Buckaroo Leather Newsletter August 2016

Published: Sat, 08/27/16

Buckaroo Leather
August 2016 Newsletter

Buckaroo Leather made this custom breast collar and custom headstall designed by Rebecca for her horse Scout.  Worn here in the parade at the Festival in Santa Barbara. Have a design in mind? We can make it! Just give Buckaroo John a call at 530-545-0139 give Buckaroo John a call at 530-545-0139




 
 
The Four Key Points to Look for When Purchasing Leather Horse Tack​​​​​​​
1. Start with the feel of the leather: Is the leather soft and supple? You want to avoid purchasing tack that feels dry because the quality will be subpar. If you bend the leather and you see it starting to crack it is useless and may become very dangerous when riding. It should be bendable, soft and not stiff. Even if it has not been oiled, tack should still stay supple. However, when buying new tack if the leather feels overly soft then this is not good either. This sort of tack has had too much oil applied and is often a technique to disguise bad quality leather.

2. Next Smell: Yes, it important to smell the leather. Quality leather has a fresh warm smell, whereas inferior leather can have a chemical or ammonia like smell. Off odor is the first hint that the leather has been tanned too quickly and inexpensively. Top quality leather has a beautiful natural smell to it, no matter how old or how new it is. The more you handle leather the more you will be able to tell what smells like good leather. If you don't think it smells quite right then this is the first sign to identifying bad quality leather.

3. Look at the Color: Even though, some quality leather may be dyed it will still show the pliability and fresh smell noted above. Inferior leather seems to be “dull”. Dark color dyes can hide lower quality and poorly matched leathers. Avoid leather tack that looks blotchy or faded.

4. Check the details: Why would you put quality craftsmanship into poor quality leather? Well, you wouldn't. It wouldn't make logical sense. Look at the stitching of the leather; has it been finished off neatly and is it even? Stitching that is neat and even, then finished off and tucked in is a hallmark of good workmanship and quality tack. Also, look for durable hardware with strong steel tongue buckles and rounded edges that won’t cut into the leather.

If you are looking for quality equipment visit Buckaroo Leather Products for a wide variety of tack and equipment as well as other leather products needed for horse riding. Purchase headstalls, reins, leather halters, bits, hardware, hobbles, rawhide gear and leather care products at Buckaroo Leather.  The materials which go into the making of Buckaroo Leather Tack and the craftsmanship employed in it’s making are elements of the highest importance. You could have no higher guarantee of quality and workmanship than the name Buckaroo Leather upon your tack. It represents an organization proud of its establishment in 1979, and ever since catering to horseman and women with two generations of experience and knowledge applied in the making of riding equipment to the most exacting standards. Buckaroo Leather is The Brand to Demand!  Visit us at www.buckarooleather.com or give us a call (530) 545-013
 
 

New Horse Tack!!


V Brow Headstall
One of our Best Sellers
5/8" hand carved Oak Acorn "V" Browband Headstall.  Choice of silver or no silver, Medium oil or dark oil...we can also do custom conchas. 


Purchase here: www.buckarooleather.com



15 1/2" Bridger Creek saddle out of Bozeman, Montana. Beautiful oak acorn border comes with saddle bags, breast collar, headstall, custom horse hair cinch, sterling silver conchos and buckles.

Excellent condition

$2150.00​​​​​​​


 
Beautiful new turquoise flower conchas. They measure 1 3/4" in diameter. Screw back to fit in any hole.
Sold as single. Choose antique silver or copper.
 
$15.00 a Piece

 
Customer Spotlights
Kind words from George:
Here is my boy, Rocky looking fine with his Buckeroo Leather breast collar and wither strap. Thanks again for fine products. George 
 
From Eileen:
Copper. Ride #32 

Ride" is a euphanism. Of the 32 times I've been in the saddle on this sweet boy, the majority of those times were just getting on, walking about for 15 minutes or so, getting off. 

He's 40 months old, still growing, but just shy of 16hh, muscular, athletic, and very easy. Copper literally asks to be ridden. He's gotten so he goes into the big round pen, walks over to the mounting block on his own, positions himself at the block perfectly, and looks at me like "you getting on?' He'll come over to pick me up at the fence too. How did I get so lucky to have such a good minded, good hearted boy?

