THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT

                         THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT
                 Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, June 10, 1994                    TAG: 9406080160 
SECTION: CHESAPEAKE CLIPPER                     PAGE: 04    EDITION: FINAL  
SOURCE: BY JANELLE LA BOUVE, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: 940610                                 LENGTH: Medium 

TEEN TAKES TO HORSES, WINNING WAYS IN SHOWS

{LEAD} JUST FOUR YEARS ago, 14-year-old Elizabeth Mowery climbed astride a horse for the first time. But she is already competing in show horse competitions on a national level and winning her share of them.

Recently, she won championships in both the hunter pleasure and show hack divisions at the Old Dominion Arabian Horse Show in Richmond.

{REST} ``Elizabeth started here during summer camp four years ago when she was a 9-year-old,'' said Sue Cherry, owner of Cherry Point Stables in Suffolk. ``We taught her how to groom and tack.''

Just last year, she entered her first top-level Arabian show.

``She did well,'' said Cherry. So well, in fact, that she qualified for the Arabian Junior National competition.

``The unusual thing is that my daughter, who is 17, is her teacher. There's a good relationship between them.''

``Elizabeth has real natural potential as a rider,'' said Christy Cherry, Mowery's trainer. ``She has an air of confidence about herself when she goes into the ring. It makes a real pretty appearance.

``Elizabeth has done well. She's come a long way real fast, and I think she will be a trainer.''

In the Old Dominion Arabian Horse Show on May 7 and 8, Elizabeth won over trainers many times her age.

Just last weekend, she showed two horses at the Virginia Arabian Horse Association show in Richmond.

``Her horse, Appollo's Gold, placed second in the show hack division,'' said Sue Cherry, ``Then she showed her other horse, Magic Man. He placed second in the halter division.''

Every afternoon after school, Mowery can be found at the stables. She's there on Saturdays and Sundays, too, putting in 7 1/2-hour days caring for her three horses. Ziggy is a purebred quarter horse. Appollo's Gold is a purebred Arabian, and Magic Man is an Arabian saddlebred.

She brushes the horses regularly. Three times each week, she applies Skin-So-Soft lotion to keep their coats shiny. She clips them about every three weeks. On show day, they rate an extra clipping.

``Gold and Magic are the two show horses right now,'' Mowery said. ``I'm in the process of training Ziggy now.''

She teaches them to square their feet and arch their neck for the halter competition, showing off the tightness of their body muscles.

``The halter is gold and silver,'' she said. ``It's really pretty and fancy.''

For the saddle seat event, Mowery trains her horses to hold their head up high and to lift their feet high off the ground.

``When my horse and I give each other a good ride and we look nice together, that makes me feel real confident inside,'' she said.

Mowery, an eighth-grader at Western Branch Middle School, sometimes helps the younger children with their horses or answers their questions.

She plans a career in veterinary medicine. Although she hopes to limit her practice exclusively to horses, she enjoys other animals, too. Her family has a pet cocker spaniel named Hugger.

``Elizabeth's whole life is horses,'' said her mother, Sybil Mowery. ``She competes a lot during a year.''

She is a member of Equestrian 4-H Club and the Tri-City Horse Association, which includes members from Chesapeake, Portsmouth and Suffolk.

When she's not riding, Mowery likes spending time at the beach soaking up the sun and playing in the waves with her siblings Terry Lynn and Christopher. Her other interests include snow skiing and water skiing. She enjoys all types of music, and her favorite movie is ``Aladdin.''

When asked what one thing she would change about her life, the contented teenager couldn't think of anything. ``I like my life,'' she said.

by CNB