AN AUSSIE HORSE WHISPERER
courtesy of
Pip Courtney and Nance Haxton
G'day guys,
Today I feature something different. Hope you enjoy this story about AN AUSSIE HORSE WHISPERER.
Two years ago
Queensland horseman Guy McLean moved to Texas in the United States.
He went with his wife, a team
of Australian stock horses and big dreams of making a living as a 'horse whisperer'
in the country that invented the term.
He has returned home a
superstar after taking the US horse world by storm.
His break came quickly when
he won 'The Road to the Horse' competition in March 2012.
A showcase for gentle
horse-breaking methods, it is one of the most prestigious horsemanship events
in the US, with only three or four top trainers invited to compete.
Each competitor chooses an
unbroken colt and is given three days to train it.
"It's a
rollercoaster," Mr McLean said.
"I've done 10-day shows
that don't wear you out like 'Road To the Horse'.
"We have three days to take a horse from
untouched to do some pretty special things do things that a lot of 10-year-old
horses would turn their nose up."
When Mr McLean won the event
again this year, the back-to-back wins boosted his profile enormously.
He now tours the US 10 months
of the year performing to sell-out crowds.
A self-taught horse trainer
Mr McLean is well known in Australia for his bareback bridle-less performances
with his troupe of Australian stock horses.
He calls his method
"finding a better way", and is passionate about showing how much
horses will do willingly, without any restraint.
"My Dad always said to
us as little kids, 'I don't care what you do with the horses as long as you
don't hurt them and you don't hurt yourself'. And I was able to grow a method
very much my own," he said.
"No-one told me as a
young boy you shouldn't ride stallions bridleless and saddleless.
"Nobody told me you
couldn't put a tarp over your best mates' head, so I was able to do a lot of
things now that people say are unorthodox."
An Australian in Texas
Mr McLean
performs in Las Vegas to 3,000 people a night, and gets standing ovations from
10,000 plus crowds at some of the world's biggest horse events.
He wants
Americans to witness an Australian performance.
"When
I wear my Akubra over there and my hobble belt and my pocket knife on my hip
like that, people know exactly who I am," he said.
"Not
only do I sound different, I dress differently. And it's important to me.
"I
see a lot of top Australian horsemen go over there and very soon they're riding
American saddles they're riding American bits and American horses with American
gear. And that's fine. I have no problem with that, but I didn't go over there
to be American, I went over there to showcase Australia."
He has
taken Australian stock horses to the US, and they are generating a lot of
interest amongst the quarter horse crowd.
"Before
I went over there, and before a lot of top Australian horsemen went over there,
they all thought we wrestled crocodiles and rode kangaroos," he said.
"Now
they know Australian horses aren't just brumbies, they're a breed of their
own."
Earlier
this month Mr McLean took his Australian-based horse team to the Eidsvold Bush
Festival.
A far cry
from the American stadiums that seat thousands, the laidback country festival
reminded him of the places where he used to perform.
"I've
done a lot of big things here and nobody knew about me, now when I do big
things in America the world hears about me," he said.
"But
I miss this country so much. This little Eidsvold here. I drafted here. Drafted
here when I didn't even know what a proper stop and turn looked like.
"I
didn't even know what lead I was on.
"Now
I get to showcase what I do worldwide at the same place."
Getting
accolades from top horse trainers is what pleases him the most.
"To
impress real horsemen has always been my biggest goal. A lot of horsemen in
America they really only want to impress the ones who buy their gear.
"Now
I know a horseman's never going to buy my tape he's never going to buy one of
my shirts but if I impress him that means he understands how much work and
effort's gone into them. I get more excited than anything," he said.
Proud father wants his son to inspire kids
Mr
McLean's father, Norm McLean, was at Eidsvold to watch his son perform.
He says
he could not be prouder of Guy, who after two months in Australia will return
to Texas, which for the time being is home.
"I'm
sure he'll come home eventually," he said.
"I
want Australian kids to say that if Guy McLean can do it, coming from a little
boy that was too nervous to speak in front of three people - now he's an
identity in the horse world - then I can do it too."
Guy's
wife, Emily, a trick rider, says his performances resonate with audiences as
they focus on the horses.
"For
me as a trick rider and performer it's all about us as performers and the horse
is there as an aid," she said.
"What
he does is all about the horses. The horses are the star.
"He
is there - as I guess their lackey - and he does everything for them and I
think that's what makes it so unique and different and why he's so
special."
Mr McLean
says that is how it should be.
"I
make sure as a performer that the crowd walks away feeling they know me a
little more," he said.
"They
know my horses names. I walk into the arena and they're not shouting out Guy
McLean they're shouting out where's Teddy and where's Renee and where's
Showgirl.
"I'm
just the manager of this wonderful show team that I take around."
Now, check out this video about this amazing character:
Clancy's comment: Amazing, eh? Some people are born with special gifts. Many thanks to Pip Courtney and Nance Haxton.
Go, Guy!
I'm ...
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