We've gone from riding in the halter, to a Rother comfort snaffle, and today tried the side pull bridle, which we love. He's softer in this bridle. I like that and I think we'll stick with this with the plan to transition to a bosal when it's time.

Short rides still. Walk, trot, upward and downward transitions, halt, bend, beginnings of turn on the forehand, turn on the haunches, backing well. All accomplished first on the ground, so he understands easier what is asked for under saddle.

He looks awful handsome in his side pull, and amused himself playing with the tassels on the alpaca reins.

Soft. Listen to your horse. He'll tell you when he's ready.

Beautiful side pull bridle by Buckaroo Leather, and 
Buckaroo John
 
From Brenda:  I couldn't find a headstall to fit our mammoth donkey. Met John at the Bishop mule days and he said 'sent me measurements of what you need '. Within 2 weeks Maggie had a beautiful headstall that we could get over her ears! Wonderful customer service! 

Thank you for the kind words Brenda!

From Jasmine:
Mosha with her sidepull. Quality of the leather is just awesome!!
Thank you Jasmine... Mosha looks great! 
 
The Four Greatest Things I
Learned About Horses
By Robert M. Miller, DVM
(Spaulding Labs)


By the time I graduated veterinary school at thirty years of age I felt very knowledgeable about horses. After all, I had driven draft teams at 15 years of age, judged Quarter Horses as a student in the University of Arizona, spent 10 summers working with horses in three states including starting colts that had never before been handled using non-coercive methods known today as “Natural Horsemanship.” Such methods were completely non-traditional in the Western U.S.A. and I had such success with them that I felt completely competent.


I was to learn, however, that from middle age onward, I was to learn far more about horses, and that I would never stop learning.
Beginning in my thirties, and continuing to this day I was to discover countless things, but four great things stand out:


1. Horses are a precocial species, born with all of their senses fully functional; vision, hearing, the senses of smell and taste, and their tactile sense. Their learning capacity is at its peak during the minutes, hours, and days following birth. Their imprinting period, when they immediately attach to, trust, and want to follow what they see moving around them following birth, unlike puppies (6 to 7 weeks of age), is right after they are born. So, this means, newborn foals can learn, quickly and lastingly and, if we fail to skillfully take advantage of that period, we are losing the most powerful learning time in the foal’s life.


2. Horses do not fear predators (we are, biologically speaking, a predatory species). They fear predatory behavior.
Predation takes two forms: the stalk and the charge.
Hence, horses fear an unrecognized or unfamiliar stationary object, or if it moves towards them.
Conversely, if such an object moves away from them, it is therefore non-predatory and rather than fear, the horse reacts with curiosity. This quality is a major factor in the current revolution in horsemanship sweeping the world.


3. The goal in horsemanship should be 100% respect and zero fear. It is not fully attainable because we are dealing with a prey species dependent upon flight to survive in the wild. But, it should be our objective. Leadership should be our goal, not compliance forced by fear.
This requires education, discipline, patience, and persistence on our part because we are a predatory tool using species and coercion comes naturally to most of us.


4. Horses are a very intelligent species. I loved horses but, like most people, I thought they were stupid.
Intelligence involves many mental qualities, including reasoning ability, speed of learning, memory, response time, and perceptivity. Except for the first named, reasoning, horses are remarkably high in all of the other qualities of intelligence. The horse, therefore, is a very intelligent mammal.

The horse’s brain evolved to survive in a habitat inhabited by hungry prey species. Thus the best way to stay alive when a potential predator is sensed is by:
a. Staying with the herd
b. Following the leader (usually an older, experienced mare.
c. Running fast away from the threatening stimulus
d. Running genetic pre-determined Flight Distance which, in prey species, is slightly farther than its primary predator can run. Thus, the horse sprints just far enough to escape the short-winded but speedy large feline species. If the flight is too far, they may run into another predator.

These four understandings greatly helped me to understand equine behavior and how to best communicate with them.


(source: Spalding Labs)

 
Come visit us at the Cowboy Dressage World Finals in Rancho Murieta, California
​​​​​​​Sept. 7-11 2016

Also catch Buckaroo John Brand's presentation "Why quality leather tack is of the upmost importance in safety and communication.​​​​"
Sept. 7th 2016 from 1:30-2:15pm! The presentation will be upstairs in Arena 1. 
 
 
This just in... more Lasso leads to go with rope halters!
Unique one of a kind.
 



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