse proves otherwise, the purchaser would have to prove that the auction house and the seller were aware of a trait that prohibited the horse from being so described.
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ERis” and there is no opportunity to ride or examine the horses beforehand. In these circumstances, it is difficult to perform any due diligence to verify the horse’s soundness or suitability.
With either type of auction, it is best for buyers to be armed with a good amount of skepticism; if the deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Auctions may be the last resort for owners unable to sell their horse themselves, or horses that have failed pre-purchase vet examinations. Auctions can be used by owners as an attempt to unload an unsound horse on an unsuspecting buyer.
Buyer Beware The legal maxim of caveat emptor or “let
the buyer beware” generally applies to any kind of horse purchase and sale. The seller has a relatively limited duty to disclose in-formation about the horse. As well, unlike many big ticket items, horses usually do not come with money-back guarantees or a re-turn policy. As such, the onus is on the pur-chaser to fully research the horse before buying it.
Part of a buyer’s research process may include asking the seller lots of specific and direct questions. In those circumstances, the seller has an obligation to fully and honestly disclose information to the buyer.
For instance, if the buyer asks whether the horse cribs, the seller must answer that question honestly to the best of their knowledge. The difficulty with auctions is that buyers are generally not provided with an opportunity to ask questions of the consignor, which would give rise to a legal disclosure obligation upon the consignor.
Read the Auction ContractOnce the buyer’s bid has been accepted, a
legally binding contract is created. The terms and conditions in the auction contract may vary from auction to auction, but most
contain the following terms:
• Title passes to the buyer at the fall of the hammer, at which time the buyer assumes all risk and responsibility.
• All successful bidders must sign an acknowledgement of purchase.
• A buyer who fails to sign an acknowledge-ment of purchase or to pay the purchase price is in default and an action shall be commenced against the person for the amount owing plus legal costs.
• The auctioneer may detain or repossess any horse for which payment is not properly made and may sell the horse at a
28 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
By Margaret Evans
RIDING Beneath the NorthernLights
The Yukon experience: “A friend and I would ride on full moon nights and sometimes see the northern lights — very beautiful,” says Janilyn Kooy.
29CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
It would be some 700,000 years before Duane Froese, an earth sciences professor with the University of Alberta in Edmonton, and his team excavated a metapodial (cannon) horse bone from permafrost in the Thistle Creek gold mine in west-central Yukon in 2003.
The team was hunting fossils embedded in permafrost while gathering data on the sediments that preserved them. Many other horse fossils found in Yukon had been pony-sized but Froese and his team knew this find had come from a larger horse. What was exciting was that the fossil was from a time associated with Gold Run volcanic ash dating from some 735,000 years ago.
The horse had lived in the vast grassland region of Beringia that linked Yukon and Alaska with Siberia and
The land is wide, gently rolling, and breathtaking. Distant mountains are white with glaciers, and form a rain shadow, making the grassland steppe extremely dry. In spite of this, the land is fertile and rich with vegetation. A gentle, dusty wind picks up, lifting the grasses, tundra flowers, herbs, sedges, mosses, lichen, shrub willows and birch in a whispering wave. The windborne loess, silky dust from boulders ground up by the glaciers and common throughout this unique northern world, is mixed with fine volcanic ash and will lay down the fertile soil for next year’s plant growth.
The horse stares. In the distance his herd grazes with mammoths, steppe bison, caribou, Dall sheep and camels. All are alert for the dangers from wolves, scimitar cats or short-faced bears. For so many years, the old stallion has followed the well-worn paths. But in this strange grassland world beset with violent storms, the trails are dissolving into spongy, destabilizing permafrost.
The stallion lies down to rest, folding his legs supportively beneath him. He feels the wear and tear as his bones creak with age. But in those bones lies the secret of his entire ancestry.
An artist’s interpretation of Beringia with the Yukon horse (Equus lambei ) in a Beringia landscape 11,000 years ago.
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Skull of 700,000-year-old horse found in permafrost in Thistle Creek Gold Mine in Yukon in 2003.
40 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
at HOME on the RANGE
Cattle ranching in Canada has a long and fascinating history. This historic photo is titled “Branding Calves on the Cattle Ranches near Kamloops, BC.”
41CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
Canada’s cattle industry began long ago and far away, its tradition and history interwoven in the stories and folklore of explorers, fur traders, gold seekers and settlers.
For millennia, the vast region of western Canada was a land of pure, rich wilderness. Aboriginal tribes were hunter/gatherers and expert fishers whose environment defined their culture. Wildlife, especially fur-bearing species, was varied and hugely abundant.
