Eitan Beth-Halachmy will be in Parker, Colorado for a horsemanship clinic. 

July 16, 17, 18 2010                   

Sunrise Morgans
11875 Delbert Road
Parker, Colorado  80138
 edibella@aol.com

303-841-5210

Class lesson---Friday, Saturday, Sunday mornings from 9AM to 11:30AM

This format is perfect for a horse /rider combination who like to watch and learn and as well as ride.  There is something special about working with other horses and riders. This format has been very successful in past clinics. Three mornings of lessons---$300

Private and Semi-Private lessons---Friday, Saturday and Sunday afternoons starting at 1PM

            Private Lesson---$100

            Semi-Private---$75 per person---$150 total

Stabling is available next door to Sunrise Morgans at Squires Large Animal Clinic.  Feed, grass and/alfalfa hay, as well as first bedding is provided.  You will clean you own stall and strip the stall when you leave.  A Negative Coggins is required.

We welcome auditors and suggest that you bring your own chair.  The fee is $25 per day for both morning and afternoon sessions.  If you are enrolled in any class, private or semi-private lesson, you are welcome to audit the entire day of your lesson or to audit all three days if you are in the morning group lesson at no charge.

Hospitality---$50 per day or $125 for three days

Hospitality includes all day beverages and snacks, lunch each day and dinner and cocktails on Friday and Saturday evenings.   Enjoy some of Eitan’s favorite menus in a lovely setting; meet new friends and enjoy old friends.  Ladd Squires, DVM will do a presentation on Form to Function; he will use several horses to illustrate skeletal structure.  Todd Gosnell, master farrier, will provide a demonstration of computer assisted gait analysis.  Your hospitality fee is a tax deductible donation to the AMHA Educational Trust which funds a variety of activities which educate the public about the Morgan horse.

“I feel in my life I have had the best of both worlds. My early education in horsemanship was of the classical nature. Lots of discipline and dressage taught by a Hungarian Cavalry Officer. He was strict but a horseman of the highest caliber. He was one of the big influences in my life and the other was the American Cowboy.

As a young boy in Israel, the first time I saw a western on the silver screen I knew where I had to go and what I wanted to be. It has been a long journey full of adventure, triumphs and yes, setbacks. Throughout it there have always been horses.

It is my goal to teach and share with others what my horses have taught me about life and about being a horseman.”  Eitan

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Contact Us

Ellen DiBella 
Parker, CO
303-841-5210
Email: EDiBella@aol.com