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Locality: Holden, Missouri

Phone: +1 816-529-9195



Address: 620 SW State Highway T 64040 Holden, MO, US

Website: www.firedupranch.com

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Fired Up Ranch 07.06.2021

Some great shots by Marty Maynard and Joe Galati from our second show of the season. We had a great time and are so proud of all our Fired Up Ranch riders! #FiredUp #arabianhorse #horse #aha #pinto #americansaddlebred #horses #western #huntseat #saddleseat #ranch #horseshow #halfarabian #instahorse #sharethesaddlebred #arabianhorses #horseshowlife #farmlife #sporthorse #ranchlife #westernlifestyle #painthorse #englishhorse #photooftheday #photography #equestrian #equestrianlife #dressage #equinephotography #equestriansofinstagram

Fired Up Ranch 02.06.2021

Long but super day a our second show of the season! So proud of everyone! Big improvements, confidence built and we had some fun! #FiredUp #arabianhorse #horse #aha #pinto #americansaddlebred #horses #western #huntseat #saddleseat #ranch #horseshow #halfarabian #instahorse #sharethesaddlebred #arabianhorses #horseshowlife #farmlife #sporthorse #ranchlife #westernlifestyle #painthorse #englishhorse #photooftheday #photography #equestrian #equestrianlife #dressage #equinephotography #equestriansofinstagram

Fired Up Ranch 30.01.2021

Spring fever is just around the corner and we have lesson spots available! Contact us today for scheduling!

Fired Up Ranch 07.01.2021

We can fix that.

Fired Up Ranch 23.12.2020

Now that the holidays are over we're ready to see our 2021 foals Amira Jeana x Vegaz purebred, Shatzie x JRA Azul half arabian, Another Jama Party x TA Caarnot+/ half arabian. Babies start arriving end of March, contact us about purchasing your dream horse in utero today. #arabianhorse #horse #aha #pinto #americansaddlebred #horses #western #huntseat #saddleseat #ranch #horseshow #halfarabian #instahorse #sharethesaddlebred #arabianhorses #horseshowlife #farmlife #sporthorse #ranchlife #westernlifestyle #painthorse #englishhorse #photooftheday #photography #equestrian #equestrianlife #dressage #equinephotography #equine #equestriansofinstagram

Fired Up Ranch 06.11.2020

ÇA FAIT DRÔLEMENT DU BIEN ! Elles ont l’air d’apprécier... Merci à H&E Innovations pour cette vidéo.

Fired Up Ranch 27.10.2020

Prize list is out for the American Royal! This will be our last show of 2020 and kicks off the 2021 show season. We have already spoken to most of our riders but if you're wanting to go deadline is the 16th to let us know! https://www.americanroyal.com/equine/arabian-horse-show/

Fired Up Ranch 22.10.2020

Yes! Get started on your 2021 goals now.

Fired Up Ranch 13.10.2020

Put you legs on!

Fired Up Ranch 29.09.2020

Are you looking for a great activity to enroll your children in? Why not try horseback riding lessons? Fired Up Ranch has openings for riders of all ages and skill levels. Come enjoy our fun family atmosphere! We are a very hands on barn and love to soak up all the knowledge we can about caring for our amazing ponies and horses! Send us a message or give us a call for more information. 816-529-9195 Visit our website: www.firedupranch.com... We have several school horses available for on-site lease and half lease options. If you are looking to expand your love for horses, but aren't quite ready to jump in and buy, we have school horses/ponies as well.

Fired Up Ranch 13.09.2020

Mavis working on her glow up Shoot us a message about how you can add this gem to your barn. #arabianhorse #horse #aha #pinto #americansaddlebred #horses #western #huntseat #saddleseat #ranch #horseshow #halfarabian #instahorse #sharethesaddlebred #arabianhorses #horseshowlife #farmlife #sporthorse #ranchlife #westernlifestyle #painthorse #englishhorse #photooftheday #photography #equestrian #equestrianlife #dressage #equinephotography #equine #equestriansofinstagram