Then, one misty February day in 1778, Captain James Cook on HMS Resolution dropped anchor off what would be the central Oregon coast. His men went ashore, met the locals and purchased beaver pelts and other furs. The transaction changed a way of life.
CANADA’S RANCHING HERITAGE By Margaret Evans
at HOME on the RANGE
ABOVE: Established as the North West Cattle Company in 1882, the Bar U Ranch saw many colourful characters over the years including Harry Loungbaugh, aka The Sundance Kid, who worked at the ranch in the early 1890s. Today, the Bar U Ranch, the longest lasting and most successful of the first four founding corporate ranches in southern Alberta, is a National Historic Site run by Parks Canada. Ph
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56 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
Ever since the wheel was first invented
around 3,500 BC in Mesopotamia as a
wooden disc with a hole in the middle for
some form of axle, creative Sumarian minds
were buzzing. They were, after all, already
planting crops, herding animals, and had a
pretty impressive social order. But getting
the wheel contraption right took a bit of
creative genius. The holes in the centre of
the disc and at the ends of the axle had to be
perfectly smooth and round in order for the
wheel to fit and turn. Otherwise, too much
friction would cause breakage.
The wheel for transportation actually
followed the invention of the potter’s wheel.
But those Bronze Age inventors wasted little
time connecting the dots and figuring out
that if you put a box on top of the axle, you’d
have a cart. It you hitched a horse to the front
end, you’d have an animal to pull it, which
would save doing it yourself. With the
domestication of the horse almost 6,000 years
ago, a marriage between the cart and the
horse was inevitable, eventually
transforming a civilization. On the Sumerian
Battle Standard of Ur is the depiction of an
onager-drawn cart from 2,500 BC.
A Carriage Ride Through History By Margaret Evans
From pony cart to coronation coach, few vehicles have had such a colourful history as the horse-drawn carriage.
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57CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
The earliest form of a “carriage” (from Old
Northern French meaning to carry in a
vehicle) was the chariot in Mesopotamia
around 3,000 BC. It was nothing more than
a two-wheeled basin for a couple of people
and pulled by one or two horses. It was light
and quick and the favoured vehicle for
warfare with Egyptians.
Carriages in a myriad of formats quickly
became the defining form of transport. And
with them came their own dictionary of
terms. A carriage is sometimes called a team. A
carriage and horse is a rig. A carriage with
horses, harness, and attendants is a turnout. A
procession of carriages is a cavalcade. Then
there’s the coachman (driver), footman (who
cleared the path in front), a carriage starter
(directing the flow of carriage traffic at
ABOVE: The Gold State Coach (Coronation Coach) gilded and painted by Italian painter and engraver, Giovanni Battista Cipriani, in 1762.
FACING PAGE: An original Concord Stagecoach on display at the Wells Fargo History Museum in Old Town San Diego State Historic Park.
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70 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
How to Apply BandagesEvery horse owner should possess at
least a basic understanding of the proper techniques for bandaging a horse’s legs.
There are a number of situations in which leg bandages may be necessary or advisable. Some of the most common reasons for bandaging a horse’s legs include:
• Providingwarmthandsupporttostifforsore tendons and ligaments
• Preventing or reducing swelling after exercise or during stall rest
• Protecting legs from injury during exercise or trailering
• Covering wounds to prevent contamination and facilitate healing
Differentoccasionscallfordifferenttypes of bandages, but all equine leg bandages can be dangerous if applied incorrectly. In many cases it is preferable to leave a horse’s leg unwrapped altogether rather than bandage it improperly.
STANDING BANDAGESThe main function of standing bandages
(also called stable or stall bandages) is to provide protection, mild support, and warmth to the tendons and ligaments in the horse’s lower leg. Frequently used to help prevent edema or “stocking up” caused by inactivity and often following strenuous exercise, these general purpose bandages can also be used to cover the leg after applying a wound dressing, poultice, liniment, or other topical.
Standing bandages consist of an inner layer of padding material – usually no-bow, quilted, or pillow wraps, although roll, sheet, or combine cotton are also suitable – over which commercial standing (or stable) bandages made of stretchy cotton or polyester knit with Velcro® fasteners are applied. When applied correctly, a standing bandage should cover the horse’s lower leg from just below the knee or hock down to the bottom of the fetlock.
