| Road to the Horse™ Challengers Westfall and Cox to Appear at Rocky Mountain Horse Expo, March 9-11 |
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| Friday, 26 January 2007 | |
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Direct from this year’s Road to the Horse™, colt-starting challengers Chris Cox and Stacy Westfall will appear together in two special ticketed performances at the 2007 Rocky Mountain Horse Expo in Denver. Plan now to attend both events!
Each performance will include presentations by the horsemen separately as well as time for them to work together. Enjoy Chris Cox is sponsored at the Horse Expo by TR3™ Rake. “Building confidence through knowledge” describes the heart of Chris Cox’s approach to creating trust between horse and rider. “Building a proper and thorough foundation means the difference between a horse that trusts its rider and responds as a willing partner,” Chris says, “and one that makes teamwork between horse and rider an impossible goal.” Bringing the right knowledge to horsemen is what Chris Cox is all about. 2006 Road to the Horse™ Champion Stacy Westfall is presented by Design Steel Systems, LLC. Winner of all six freestyle reining Tickets are on sale now. Visit the website at www.RockyMountainHorseExpo.com, get them at any King Soopers, contact Tickets West, or buy them right at the door. The special event ticket price of $25 ($20 student/senior) includes admission to the full day of great features at the Rocky Mountain Horse Expo. For more information and the daily schedules go to www.RockyMountainHorseExpo or call (303) 292-4981. Stacy Westfall and Chris Cox—two excellent reasons to come to the 2007 Rocky Mountain Horse Expo, happening March 9-11 at the National Western Complex in Denver. |
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lively commentary at both performances by Rick Lamb, of RFD-TV/radio’s “The Horse Show.” Plus, Chris and Stacy will make individual appearances on all three days, included in the regular admission to the full Horse Expo program, March 9-11. This is an unbeatable opportunity to pick up the best horsemanship advice from two great champions.
championships she entered in 2006, Stacy believes the horse should feel like an extension of the rider’s body. She calls her method “the direction you and your horse have been looking for,” and apparently she’s got it right—Stacy is known for her seemingly effortless performances without a bridle, and sometimes without a saddle as well.


