Cameo Lipizzans - Horse Breeders
Our People - Cameo Lipizzans

Jenice Knechtel

Owner of Cameo Lipizzans

I came to riding as an adult. My parents thought I would "grow out of it", my husband feels if they had just bought me the #@*&! pony, he would not be sharing his life with 9 horses as the "reluctant farmer". I pinch myself daily because I still can't believe I have horses in my "backyard"!

I owned four "starter" horses, one at a time, that were patient and kind and let me make all those beginning mistakes one makes without killing myself! When the time came to replace my last horsey partner I felt I had the time to do it "once more". We had tried to make dressage horses out of a number of wonderful mounts. None of which were bred to do the job. We made great inroads, but it was always a up hill battle. With the option to start fresh we decided to look into breeds bred to do dressage. I'm only 5'2, and had already done the 16,3h. monster thing. I wanted a horse I could mount from the ground if necessary, and look like a balanced picture. Just for "fun" we looked into the Lipizzans, never for a moment thinking they would be a possibility, but when you dream, dream BIG! Much to our surprise, you CAN buy a Lipizzan. Infact they are still very reasonably priced. My partner in crime found her horse first. A bay, gelding. (Apollo is the Billy Crystal of Lipizzans!) My turn next.

I did not start out thinking "Stallion", I was thinking "Gelding", but life has often plopped me onto amazing detours. Mares were also not in the plans, but more on that later.

In a small ad, two Lipizzans were offered for sale. A hard luck story with soap opera script. Of course these horses had to come home to me! Plan "A" Geld, and Sell the "Extra" one. NOT. The young (for a Lipizzan) stallion was so sweet. He truly was a boy looking for a job, any job. Willing and funny, personality to spare, he seemed to say " Hi, your mine, now lets get to this riding thing!" The mare was broken. Heart and body. I do not know what her story is. I may not want to know. I do know she grieved for a year over the loss of her previous owner. I was allowed to be her caregiver. She had nothing more she was willing to give me.

Fast forward several years. Magic is going well under saddle. Cierra, Magic's sister, and I have come to an understanding, and developed a good level of trust. Cierra is a poster child of what NOT to do with a Lipizzan. Working with a trainer who had lots of experience with "broken" Lipizzans, and other breeds, we went back to the beginning with her. She was a dream to ride. Floating trot, and rocking horse canter. One only needed to think, and she responded. We had come so far. What ever happened to Cierra before I bought her can only be guessed at. She has what we call her "flashbacks". One day before our lesson I bent over to pick up a rock in the arena. With out warning she went up and over. Scrambling to her feet she stood there shaking, there was no horse behind the eyes of my frightened mare. It took several seconds for her to "come back". I had seen her "sunfish" before, we had made such progress we thought it was behind us. Riding her was not worth the risk to horse or rider. I never saddled her again. Cierra is broken..........but she gave us the beautiful filly Carmella, and now is retired. She will be cared for here as long as I can keep the quality on her life good and she is not stressed.

Life is funny, first I fall into two Lipizzans, neither one the gelding of my plans, then I run into a trainer (Stephanie Wagner ) who has worked with the breed, then I get invited to drive to San Francisco to ride with Karl Mikolka. ( see Karl Mikolka ) Karl has more knowledge of classical dressage and the Lipizzan than anyone in the US. And another twist in the "can you believe it ?" Stephanie worked with Karl for years! Blows me away!! So, the support for my horses is unbelievably deep!! Another "pinch" me moment! Lastly, my poor husband could not have known what he was getting into when he offered to move out of the "planned development" we had lived in for 18 years, and onto 5 acres. Engineer turned farmer is a story in itself.

Back to "Magic". He came with that barn name. I did not care for it. However he has lived up to the name, and more! He is my gelding in stallion attire.

Better behaved away from home than at home, and he is very good at home, I am always amazed at how he take things in stride. He lives in the barn with all his girls, his son, and the old gelding. I have had school field trips come to see the Lipizzans, and he has stood for all 45 little hands to pet the "White Stallion". He went to the Albany Horse Expo, and had flash pictures taken with children holding balloons. He shared a trailer with another young Lipizzan stallion, to S.F. and back without any of the studdy behavior one would expect. He allows me to take time off from riding, and happily picks up where we left off, without missing a beat. Magic.

E-mail: jenice@cameolipizzans.com




Emerald Equine Services
Paul Haffner, DVM

Dr. Paul Haffner, as you might guess, is an intricate part of our breeding program. Not only does he keep our horses up to date on all their vaccines, and routine "maintenance", his facility is set up to collect our stallion and inseminate the mares. Located two miles from Cameo Lipizzans, this state of the art facility can care for your mare from breeding soundness and insemination, to ultra sound pregnancy confirmation.

Now we are able to provide frozen semen.



Stephanie Wagner

I feel so lucky to be able to work with this wonderful lady. Stephanie worked with Karl Mikolka for many years before she settled here in the northwest. Her vast knowledge of the Lipizzan mind and temperament makes every lesson a "mini" clinic. It's not often one finds an instructor that can reinforce what you learned at a clinic exactly the way it was taught. Riding with Karl Mikolka several times a year, and with Stephanie on a weekly basis is a match made in "horsey heaven".





Karl MikolkaKarl Mikolka

Karl was born in Vienna, Austria to non-horsey parents who's efforts to interest him in a musical or banking career he spurned in favor of a job at the racetrack at the age of 17. Upon the suggestion of a friend he applied to the Spanish Riding School and was accepted into that venerable institution by Colonel Alois Podhajsky. The education of Mikolka the Eleve was assigned to Alfred Cerha, who was one of the few remaining riders from the "Old School." Cerha was the last link in an unbroken chain leading to Max Ritter von Weyrother, that famous Chief Rider responsible for bringing the teachings of de la Guérinière to the Spanish Riding School. Cerha had only two pupils who themselves went on to teach, Alois Podhajsky and Karl Mikolka. During his 14 years at the Spanish Riding School, Karl advanced through the ranks of Bereiteranwärter (student rider) to Bereiter (rider) to Oberbereiter (chief rider). In 1968 he made the momentous decision to leave the Spanish Riding School and accepted an offer to coach the Brazilian Olympic team.

When his contract with the Brazilian team expired, Karl took the opportunity to fulfill a childhood dream and came to the United States where he has lived and worked ever since. Like most professional horsemen, Karl's career has led him to many places in this country and through many changes, but his love of the graceful, intelligent Lipizzaners never diminished and Karl has spent many years training and teaching at Tempel Farms, working with the descendants of the Lipizzaners that Temple Smith imported at the end of World War II.

Karl and his wife, Lynn, make their home in Gloucester, Massachusettes. From this base Karl gives clinics throughout the country. When not on the road, Karl is busy writing a book and working on video projects.


Cameo Lipizzans - Horse Breeders
360 563-1035 | Cameo Lipizzans

info@cameolipizzans.com
7505 147th Avenue SE | Snohomish, Washington, USA 98290
The Horses | Sales | Breeding | About Us | Links | Home