Deer Creek Arabians

Deer Creek Arabians AHA Discovery Farm, Arabian Horse breeding facility, family owned and operated in Northern California

Love Santa Barbara and Region 2 at the classic Earl Warren Showgrounds!
06/19/2026

Love Santa Barbara and Region 2 at the classic Earl Warren Showgrounds!

06/19/2026
06/13/2026
06/04/2026

We love seeing Lodi’s food scene get some well-deserved love.

A big thank you to Ligaya Malones and Travel + Leisure for shining a spotlight on the people and places making Lodi such a delicious, welcoming place to visit.

From morning pastries at to wood-fired pizza at Guantonio's relaxed wine country dining at Americana House at Appellation Lodi - Wine & Roses Resort and Spa, and fresh pasta and local flavors at Pietro's of Lodi this article captures what we love most about Lodi: great food, great wine, and zero pretense.

Come hungry, bring friends, and make yourself at home.

Read the article here: travelandleisure.com/lodi-california-wine-food-destination-11989457

05/21/2026

The night Lee Marvin won the Oscar, he gave half of it away to a horse.

Not to a director. Not to a studio. Not to another actor.

A horse.

It was 1966, and Marvin had just won Best Actor for Cat Ballou. Hollywood expected the usual polished speech. Instead, he looked out at the room and said, “I think half of this belongs to a horse somewhere out in the San Fernando Valley.”

The crowd laughed because it sounded like a joke.

But anyone who has ever trusted a good horse knows it was something closer to a thank-you.

That horse was Smoky, a gray gelding who played Marvin’s mount in the film. On screen, Marvin was Kid Shelleen, a washed-up, whiskey-soaked gunslinger who could barely stay in the saddle. He slouched, swayed, leaned, slipped, and rode like a man who had lost every argument with balance.

But Smoky never quit him.

That is the part horse people notice.

A horse does not naturally enjoy a rider who is loose, crooked, unpredictable, and hanging off one side. A horse feels every shift in the saddle. Every nervous breath. Every stiff hand. Every awkward lean. If the rider is wrong, the horse knows before anyone watching does.

And Marvin’s job was to ride wrong.

Smoky’s job was to make it safe, believable, and funny.

He leaned with Marvin. He waited on him. He carried the timing of the scene as much as the man in the saddle did. When Marvin flopped, Smoky adjusted. When Marvin swayed, Smoky stayed. When the joke depended on a horse standing quietly beneath a human pretending to fall apart, Smoky held the whole thing together.

That kind of performance is not just training.

It is trust.

A trainer can teach cues. A director can call action. A camera can catch the moment. But a horse still has to decide, over and over again, that the person on his back is worth staying with.

Smoky stayed with Lee Marvin.

And maybe that meant more to Marvin than people realized.

Before Hollywood knew his name, Marvin had been a young Marine in World War II. He was badly wounded at Saipan, spent more than a year recovering, and carried pain for the rest of his life. He knew what it meant for a body to betray you. He knew what it meant to act steady when you were not.

So when he climbed onto Smoky and played a man who could barely hold himself together, there was probably more truth in that saddle than comedy.

The audience saw a drunk cowboy.

Smoky felt the man.

That is what horses do.

They do not care what role you are playing. They do not care if the crowd laughs. They do not care if your name is on a movie poster. They feel what is real underneath the performance.

Smoky carried a character.

But he also carried Lee Marvin.

And Marvin, to his credit, knew the difference.

That is why his Oscar speech still matters. Not because it was funny, although it was. Not because it was charming, although it was that too. It matters because, for one rare moment, Hollywood’s brightest spotlight landed on the quietest partner in the story.

A gray gelding who never read a script.

Never chased applause.

Never understood awards.

But still gave an actor something every horseman understands.

Timing.

Trust.

Forgiveness.

And a steady place to fall apart without actually falling.

Lee Marvin died in 1987 and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. His headstone does not mention the Oscar, the movies, or the fame. Just his name, his rank, the Marine Corps, and World War II.

But somewhere in those old scenes from Cat Ballou, Smoky is still there beneath him.

Patient.

Funny.

Steady.

Carrying the joke.

Carrying the man.

And, just like Marvin said, carrying half the Oscar.

Complimentary Mimosas are always great at the DAHA Brookside Show !
05/17/2026

Complimentary Mimosas are always great at the DAHA Brookside Show !

05/17/2026

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Wilton, CA
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