If you apply a standing bandage to one leg, you should also wrap the opposite leg. Standing bandages are typically worn for about 12 hours at a time and should never be left on for longer than 24 hours without being removed and re-wrapped.
WOUND BANDAGESWound bandages facilitate healing by
keeping wounds clean to minimize the risk of infection, protecting the area from
How To HorseKeeping Have you ever wondered how to bandage the tricky parts of your horse, such as his knees, hocks, forearm, and
gaskin? Not sure how to transition your horse’s feed to avoid causing digestive troubles? Love dashing through
the snow with your horse, but need to know how to keep him from catching a chill afterwards? Then read on…the
step-by-step instructions in our collection of How To articles will help you perform these basic horsekeeping
taskswithconfidenceandease.
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71CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
Place the starting edge of the wrap at the inside front of the cannon bone and unroll the wrap around the leg, checking as you go to ensure the fabric remains smooth, flat, and wrinkle-free. Tuck the starting edge of the bandage under the end of the wrap across the front of the cannon bone.
Circle the fetlock once, leaving an inch of wrap showing below the bandage, and then spiral back up the leg to the top.
Wrap the bandage around the leg once to “lock” the end in place and then continue wrapping down the leg in a spiral pattern, with each wrap of the bandage overlapping the preceding layer by about 50 percent. Try to maintain an even tension on the bandage as you wrap and check after every turn around the leg to make sure the bandage, and the padding beneath the bandage, is lying smooth and flat against the leg.
End the bandage at the outside front of the leg just below the start of the knee or hock, leaving an inch of wrap showing above the bandage, and fasten the Velcro closure. Run your hands over the entire bandage to make sure it is uniformly snug, smooth, and solid from top to bottom, without any wrinkles, ridges, or slack. If bandaging the front legs, insert two fingers under the bandage behind the knee to make sure there is no pressure on the joint.
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Box 1209, Russell, Manitoba R0J 1W0(204)773-2711 • [email protected]
Tennesse Walking Horses FOR SALE
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80 Equine Consumers’ Guide 2016 CANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
H O R S E I N D U S T R Y
Does your horse suffer from heaves, more clinically known as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)?
Is his mobility affected because of osteoarthritis?
What about problems with cartilage inflammation?
Does your mare, gelding, or stallion exhibit irritability, anxiety or stress due to a hormone imbalance?
Sound objective science
drives the production of exceptional products. At Selected BioProducts Inc., which produces a wide range of herbal products for horses under its Herbs for Horses line, they pride themselves on a wide range of top notch, thoroughly researched herbal products that will address everything from pain relief and joint care to weight management, lung care, or general health balancing.
Like many successful companies offering innovative products, Herbs for Horses started in a serendipitous moment.
“My two daughters were on the hunter circuit and I would drive them everywhere, then sit and read the financial news whilst they trained or competed,” says Ralph Robinson, president of Selected BioProducts based in Guelph,
Ontario. “I was paying for a lot of stuff, got bored, and started reading labels. Eureka moment! I had spent three years working in nutritional research for the Chairman of Nutrition at the University of Guelph. I said [to my daughter], ‘Samantha, this stuff is crap. I could make better in our bathtub!’ Sam replied, ‘Yea, right dad.’ You know that putdown voice that teenagers have with ‘old’ people? So I
Herbs for HorsesDriven by Purity, Research and PassionBy Margaret Evans
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“I may not know your horse but I appreciate it as I do my own,” says Ralph Robinson, owner of Herbs for Horses.
81CONNECT TO THE HORSE INDUSTRY www.HORSEJournals.com
thought: I’ll show you, you cheeky little monkey. The next day I bought a new cement mixer (like a giant kitchen blender), sat down with a friend [who is] a professor of veterinary medicine, and designed the first research project (Mobility) for which we received a US patent. It wasn’t six months before the mixer was too small so we purchased a $20,000 stainless steel Ribbon blender that holds 500 kg of herbs.”
Robinson’s background is in nutrition, animal health, and research. During his university years, his best subject was biological chemistry. For his thesis at the Lincolnshire College of Agriculture he worked with herbs and spices to improve the carcass taste and improve health and growth. Herbs and spices, he says, are antibacterial; therefore no drugs are required.
“Herbs are the ancestors to modern-day drugs,” says Dr. Wendy Pearson with Nutraceutical Alliance in Campbellville, Ontario, and who has worked with Herbs for Horses for 20 years. “They are a vast reservoir for bioactive material and have the potential to play an important role in an integrative equine health and wellness program.”
