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Miss Southern Sunshine
Posts: 7427
       Location: South Central Florida | WrapSnap - 2015-12-21 1:38 PM I grew up on own get of OTMR and tend to have grand get coming through frequently. Most of mine have been crossed on either barrel breeding, or straight race breeding. I like me an OTMR, but you have to be a hand. If you are impatient, don't get one. If you are one who tends to pick a fight, don't get one. They can be the sweetest horses ever, but you can blow one sky high with just a few minutes of the wrong handling.
Our Mare is one of the sweetest horses ever, LOVES everyone...nickers for kisses. . . big baby, but she gets really hot. Not crazy hot, just WANTS TO RUN hot. We just actually gave her to a good friend that LOVES OTMR's and they just fit better. |
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 Not Afraid to Work
Posts: 4717
    
| A good friend of mine owned one and I rode him a few times before a different friend bought him. He was a Beduino on the bottom side, OTMR on top. He was super fragile and spooky. When he decided to work, he would lay one down but he would spook randomly and always looking for reasons to spook. You couldnt kick him or he would trot. He didnt like a bit. He was just weird and quirky. A more novice gal has him now and she loves him because she doesnt have expectations. I was offered him before my friend bought him and I quickly could tell he wasnt for me.
Now I have heard Beduino horses are difficult too so maybe it was that side of him or maybe it was the combo. I dunno but i definetely a bit leary of them. |
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Go Get Em!
Posts: 13503
     Location: OH. IO | Tilt The Kilt - 2015-12-21 8:05 AMI had one by Reds Western Native and had to put him down. I don't know what went wrong in his early life (though we'd gotten him at 6), though he'd been held back from his first owner hoping he'd be their next rodeo horse, he came back from the colt starter dangerous. From there he'd been passed around innumerable times to trainers due to his temperament or damage from early work with him, and was sent home from every one of those trainers having either hurt the trainer or an asst. The sellers weren't honest with me about him other than he was "a little cold backed". I did some detective work and found the story to be much more significant than I was told. Hired a trainer friend of ours to check him out as the stories of injury were pretty grave. Gave the guy a heads up and full disclosure before he even swung a leg over and after a month where we thought he was going to be ok in the right hands, he came undone while checking a trap one day and gave the trainer a closed head brain injury, we chose to put him down.
Granted this is the only one I've had, but others told me later they are fragile, and shouldn't be rammed and jammed in their early years. We have hot bred horses, grew up with OTT horses and hot blooded single brain celled warmbloods, this wasn't "hot" this was a horse unable to cope. ours was EXACTLY like this! Bought him at five years old.Never saw a horse that came unglued as quick as he did.bought him sight unseen from someone on here that wanted to travel with the ministry.......... thats now a bigger concern of mine than a vet check when we buy one. HE WAS A TOTAL DISASTER.
Edited by jake16 2015-12-21 4:11 PM
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Common Sense and then some
         Location: So. California | Out of curiousity, I wonder what the dam's side was? |
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Veteran
Posts: 242
  
| I bought one almost 2 years ago and was worried about temperament. She is a granddaughter of OTMR on the bottom. My trainer recommended her and she said she usually doesn't like them but she was different and she is. She is quiet, laid back but is built "racey". She is by Firewater on the Rocks. Have been very pleased with her. |
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Expert
Posts: 4766
       Location: Bandera, TX | stayceem - 2015-12-21 2:19 PM A good friend of mine owned one and I rode him a few times before a different friend bought him. He was a Beduino on the bottom side, OTMR on top. He was super fragile and spooky. When he decided to work, he would lay one down but he would spook randomly and always looking for reasons to spook. You couldnt kick him or he would trot. He didnt like a bit. He was just weird and quirky. A more novice gal has him now and she loves him because she doesnt have expectations. I was offered him before my friend bought him and I quickly could tell he wasnt for me. Now I have heard Beduino horses are difficult too so maybe it was that side of him or maybe it was the combo. I dunno but i definetely a bit leary of them.
My, my, what a combo. The Bid's were the hardest breaking horses that I ever rode out of the gate. I was "the" gate girl at our local track. Took my time and didn't eat lunch many times because I refused to leave a horse on a bad note. They needed patience. That being said, I have started a Designer Red baby and a son of his. They needed more patience! Both blood lines were amazing athletes. I still say that Designer Red was the fastest horse down the alley to the first of any horse I've ever seen. OTMR on cow lines should produce a nice barrel horse. Mare's are so important in my opinion-the match is critical. |
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