Fired Up Ranch 05.09.2020

This breeders note to a potential buyer. I love that you thought my horse was worth inquiring about. Thank you. After all the time, money, and effort that has gone into each and every horse it is beyond exciting to see other people appreciate the horses. However, please remember that these horses are mine. They are part of our family now, and if I have my way, even after they leave... we will simply adopt their new people as part of the family. I am in no way shape or for...m obligated to sell you any of my horses. If you inquire on horse, and refuse to tell me which trainer you work with, I will not sell you a horse. These animals are my responsibility, and if I sell them to an owner that sends them off to someone I believe will mistreat them... that is my fault. It has happened a time or two when people have switched trainers, and that is something that weighs on me every day. If I sell a horse, and I see a previously happy horse unhappy, it breaks my heart. If I sell a horse, and it goes from trainer to trainer never settling into a program, without any consistency, it breaks my heart. If I sell a horse that has a ton of potential, only to see it at a show looking less than it is, it breaks my heart. So you understand, to protect my heart is to protect my horses. I will not sell a horse just to have it sold. Yes, that is absolutely the smarter way to go about being a Breeder. Without a doubt. However it’s not something I am capable of doing, and something I am not obligated to do. I have found plenty of great people to sell horses to, that send them to good trainers and let me be part of their life. Please keep this in mind when inquiring on horses, not everyone is like this, but I know some others are. There have been a couple of times I have even been lied to about what the future held for that horse, and while I cannot control it, I can never sell a horse there again. If you think selling a horse means I no longer have to worry about it, think again. I stress about them constantly, hoping they are ok, hoping their trainers like them, hoping they are loved by at least one person that works with them daily. These are the things I loose sleep over, and really, I can’t afford to loose anymore sleep than I already do!! I can never thank the owners of the WA horses that keep in touch and let us continue to be apart of their lives enough. -originally written by Meagan Frieson Cannot agree more! Thank you to all our Fired Up Ranch buyer's for letting us stay in touch!