Pearson’s relationship with Herbs for Horses has involved laboratory testing of their products during the product development cycle.
“On an ongoing basis, I offer advice on new products as needed, prepare scientific review documents for medicinal plants
of interest, and continue to provide oversight on their food safety program that is audited and renewed every spring.”
Robinson is dedicated to improving the health of horses rather, he says, than making money.
“We’ve always put more value and quality into every product,” he says. “But I can ID for you products with 93 percent filler! It’s the world we live in now where greed rules.”
Pearson says that contamination of herbal products with biological, chemical, or physical contaminants is a very real concern.
“There are many documented cases of contaminants appearing in herbal products that are not
Herbs for Horses offers a professional line of all natural, all Canadian-made ISO 22000 Global Food Safety certified feed supplements for horses and canines, based on research done at the University of Guelph in Ontario.
Here is a collection of some of their many products:
HYALcarePLUS is for care and management of osteoarthritic cartilage.
HoofMASTER hoof growth formula is low glycemic and safe for horses with Cushings disease.
LiverCLEANSE helps repair pharmacological damage and flush toxic residues.
PULMONaire spirulina blend antioxidant suppresses over-active immune responses to allergies and has anti-viral and anti-inflammatory properties.
SIMMIRdown insulin resistance formula to help improve glucose utilization and prevent laminitic episodes.
“I was paying for a lot of stuff, got bored, and started reading labels. Eureka moment!”
AssociationsALBERTA EQUESTRIAN FEDERATIONSuite 100, 251 Midpark Blvd SE Calgary, AB, T2X 1S3www.albertaequestrian.com [email protected]: 403-252-5260Phone: 403-253-44111-877-463-6233
EQUINE ASSOCIATION OF YUKONPO Box 30011Whitehorse, YT, Y1A 5M2www.equineyukon.weebly.com [email protected]
EQUINE CANADA308 Legget Drive, Suite 100Ottawa, ON, K2K 1Y6www.equinecanada.ca [email protected]: 613-248-3484 Phone: 613-287-15151-866-282-8395
FÉDÉRATION ÉQUESTRE DU QUÉBEC4545, av. Pierre-De CoubertinMontréal, QC, H1V 0B2www.feq.qc.ca [email protected]: 514-252-3068 Phone: 514-252-3053 1-866-575-0515
HORSE COUNCIL OF BRITISH COLUMBIA27336 Fraser Hwy.Aldergrove, BC, V4W 3N5www.hcbc.ca [email protected]: 604-856-4302 Phone: 604-856-4304 1-800-345-8055
MANITOBA HORSE COUNCIL145 Pacific AvenueWinnipeg, MB, R3B 2Z6www.manitobahorsecouncil.ca [email protected]: 204-925-5703 Phone: 204-925-5719
NEW BRUNSWICK EQUESTRIAN ASSOCIATION900 Hanwell Road, Unit 13Fredericton, NB, E3B 6A2www.nbea.ca [email protected]: 506-454-2363 Phone: 506-454-2353
NEWFOUNDLAND EQUESTRIAN ASSOCIATIONPO Box 372, Station CSt. John’s, NL, A1C 5J9www.equestriannl.ca [email protected]
NOVA SCOTIA EQUESTRIAN FEDERATION5516 Spring Garden RoadHalifax, NS, B3J 1G6www.horsenovascotia.ca [email protected]: 902-425-5606 Phone: 902-425-5450
ONTARIO EQUESTRIAN FEDERATION1 West Pearce Street, Suite 201Richmond Hill, ON, L4B 3K3www.horse.on.ca [email protected]: 905-709-1867 Phone: 905-709-6545 1-877-441-7112
PEI HORSE COUNCIL40 Enman Crescent, Charlottetown, PE, C1E 1E6www.islandhorsecouncil.ca [email protected]
SASKATCHEWAN HORSE FEDERATION2205 Victoria AvenueRegina, SK, S4P 0S4www.saskhorse.ca [email protected]: 306-525-4041 Phone: 306-780-9449
Riding Arenas
587.230.1970 • www.ironwood.ca
2 Locations to Serve You!7669 Evans Road Chilliwack, BC
Toll Free: 877-847-3735
3155 Pleasant Valley Road Armstrong, BC
250-546-9174
Panels • Gates • Feederswww.countrywestsupply.com
TIMBER FRAME BARNS • SHELTERS • HOMES • SHOPS • ARENAS
[email protected] • 778-899-1050
MARKETPLACECANADA’S HORSE INDUSTRY AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
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