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Rocky ByMy BaBY
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RMH Red Rocks goes back to the foundation Tobe and exhibits his character
in every way.
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- Courtesy of the RM Horse Association
- About the Rocky Mountain Horse Tobe
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- Sam
Tuttle was the most prominent breeder of Rocky Mountain Horses for the
first three quarters of the twentieth century. With the advent of better
roads and means of travel, the population of gaited horses in the United
States began to decline. The exception was the less developed area of
the Appalachian Mountains. Gaited horses were still needed for travel
where there were no roads, and therefore they were preserved in that
area.
- Even through
the hard times of the Depression and World War II years, Sam Tuttle kept
a sizable herd of thirty to forty horses on his farm. Sam is considered
as the man most responsible for the survival of the Rocky Mountain
Horse. TOBE was the primary Rocky Mountain stallion used in Sam's
breeding program. In the 1950s, many people were selling their
stallions, and the horse population in general was rapidly declining due
to tractors and farm machinery available. Even so, breeders remembered
TOBE, and he was always in demand for stud service. People brought their
mares to TOBE from several different states, and he was as famous in
Estill County as MAN O' WAR was in Lexington, Kentucky.
- Everyone who
rode TOBE fell in love with him. TOBE's offspring were always in demand,
and Sam never had any trouble selling all the Rocky Mountain Horses he
could produce.
- In the early
1960s, Sam Tuttle managed the trail riding concession at the Natural
Bridge State Park in Powell County, Kentucky. He had as many as fifty
horses there, including TOBE. This stallion was often seen tied to the
hitching post alongside all the mares. He became quite well known in the
ten or so years he was ridden there. Besides breeding, TOBE was used as
a trail horse. He carried Sam, and sometimes the trail guides who worked
for Sam, with sure-footed ease over mountainous terrain for many years.
Although Sam would allow other people to ride TOBE occasionally, it was
always a ride closely supervised. He loved to show off his beloved
stallion, but also kept a close eye on him. Everyone who rode TOBE
enjoyed his gentle temperament and comfortable gait. It amazed people to
think the well-mannered horse they were riding was indeed a breeding
stallion.
- TOBE was used
for breeding until July of his thirty-fourth year, and he passed on his
gait, disposition, and other great qualities to his offspring. It has
been said that TOBE's progeny followed in his
"perfectly-timed" footsteps. TOBE fathered many fine horses
before his death at the ripe old age of thirty-seven. One outstanding
trait passed on to his get was longevity, as many of his offspring were
still breeding into their late twenties and early thirties.
Visit the RM Horse association here for more
information on this amazing breed.
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