| "I've
learned something from every person and every horse
I've ever met, and in every place I've traveled." |
That
single statement quite nicely sums up the way Mike Kevil
thinks. Often referred to as "the
thinking person's cowboy," Mike has made a remarkable
career observing, identifying, reasoning things through,
then teaching what he's learned to both horses and their
owners.
Before the modern day term "Horse
Whisperer" and the training practices that terminology
denotes came into vogue, Mike was a master practitioner
of this art. His style of patient, steady training, with
an emphasis on understanding the horse, rather than forcing
it to blindly yield, sets him in a class by himself. Today,
in a world where more and more horse trainers and amateur
enthusiasts are using methods similar to Mike's, this horseman
remains at the head of the class, beside the very best in
his field.
Born
in Arizona in 1953, Mike was a rodeo competitor during high
school. He earned a college scholarship, but only stayed
in school for a semester and a half because, "I
was having more fun out of school than in
so I quit
and headed for Colorado." Although he regrets not
staying in college for a formal education, Mike's travels
and the acquaintances he's made along the way have provided
him with valuable learning experiences.
In the early 1970's following stints as a guide and outfitter
in the Colorado Rockies and a colt starter and exercise
rider for an Idaho based racehorse trainer, Mike returned
to Arizona to look for a job
- "doing
anything. I was flat broke. One day a friend told me about
a guy who needed a horse started. I guess he thought I did
an all right job, cause he recommended me to his neighbor.
Pretty soon I was riding three horses at $5.00 a head, every
day. It was the first time in a couple of months I'd been
able to feed myself. I thought it was a pretty good way
to make a living so I put an ad in the paper to get more
horses." Before long, Mike had to cancel the ad. He
had more horses than he could ride. "I kept my saddle
in my pickup all the time. I didn't have a place of my own,
so I made house calls. I started horses in back yards, barbed-wire
arenas, open desert, plowed fields . . . whatever was available."
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This horse has learned to stand quietly
In
the winter of 1976, Mike went to work starting colts for
Gene LaCroix (for many years the leading trainer of Arabian
horses in the world). From there, he moved on to starting
colts for two legendary cutting horse trainers, first,
Shorty Freeman, then Matlock Rose.
Following
those experiences, Mike went into business for himself,
primarily starting colts for top trainers including his
former employers and adding the likes of Don Dodge and Al
Dunning. After two years, Mike was able to buy his own facility
near Cave Creek, Arizona. Since then the only thing that
has kept his business from growing too big to handle is
Mike's self-control and the same good sense about business
that he has about horses.
Today,
although Mike rides a lot of horses for individual owners,
seventyfive percent of his business still comes from other
trainers who send him colts to start and problem horses
to fix. The types of horses that Mike rides cover the spectrum.
It's not unusual for him to step off an Arabian park horse,
then onto a rope horse to heel a few steers, then to a young
cutter or reiner that some top trainer thinks has great
enough potential to warrant being started by Mike.
Read
More About Mike........Continued >>
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