
QUARTER HORSES
5374 Bayview Rd, Langley, WA 98260
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Randy Thompson - 206-794-0832
Thompson Quarter Horses Article Published in the American Quarter Horse
Journal December 2007 Written by Michelle Schmidtke
RANDY THOMPSON,56, HAS DONE IT ALL, DONE IT
WELL-AND he has done it with the American Quarter Horse.
“ They’re the best looking horse around,” he said. “You can’t beat them for
brains, stamina, athleticism and over all enjoyment.”
From AQHA shows to the polo fields, Randy... has proven himself a superlative
horseman, versatile as the Quarter Horses he rides. He belongs to a dying breed
of horsemen who train horses from start to finish, in many disciplines, for the
sense of accomplishment it gives them to help a horse reach its full potential.
Randy has been a member of AQHA since 1971. He has lived on Whidbey Island in
the state of Washington his entire life, and it’s there he breeds and trains
Quarter Horses.
As a youth, Randy Rode Quarter Horses at the local 4-H shows. At 19, he helped
Ed Milam, a local horse breeder, finish his first AQHA Champion, Flit Knot, a
Flit Bar daughter. Ed wanted AQHA Champion so Thompson said he found the mare
for him, trained her and rode her in the shows.
In the 1970s, during time off from college. Randy continued to work for Ed and
apprenticed with the late John Condon a Trainer.
“Within three years, we produced three AQHA champions, and there were only 50 in
the entire state,” he said.
For the next three decades, Randy bred his own horses and competed in AQHA
shows.
“I did a little bit of everything,” he said, “halter, western pleasure, working
cow, reining, trail and cutting.” The awards that fill his home attest to his
success.
Trophies, plaques, high-point saddles and a coffee table display full of silver
buckles are scattered throughout his living room. Randy is especially proud of
his trophies from the Washington State Quarter Horse Association for high-point
halter and performance breeder in 1996 and 1997 and the WSQHA high-point halter
breeder in 1998.
Randy didn’t quit his day job to train horses full time. He gets up at 5 in the
morning, five days a week, catches a ferry and commutes to work in Seattle, 40
miles away. He works his horses rain or shine –and there’s lots of rain-when he
gets home from work or on the weekends.
“I like a fast, smart Quarter Horse,” Randy said. “Everything I do is fast.”
He said breeding racehorses to cutting horses produced the type of Quarter
Horses he prefers. Dash for Cash, Smart Little Lena, Sugar Bars, Driftwood, Jet
of Honor and On the Money Red rate as his favorite sires.
In 1998, at the top of his game, Randy left AQHA Shows behind.
He found the sport that suited his temperament when his sister-in-law and niece
introduced him to “motocross on horse back,” pattern racing events. They bought
two of Randy’s reining horses and used them for barrel racing and gaming. Randy
went to the shows with his relatives and was hooked.
That same year, Randy’s son, Trevor, joined the Yale University polo team. When
Randy visited his son at Yale, Randy said, he helped out in the barns and Trevor
turned him on to polo.
“I thought I could ride better than those bratty little children,” he said.
The next summer, when Trevor was home from college, they played polo together, a
sport that provided the perfect outlet for Randy’s abundant energy.
“When I started playing polo everyone told me that I would need Thoroughbreds,”
Randy said. “The thought was only Thoroughbreds had the endurance for the polo
field.”
But he had to find out for himself what made a good polo pony.
Randy bought a few Thoroughbreds because he was new to the game, but he also
turned his reining, barrel and gaming horses into polo ponies. He said the
Quarter Horses turned out to be just as fast as the Thoroughbreds on the polo
fields and had plenty of stamina.
“My best polo ponies are Quarter Horses,” Randy said. “Not only are they smart,
quick learners with explosive speed and agility; they’re naturals for it. They
follow the ball ride off your opponent as if working a cow.”
“Polo is expensive,” Randy said.
He sells 12 to 15 horses a year to support his “habit.” Some of the horses he
raises; others he obtains from the S2 herd.
Randy Allen and Steve Isaac, Thoroughbred and Quarter Horses breeders, run a
band of about 150 race-bred mares under the S2 brand, near Yakima, Washington.
They don’t ride any longer, so Randy breaks and trains their youngsters, keeps a
few and offers the rest for sale as barrel and polo prospects. His phone rings
regularly with request for one of his “stew” horses as a fellow barrel racer
calls them.
Keeping polo ponies fit is a big job and “they must be very fit,” said Randy.
During the off-season, teenage girls and sometimes an Argentinean pro helps get
the horses legged up. In the arena, the horses are long trotted and loped for at
least 30 minutes, five days a week. On weekends, they’re hauled to barrel races
and gaming shows where they get used to crowd and lean about control at speed.
Playing Polo requires fit riders as well as fit horses, and Randy works out
regularly to keep in shape. At an age when many if his peers are dreaming of a
leisurely trip south in a motor home, Randy can keep up with his 20-year-old
Argentinean pro. And while you wouldn’t mistake him for the 20-year-old, Randy
isn’t shy about taking off his shirt for a victory pose next to him.
Starting in June, Randy said, he plays polo every weekend until the season ends
in October. Her hauls nine horses for himself and a polo pro from Argentina. It
costs roughly $1,000.00 a weekend to play polo, he said, citing a long list of
expenses that include transportation costs (ferry and gas), polo pro salary,
groom, entry fees, meals out and beer (lots of beer).
“Anyone who plays polo is addicted; we don’t make good business decisions,”
Randy said. “there’s no logic to how we spend money or the risks we take.”
Despite the expenses and his many injuries from playing polo, when asked what
his future plans are, Randy says, “I want to move up to a six-chukker game next
season.”
This translates to more playing time, stiffer competition, a four-goal pro, 12
horses to keep fit and haul, and a much bigger rig – no Randy isn’t slowing up
anytime soon.