Fired Up Ranch 30.08.2020

I often read with the mass coverage of social media, how starting a horse as a 2-year-old or a coming 2-year-old will cripple them. "They will be done by the ...time they are 5." "Poor thing won't be able to walk at 10." Read that again incase you missed it, STARTING them as 2 and coming 2's, not racing them. This post is also not an article, its self written and presented on the outlook of the standard bred industry. We see lots of generic horse owners have their outside perspectives and opinions that showing them as late 3, 4, 5 and 6 year olds is too early. We read/hear you should wait to start them until they are at least 4 year olds. However, I beg to differ for many reasons the big one is science and proven facts. So sit down and take a read. The famous Wolff’s Law. Don't know what it is? Let me explain a little. It’s not an opinion, it’s not a hypothesis, it’s a law that’s been proven time and time again across all animals. Developed by the German anatomist Julius Wolff in the 19th century, states that bone in a healthy person or animal will adapt to the loads under which it is placed. Bone is constantly being formed and resorbed. Bone growth occurs when calcified matrix is formed faster than it is resorbed. Diameter growth occurs when matrix deposition occurs on the outer surface of the bone. Linear growth in long bones occurs at epiphyseal plates. These plates are between the epiphyses and diaphysis of the bone. Columns of chondrocytes on the epiphyseal side divide continuously causing this growth. As the collagen layer thickens, older collagen calcifies and older chondrocytes deteriorate. Osteoblasts lay down a bone matrix on top of a cartilage base. The shaft lengthens as new bone is added at the ends. As long as the epiphyseal plate is active, long bone growth continues. Bone will constantly remodel throughout life. It is necessary to tell the bone where the areas of stress are going to be so that it can remodel and strengthen in preparation for the event. Riding a horse in general as a 2 year old the bones start to feel where the weight is being applied and the body goes to work. Bone cells, in particular osteocytes, are extremely sensitive to mechanical stress, a quality that is linked to the process of mechanical adaptation. Bone remolding consists of two stages, resorption and formation. During resorption, old bone tissue is broken down and removed by special cells called osteoclasts. Once this has been done, bone formation begins and new bone tissue is laid down to replace the old. This task is performed by special cells called osteoblasts. Osteoblasts produce collagen, enzymes, and other proteins that make up the organic portion of the bone matrix. Vigorous exercise and healthful diet with adequate calcium, protein, and vitamin D are essential in achieving sufficient bone mass during the bone adaptation process. Just like muscle, bones respond to certain kinds of training by hypertrophying. By putting enormous stress on bones, cartilage inside bones may become bones, causing plates to close. The actual amount of growth in a bone depends upon the NEED for it. As force is applied, the bone will remodel itself to better handle the force. In a reining horses, for example, the bones of the legs and feet strengthen to handle the impact of stopping a turning. Although this will alter throughout life, the main effects will be seen during the period of growth, when remodeling is most evident. It is in this period that the actual length of a limb bone is being determined. The actual amount of growth in a bone depends upon the need for it. In order for horses to be strong throughout life they need the dense bones which only happens when exercise, weight and pressure is applied. In relation to soft tissue, Davis’s Law explains how soft tissue remolds itself according to imposed demands as well just like the bone. You can look at it this way, if you had a child and that child only roamed around the house until they were 15 and then you put a 30lb back pack on them and asked them to run to the other end of a football field they would break a bone or tear a ligament before they hit the 10-yard line. Why? Their bones are thin and weak along with many other things in their body. Their body leaned during their growing phase there was no pressure the bones only grew for house hold walking, not sports. I hear and see constantly people who wait to start their horses until they are 6,7, 10 and they think because they are mature now they are ready to be started, so because of their age they start them into a training program as if they have been rode their whole lives and what’s the first thing that happens? They go lame, they tear a suspensory, they break their coffin bone, they break their sesamoid bone, spiral fracture of the cannon bone, soft tissue damage. Why does this happen? Because they were the kid who lived in the house till they were 15 that had a backpack put on and where asked to run. Even with a slow start the chance of injury compared to one started as a 2-year-old are massive. There is significant study and proof of horses raced at the age of 2 compared to being raced at 4 sustained far less injuries to the 4 year olds who frequently came up lame and many sustained career ending injuries. Exercise, pressure and weight are major essential tools for bone growth. There are a few other things that are your best friend lets talk about those. Ever wonder why people are so high on the Theraplate? The vibrating platform works by triggering bones to generate tiny electric fields. These tiny currents may turn on genes that affect bone remodeling and growth. That’s when a series of experiments showed that bone is piezoelectric, meaning that bending or deforming its crystal structure creates local electric currents. These currents where quickly linked to bone growth in studies that seemed to explain why exercise strengthens bones(riding) and immobilization (being left in a pasture) weakens them. So, when you done with your ride for the day or a great way to warm up the body to exercise is to put them on the theraplate. Ultimately You can still sit and attempt to judge someone for starting a 2-year-old or a coming two-year-old but it all boils down to science and knowing what you’re doing. They are individuals after all. Some can take a lot of pressure and some cannot. Bone growth however no matter what comes from exercise and weight in order to building and strengthening the bones needed for that horse’s career path. And that starts at a young age not when they are 5. Along with this, many people's personal opinions most with no experience raising horses from conception to riding let alone starting horses automatically think a 2 year old being started means they go into some rigorous 5/6 day a week 45-60min work out. When In fact it's more around 2-3 days a week for 2-5 mins for the first 30-60 days in which the program goes to 3/4 days a week for 10-15 mins and steadily climbs from there. A horse being started as a 2 year old is not being rode as a horse with a year or two of riding on it. People like to ignore that or just don't know. That's again where each one is an individual and you have to listen to what they are capable of handling. Other things do play a large roll in a strong horse for a long healthy life such as nutrition. So let's break this down even more. Bones are a fascinating subject in general, from the wide general perspective we just covered down to the cellular level which can be genetic and what you are feeding them. There are two types of bones, compact and spongy. Compact being the dense hard bone and spongy being the cancellous bone which does not contain osteons. Then you have the four main principle types of bone cells in the tissue which are osteoprogenitor cells, osteoblasts, osteocytes and osteoclasts. Then you have an abundant of mineral salts, primarily hydroxyapatite, some calcium carbon at and most of all calcium phosphate. These salts are the framework of collagen fibers which is a process we have all heard called calcification. Mineral salts confer hardness on the bone while collagen fibers give the bone tensile strength (bend to a certain point and not break.) Now with compact bone you have something called osteons which is a community of cells called osteocytes, you have a central canal which houses the periosteal arteries and veins to feed and remove the waste and CO2 created by the cells within the bone. The nutrient artery sends branches into the central Haversian canals to provide for osteocytes. The arty continues into the medullae to supple blood for the marrow and osteocells via the epiphyseal artery. The periosteal arteries pass through the Volkman’s canal to multitude of vessels that supply the outer compact bone. Now while I’m sure this sounds like a bunch of crazy talk I want you to think about your feed program. Sweet feeds that are extremely high in sugar content, do what to the blood? They make the blood thicker and impair the flow of the blood. When the blood gets down to the periosteal arteries that feed the bone its nutrients needed for strong healthy bone growth they are minimized. Think of sucking water through a straw versus a thick milk shake. When the blood has a very limited flow through the canal to the outer layer of bone it can cause the bone to not fully develop leaving holes or as we dread to hear on a pre purchase exam an OCD. So when it comes down to growing strong healthy stock your number one concern should always be your feed program from in-utero to old age. Followed by them having the proper amount of exercise and weight to grow the density of the bones, tendons, and ligaments. Now yes, there are other things that can cause an OCD or cause one to not heal however nutrients in the bone is the biggest. Your feed program feeds into the overall strength and development of the skeleton from in-utero to the day they die. I have always been a big advocate for the equine athlete. After all we are the ones asking them to perform. Just remember every horse is an individual. You can cripple a long yearling or a 10 year old the same it's all in how you ride them, grow them and care for them. Just because one can handle it doesn't mean the other can wether that's structurally or mentally. Hope you enjoyed the read - Chelsea Schneider (Edit: This was a post to my personal wall, it's not professionally written or cited as it sure wasn't intended for the 800+ shares it has received so far. Therefor I listed some sources below) Sources: - Professor John Adams - Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 9th edition. 2009, Elsevier. - How bone remodeling works, Ryan Nguyen - American College of Veterinary Surgeons - College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences