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There’s a lot to like about Sweet Lou as a sire – his racing credentials are fantastic, he has a huge popular following, he’s good looking and he also brings a different pedigree with him from those we have had recently, and therefore offers some outcross options that could appeal.

The changing tides of breeding means we get almost a glut of some bloodlines (both sire lines and maternal lines) over a short space of time and a lack of others. Whereas our breeding mares stay constant for longer, they are stuck with their pedigree and still have to match well with the range of sires on offer.

But new lines diving into the pool sometimes create a timely splash.

Woodlands Stud has had a great eye for the moment, the ability to sense a wave and catch it while others might still be looking at the horizon.

So good on them for reversing the love affair with Western Hanover/Western Ideal sire lines and Direct Scooter/Jate Lobell/Artsplace maternal lines, and come up with something very different.

The top half of his pedigree

Sweet Lou. He’s from the Artsplace siring line, which is currently really only represented commercially here by Art Major and Sportswriter, with Grinfromeartoear and his sons in minor supporting role. Interestingly with Sweet Lou the Artsplace sire line is coming via Artiscape who is a sire we tried lightly and couldn’t relate to much in New Zealand (a bit better in Australia and still commerical in North America) in spite of him having a pedigree that would have suited our mares. At the time I think many breeders found the smaller lighter types he often produced just not what buyers wanted, regardless of their potential ability, and we quickly lost the faith.

The immediate sire of Sweet Lou is Yankee Cruiser who is even less familiar to us – he was a very consistent race performer finishing on the board in 26 of 35 career starts, winning $1,150,123. He established his lifetime mark of 1:49.3s in winning the $1 million North America Cup. But he was probably one of those very good performers that was slightly off the radar downunder. Sweet Lou and the filly Darena Hanover are by far his best performers to date, but he’s no slug in his Ohio siring barn.  He had two yearlings in the very recent Lexington Sale, a colt who sold for a good $42,000 and a filly who went for just $10,000. Yankee Cruiser’s damsire is Jate Lobell whose presence as an “engine room” damsire is now almost a requirement of top pedigrees, and back further in Yankee Cruiser’s maternal line the presence of Poplar Byrd, who also pops up in the pedigree of Artiscape.

The bottom half of his pedigree

So now a look at Sweet Lou’s maternal line – it is one of those that has a good foundation and seems to be getting better, but it still flies well below the highly commercial, well known families and branches like Golden Miss, K Nora, Romola Hal, Breath O Spring et al. On his damsire line the mares all have really good records for their day, not spectacular perhaps, but solid times and really good earnings.

Starting with his damsire line – his dam Sweet Future is a Falcon’s Future mare. So he brings the familiar Falcon Seelster elements in here, but Falcon Future’s damline has not really kicked on apart from his great-grandam Dell Siskiyou’s daughter Gogo Playtime, who turned out to also be the great-grandam of No Nukes and TMI. Many other branches have been a lot weaker. Of course if you go back further than Dell Siskiyou, you see Falcon Future’s maternal line is the family of Roya McKinney/Princess Royal and then Estabella and Jessie Pepper.

Sweet Lou’s grandam Sweet Darhlin was a well-performed race filly by Nero. Again, Nero is not a sire that we find much in our siring line or mare’s lines these days. Yet he brings a lot to the party, including another dose of Poplar Byrd and a strong liking for Adios blood. By the by, there is a branch of Nero’s family that we do know well, and that is through his half sister Skipper’s Romance. Amongst the descendants in New Zealand are the families of Smooth Ice (dam of Classy Filly) and also Sokys Legend (dam of Bit Of A Legend). Nero was pretty much an outcross sire himself, the two closest double ups were a 4×4 to Volomite and 4×4 to Billy Direct. One of his sons, Nero’s B B stood here as a sire for 5 years from 1984 and left over 600 live foals, some of the best being Bee Bee Cee, Neroship, Nevermore and Nutwood. But would I see Nero B B being relevant to which mare I put to Sweet Lou? To be honest its quite a long bow to draw.

Sweet Lou’s great-grandam Fly Fly Darhlin is a daughter of Fly Fly Byrd who is a siring son of Poplar Byrd. Yes, that’s the fourth link to Poplar Byrd in Sweet Lou’s pedigree.*see section below

Further back on his bottom maternal line, Sweet Lou traces to a family of consistently good trotters including Morning Song, a daughter of Victory Song. Of Morning Song’s daughters Eve Barmin and Dolly Barmin, Dolly Barmin has led to Sweet Lou and his very good half-brother Bettor Sweet (and several other good performers), while Eve Barmin’s line led to I Am A Fool (the brilliant Life Sign colt who won over a million dollars) and his good half brother Cam’s Fool – both of whom were tried as sires but with little success). Again Classic Families is a great way to expose the legacy of these branches, remembering that it is still unfolding.

Poplar Byrd, Adios and Volomite

As we’ve seen Poplar Byrd occurs 4 times in Sweet Lou’s pedigree, twice in Yankee Cruiser’s pedigree, as the sire of a sire (Bye Bye Byrd) and as a damsire, and then twice in Sweet Future’s pedigree, again as a sire of a sire (Fly Fly Byrd) and as a damsire. Significant? I don’t know, but an example of how Sweet Lou brings back some names we haven’t seen for a while in the extended pedigrees of our sires.

There is a sire/damsire influence in New Zealand that I think would be well worth considering if you can find him on the maternal line of your mare – and that is Able Bye Bye. Like Nero, he was only available in New Zealand for 5 years, in his case from 1974, and the result was just 124 live foals.

Able Bye Bye’s pedigree was to die for. He was the son of Bye Bye Byrd (therefore grandson of Poplar Byrd) and his dam was Adioo Time (by Adios from On Time, who is a daughter of Volmite and the great mare Nedda Guy). Bye Bye Byrd’s dam is Adieu, the full sister to Adios. So what you have is a pedigree full of the elements that Sweet Lou’s back story either contains or loves.

Interesting!

So lets track down some of Able Bye Bye’s female descendants who might be in the category of broodmare….and one that springs out at me is Cathy’s Flybye (Caprock x Bye Bye Cathy – Able Bye Bye). Why is that name familiar? Because just recently her Tintin In America filly American Fly Bye put together two eye-catching wins at my local Cambridge track, and the mare also has the nice mare Ideal Fye Bye by American Ideal, and has since gone back to American Ideal. Look at Cathy’s Flybye’s pedigree – she’s a Caprock mare so that brings in Jate Lobell again, and more importantly another link to On Time via Good Time. She’s clicked well with Tintin In America who has quite a few of the elements in Falcon’s Future’s pedigree including Falcon Seelster, Shadow Wave and Most Happy Fella.

The female lines from Able Bye Bye mare Princess Nandina could be another quality opportunity for Sweet Lou. Flight Of Fantasy (Island Fantasy x Twice As Fine – New York Motoring) would also connect with Sweet Lou’s sire’s Artiscape influence, via the New York Motoring/Happy Motoring full brothers, although that is quite a stretch. Dashoffinewine is a Julius Caesar daughter of Twice As Fine and, because Julius Caesar is a full bro to Christian Cullen, they both carry Volomite through Direct Scooter and Billy Direct through Tar Heel, as well as a whole of of other great stuff like Bo Scots Chip (their damsire) carrying Adios and Billy Direct – but also Meadow Paige (Bye Bye Byrd x Beatrice Adios), a sire I’d never heard of who stood here 1977/8 for about 50 live foals and not much for history that I can find, but let me know because I have only done a quick scan.

The Able Bye Bye mare Tabella Beth has a dynasty which may also be worth a look in this regard – particular those from her Sokys Atom daughter Soky’s Sunday who adds in the extra interest of the Adios Vic/Miss Creedabelle connection which has an echo in Sweet Lou’s sire’s maternal line.

There will be many others with potential – and of course just the sheer ability to outcross by bringing a different pedigree to the table. In the end, hindsight will tell us what works or not. Breeders can’t wait that long, we take a risk, we decide what suits our mares. Sweet Lou will stand or fall by what he does on the track via what mares he gets.

But I do wish him well, and partly because he (and Woodlands Stud) have presented something just a bit different. They are obviously pushing the cross with Bettor’s Delight – but I’d love to hear from blog readers why they think that is a good match, pedigree wise or on type. Interested to gather those views before we all become wise after the fact.

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Late September……I’m very conscious of the big races on at the moment – Little Brown Jug, for instance – and the big name horses starting to race here as we move into NZ Cup preparation time.

But on a personal level, I am incredibly excited about the racing tonight at Cambridge and Addington. Because there are a cluster of horses racing tonight that I have a connection to, and whose careers I follow with a lot of interest as a very small-time breeder.

There’s American Flybye, a Tintin In America filly in race 4 at Cambridge, who has one win for one start and lots of ability but a tricky draw. Then in the trot later in the evening, there’s Franco Nadal, the first foal of my “new” mare Nostalgic Franco – he’s a 7-win 8yo trotter with pure pacing breeding, having his first start after a long break. And then in the final race at Cambridge, Zenterfold’s Real Desire son Thephantomtollbooth has drawn 1 of the second row and will probably need the run. He’s grown into a big boy and is still learning the trade, but will have strengthend up as a 3yo now.

Down at Addington Race 8 will have me glued to the TV, watching Nerida Franco (a half sister to Nostalgic Franco) and Amazon Lily (my mare The Blue Lotus’ first foal) compete in the Pinlea Farms Fillies and Mares Mobile Pace.

The race before is the big one of the night, and my interest lies with Bit Of A Legend, as I have co-bred a Tintin In America filly from his half sister A Legend.

There are many others I’ll follow for other reasons – Articulight is bred and owned by blog friend Brian Cowley. Freedom Fighter is bred by my friend Brian West. And in race 2 at Cambridge Overstayer is the trotter who gave my Hawaiian friends a sulky experience a couple of weeks ago, thanks to trainer David Marshall…

It’s going to be a great night of racing, for all sorts of reasons. Enjoy!

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Kiely Buttell

Kiely Buttell

It is strange but true that one of the most significant loses for harness racing breeders is someone who (I’m not 100% sure of my facts here, but 99% sure) has not bred a single race horse.

Kiely Buttell has been an excellent executive manager for New Zealand Standardbred Breeders Association for several years, and has played a key part in shaping it – more than what she may be given credit for. Having come into the industry with no knowledge of it but being open and very well organised, she became a friendly and very helpful contact for many who otherwise find the “old boys network” of the NZSBA a little hard to engage with.

One of my early encounters with Kiely was when Kym Kearns and I took  her around our horses at “feed out time” and introduced her to our scattered paddocks across Cambridge, including visiting Zenterfold for a photo in a leased paddock in Leamington, and up the hills in our trusty Toyota Hilux, with Kiely and friend hanging on in the ute’s tray as we checked out some youngsters in a beg/borrowed paddock across a nearby farm.

I have nothing but admiration for Kiely. She is intelligent, smart, thoughtful and a lovely person to deal with. A breath of fresh air in a rather stuffy room.

It is a huge loss for NZSBA. I think they know that. And I can only hope they have an eye for someone for the job who is as able as she is, and as capable of balancing out the rather resistant, precious and pompous style that NZSBA can present without the influence of someone like Kiely.

View the statement by Kiely and the call for applicants here

 

 

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I’ll be glued to Trackside TV for the  2yo colts and geldings semi-final at about 9pm tonight NZ Time.

Very nice field, and a tough ask for Zee Dana (Tintin In America x Zwish, Dave Kennedy the breeder) – drawn wide, top 2yos drawn inside.

I remember when Tintin was racing as a 2yo and Mick Guerin referred to him as a “one trick pony” because as a young horse he appeared to be less a tough staying type and more a “use his exceptional speed” type.

But looking back through Tintin’s 2yo racing replays I see much more than that.

As a really keen horse, a strong willed horse, part of his education thanks to Geoffrey Small and David Butcher  was to make him more versatile – to lead, to take a trail or even (as in the 2yo Sires Stakes Final) take three back, but have the ability to finish it off from wherever he was when they turned for home.

His own Breeders Crown was won that way too.

I see a lot of that reflected in Zee Dana’s training and racing to date. He has the ability and speed to cross and lead from almost anywhere, but he’s also been allowed to relax and sit in a trail, to learn patience and then making the ultimate effort. It is not easy for a young horse to do, when all they really want is to run and to win.

So fingers crossed tonight, as this is a very good field for a semi final. I’m cheering for him and his owners. To make it to the finals would be brilliant.

I’m also cheering for Tintin, because he’s got an x factor (always had), and he’s overcoming some big odds as a “less commercial sire” to put up some very classy success stories from his first crop to race.

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Michele Carson is a long-time breeder, for many years in partnership with Tony Milina, and is one of the few who try to survive without an additional income. She describes herself as “crazy” for trying but it is a passion that endures and by focusing on quality she has had a good degree of success. Again, her word for it is “lucky” and while that is true of how she and Tony came to get the founding mare Cinnamon Toast, it is much more than luck that grabs an opportunity and builds it into a successful family.

While Michele is still breeding from that family, she also has added a few more mares along the way including Black And Royal (by Elsu) one of the last foals of Spirit Of Venus; the trotting mare Strapless (by Straphanger); and more recent purchases being: the Christian Cullen mares Panforte (the dam of Grumpy Possum racing successfully as Ima Grumpy Possum in Australia) and Divine (who is a daughter of the very good broodmare Sokys Sunday). Michele is also now a co-owner the trotting mare Aspiring Monarch (who is an unraced full sister to Royal Aspirations).

Her cornerstone broodmare has been Toast Of New York, a New York Motoring daughter of Cinnamon Toast, and subsequently her two daughters Bury My Heart and Follow My Heart – and potentially the youngest daughter Show A Heart, currently a small but lovely striding 2yo by Big Jim.

Of those, Bury My Heart was very successful on the racetrack and has been a gem in the breeding barn to date, producing the very good Texican as her first foal.

Bury My Heart is an In The Pocket mare, and Michele has stuck to the In The Pocket cross with Bettor’s Delight for the next four foals – and the mare is due to give foal late this season to the sire again before possibly trying Somebeachsomewhere.

Texican is now doing his racing in North America – and just last weekend added another 1st to his list, bringing his total earnings to $549,104, a best time of 1:50.3 and 24 wins. He is competitive in very good quality fields, and has developed from a winning 2yo in New Zealand to a successful all aged pacer in the United States.

Texican N takes personal best in 2014

Texican N takes personal best in 2014

Here is the write-up of his latest win from Harness Racing Update newsletter:

Texican N, from post position No. 3, won the weekly pacing feature. Sitting pocketed to 17-10 choice Michael’s Power (Bartlett), he then held off a three-hole The Real One (Pat Lachance) by a nose in 1:52.3. The favorite decided to retake from the eventual winner (:27, :56.2, 1:24.4) passing the first substation, but faced in the lane. Frankie’s Dragon (Sears), Michael’s Power and Take it Back Terry (Brennan) came away with the lesserloot. For second choice Texican N, a 7-year-old Down Under Bettor’s Delight gelding trained by Peter Tritton (three winners Saturday) for owner Harry von Knoblauch, it was his fourth win in 22 ’15 tries.

1-Texican N (g, 7, Bettor’s Delight–Bury My Heart, by In
The Pocket) O-Harry von Knoblauch. B-Mrs M Carson, NZ.
T-Peter Tritton. D-Eric Carlson, $24,000, Lifetime Record:
88-24-16-10, $549,104.

The mare’s 2010 foal was a compact but attractive full brother to Texican who went through the yearling sale ring as “Derringer” and sold for $22,500 but was immediately renamed Strawberry Heart by owner Strawberry Pastoral Ltd. He has ended up in Australia after looking like he had early potential but hasn’t gone on with it.

Michele didn’t give up on the mare or the name! After missing to Art Major, she sent the mare back to Bettor’s Delight for another colt – and named him Derringer once again. A Derringer is the pistol that the wilder ladies of the West used to hide in their knickers and garters in case of trouble! The colt looks promising, having sold for $75,000 at the 2014 yearling sales, qualified as a 2yo and having just three starts for a 2nd for trainer Mark Jones – the last start was an eye-catching 4th at Addington yesterday (Friday 8 August 2015) where he was badly checked and ran on very well.

The latest foal from Bury My Heart is the Bettor’s Delight filly Capture My Heart who is entered for the 2016 yearling sales at this stage, but it will depend on what the mare foals this season.

Toast Of New York’s daughter Follow My Heart, a 4yo Mach Three mare, has just started on a breeding career and is in foal to Betterthancheddar – a son of Better’s Delight from a Hall Of Fame mare Lady Ashlee Ann.

Another daughter, Toast To Cullen, is a broodmare for Biddlecombe Equine Ltd and has done a very solid job so far.

Toast Of New York’s last foal is a colt by Sir Lincoln who has just turned a yearling and is a nice attractive type, Michele says.

Toast Of New York is a 24yo and in great nick – the dam of 14 registered foals, and now enjoying her retirement.

Michele’s trotting mare Strapless was on the market briefly with a Angus Hall foal at foot, but Michele retained them in the end and the result is the talented Angus Bolt. Michele has since bred the mare twice to Majestic Son.

She has also bred and sold a Majestic Son filly  from trotting broodmare Aspiring Monarch, and the mare is back in foal to the same sire for co-owner Shane Hayes – on an alternate foals breeding arrangement.

Black And Royal is another broodmare Michele has – although she may look to moving her on in future – and was one of the first Elsu mares to have a yearling in the sales. That was the Mach Three gelding Jack Black who has 5 wins to date in Australia. Since then there is a 4yo Christian Cullen gelding Hard N Fast who was bought  for $40,000 by Paul Court and has been at workouts and trials as a 3yo but yet to get to the races.

Game Of Thrones filly by Christian Cullen from Black And Royal

Game Of Thrones filly by Christian Cullen from Black And Royal

This year her Christian Cullen filly Game Of Thrones sold for $25,000 at the yearling sale to Australian interests. A Well Said colt was sold to John Street for $10,000 at this year’s weanling sale, and the mare is foaling this season to Raging Bull, a horse that Michele saw in the flesh as a racehorse and regards as one of the finest looking horses she has seen.

It’s not all plain sailing as a breeder, and Michele can vouch for that.   She lost four foals in one year in 2013, all potentially very commercial including a Somebeachsomewhere foal from Bury My Heart. The emotional and financial hit was hard, and the reasons were random and varied – two born dead, one with a twisted leg and one with an inoperable growth. So the highs of successful results are always tempered by others that are just average and some that are simply tragic.

Still, she keeps going.

As an industry, we are lucky to have “crazy” people like Michele Carson who are very astute and passionate breeders and who provide quality racehorses year after year.

Toast to you, Michele!

 

 

 

 

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Great to see a convincing win from Wick tonight. The Panspacificflight x On The Double 3yo gelding looked like the penny is really dropping. And a bold drive by John Dunn to take the initiative. Congrats to the owner and breeder I.L. Bennett.

I often talk about horse pedigrees and breeding. But for me Wick is the meeting point of two lines of genealogy – one that involves horses, particularly Panspacificflight (a sire I have flagged up many times previously) but also my own pedigree.

Wick is the place where my Scottish ancestors came from.

Wick

Wick, Scotland – on a fine day

Wick is in the north of Scotland, and where my own maternal line lived before their journey to New Zealand.

Tracing my own breeding back, I visited Wick on a trip from New Zealand almost 20 years ago, and I remember it vividly. Icy cold wind, the smell of salty sea and the scorch of a strong whiskey going down my gullet.

It was a part of the journey me and my partner at the time took to a visit our roots. She was following her Nordic/Viking tracks across Scandanavia to north Scotland and Ireland, and I was following my roots to Scotland. We ended up in the Orkney Isles,  following ancestrial connections, stone circles and puffins. Very, very cold but pretty cool.

I could understand why my ancestors left Wick. They had been pushed into to herring fishing ports like this by the complex history of Scotland and England conflicts and land grabs, a deed later repeated when both English and Scottish migrants arrived in New Zealand, a British colony, and did much the same to the indigenous Maori people.

Visiting Wick’s older town, and particularly Pultneytown, was my main interest – tightly close brick buildings crammed into narrow winding up-and-down streets, and of course the Old Pultney whisky distillery – yes, single malt whiskey was another love of mine that dissected nicely with family connections.

But the distillery was closed on the cold weekend day we came into Wick, as was much of the town. We had fish and chips (imported fish from Norway) from the chippy down at the wharf which was called Bremners Fish Shop (my family name), and we sat in the rental  car with the heater on, eating the chips and drinking the whiskey we had bought elsewhere, just trying to keep warm.

All of that comes back in a rush when I saw Wick cross the line tonight for a really good win, a lovely drive.

Yes, I had a wee bet on it, but being from Scottish heritage not a big one lol

Also was cheering for Panspacificflight and those who have had faith in him as a sire. Really adding value, great breeding.

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Below is the proposed new scheme currently out for consultation for members of New Zealand Standardbred Breeders Assn, closing 31 July 2015. The proposal was developed by the North Island branch of the association. The intention is good, but the scheme is diverting scarce funds into something that does not reward breeders and breeding success.

I’ve mentioned before my concerns about the way proposals like this are developed and decisions made. There are three issues I want to raise (independently of the merits of this particular proposal).

  1. Proposals seem to arise and be considered in isolation. There seems to be no effort to get agreement on the overall objectives (criteria) and then to canvas some options. This ad hoc approach to significant commitments means we end up with a mix of activities that do not hang together well, and the reasons for pursuing one and not others is not transparent.
  2. Consultation is not a forte of the NZSBA. A significant proposal like this would ideally have been a feature of presentations/discussion at the breeders forum earlier this year, but it was hardly mentioned. When the issue of breeders credits/bonuses was raised in a short “brainstorm” session, the session facilitator (John Mooney) put it aside. The longest topic for discussion at the forum was on conditioning of races – a topic of interest more to owners than breeders. Even the development of the proposal by the North Island Branch seems to have been done very much “in house”. I understand that I am a member of that branch (as a member of  NZSBA) but I am unaware of any effort made to consult with branch members before putting the proposal forward to the national body.
  3. The bias towards schemes that benefit owners rather than breeders concerns me. This was clearly apparent at the forum mentioned above. The argument is that a high percentage of breeders are also owners. Surely that begs the question: Why aim to support a percentage of breeders when you could develop schemes that support 100% of breeders, just by ensuring the benefits/credits return to direct to breeders rather than to owners?

Specifically, my objections to the proposed scheme is that it ignores the very real plight of current breeders. It may be more effective (and quicker acting) to increase breeding numbers by targeting current breeders (especially those in the 2-5 mare type of group which is a significant percentage of breeders) rather than invest in potential owners of mares who may or may not choose to breed from them. The current 2-5 mare breeders are hobby breeders on the cusp of being more commercially focused. In the current climate, they have to choose each year to drop breeding numbers or increase them, very much based on perceived risk (usually financial). They cannot retain ownership of all the foals they do not sell. That becomes a very high cost for them. So they will reduce their breeding instead. They are already knowledgeable about and interested in breeding. They may need only a small but tangible “knudge” to add a couple more mares or keep breeding from their total number of mares, or to upgrade some of their mares, or go to more commercial sires, or to feel able to retain a filly foal for racing and breeding. Accumulating service fee “credits” based on breeding success would be a real boost and cost-saver for smaller breeders.

The biggest flaw in the proposal is that the rewards of breeding a winning mare do NOT go back to the breeder of that mare, but instead will be assigned to the racemare and her current/future owner. In many cases, this will no longer be the breeder.

Therefore a successful breeder may watch a racemare accumulating credits for a future or current owner, and meanwhile be downsizing his/her breeding band because there is no incentive or reward coming back.

Why not reward the mare who foaled the winning racemare? Or the breeder who made the decisions and put in the money and work to produce the racemare in the first place?

Encouraging owners to buy, race and breed from fillies is a very valid objective – and the same North Island Breeders Assn has already put in place an ownership syndicate to test this route out. Originally intended to have two fillies raced by the syndicate, the numbers applying to join were too low to support that and so there is just one filly now racing, Everlasting Grace. It is a good scheme and it will be great to see how it translates from the owning/racing syndicate to the breeding side of things. Let’s give that concept a chance, or develop it further, before adding yet another scheme that focuses on racehorse owners.

Looking long term is something I support. But we need to balance that with something more immediate to recognise the situation breeders are in right now.

Some tweaks to the proposed scheme would give it a more immediate benefit to current breeders and provide an incentive to new breeders coming into the industry (whether they are owners or not).

Then the $250,000 to $300,000 cost will be a true investment in standardbred breeding, and a significant “pull factor” in attracting and retaining breeders.

____________________

North Island Breeders’ Association Proposed Broodmare Incentive Scheme – Submissions sought.

This paper outlines a proposal for a breeding initiative based on the Western Australian EPONA Mares Credit Scheme. The beneficiaries of the scheme will be the mare owners, should they choose to breed from the mare once retired.

New Zealand Standardbred Breeders Association are seeking feedback from industry stakeholders on this proposal, all submissions welcome in writing by emailing kiely@harnessracing.co.nz or posting to PO Box 8270, Riccarton, Christchurch, 8440 by 31st July 2015.

Assumptions have been made based on three years analysis of foal crop data from 2002, 2003, 2004.

Assumption 1:     65% of winning mares go to stud

Proposal     
Establish a fund for payment of stallion service fees on a LFG basis to owners whose mares have accumulated redeemable credits from racetrack wins in New Zealand.

Estimated cost of scheme is $250,000 per annum based on 65% of winning fillies and mares going to stud.

Conditions:   

  1. Applicable to fillies and mares aged three-year-old or older, who win any totalisator race in New Zealand;
  2. 10% of winning stake to a maximum of $500 each win;
  3. Total credits to be capped at $4000 per mare;
  4. A maximum of 50% of the credit is available in the first breeding season and the balance in a subsequent season;
  5. The credit is attached to the mare; it is not transferable; it does not survive the death of the mare or her becoming unable to conceive, and cannot be converted into cash;
  6. The credits are not transferable in the event of death or export of the mare prior to foaling;
  7. No payment from the Fund is required until the mare is served and tested positive 42 days.

Assumed Benefits:   

  • Relatively low cost initiative;
  •  Send a signal to the industry that owners of mares are an integral part of the industry;
  • Will provide an easier entry into breeding for mare owners;
  • Utilisation of mares increase – raced more often and for longer to accumulate maximum credits;
  • Mares more likely to stay in New Zealand to redeem credits;
  • Would appeal to smaller and potential breeders who may not otherwise breed their mare;
  • Arrest decline in breeding numbers;
  • Improve prices for fillies at weanling and yearling sales as buyers look to reinvest in potential broodmares.

Potential Funding Sources:   

  • 2% levy on Stallion service fees, payable by stud (potential funding of $300,000 per annum)
  • Reinstate DNA fees (potential funding of $220,000 per annum)
  • HRNZ distribution account
  • Racing Board grant (unknown and previously unsupported at NZRB level)

 

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It was well worth the 2 hour drive to Auckland this morning to see progress on four horses that Kym and I have an interest in, one way or another.

First to go in Race 1 was Thephantomtollbooth (Real Desire x Zenterfold) the colt I bred and Lincoln Farms bought from me at last year’s yearling sales. I’ve recorded his progress through to qualifying, then a setback to recover from a bruised tendon, and now back at the workouts. Lincoln Farm’s John Street was watching today along with trainer Ray Green and they were pleased with his 2nd today. They know he has genuine speed, and it is just a matter of being patient as he develops some strength. He’s a big, handsome boy with more growing still to come.

Thephantomtollbooth at Auckland workouts 4 July 2015

Thephantomtollbooth at Auckland workouts 4 July 2015

The workout was won by Mo Casino (Bettor's Delight)

The workout was won well by Mo Casino ( 2yo Bettor’s Delight x Mo Cullen) with a close go for the minors from Thephantomtollbooth, (centre) then Bert The Bookie (3yo American Ideal x Whale Watcher) on theoutside and Van Mara (2yo Lismara x Van Sera) on the inside.

Next workout featured Father Frank (2yo gelding Real Desire x Gold Return) that I bought a quarter share in after seeing him at the Christchurch yearling sales last year. He’s trained by Frank Cooney and Tate Hopkins, and this was the first time I have seen him in the flesh since the sales. My word he has grown! He’s a typical Real Desire, tall, leggy and lanky until they fill their frame, but luckily Frank and Tate know Real Desires and are happy to take their time. Driver Maurice McKendry was very pleased with the way he felt in his first run on the Alexandra Park track. He’s got a lot to learn, but that’s half the fun to watch them develop…and his close up 3rd in his first outing was a pleasant surprise.

Father Frank 2yo Real Desire gelding

Father Frank led out to the track by Tate Hoplins, 4 July 2015 workouts

Father Frank (on the inside) comes a close 3rd in his workout for unqualified pacers.

Father Frank (on the inside) comes a close 3rd in his workout for unqualified pacers.

The other two horses I was there to see were half brother and sister Angus Fogg and Isa Smiling, from Kym’s mare Sun Isa. Both were in the same workout for trotters. Angus Fogg is a 3yo Angus Hall gelding, plenty of ability but still a couple of problems to iron out – and he was away slowly from the standing start and later broke again, trailing the other three horses by over 20 lengths. However he made up some good ground by the finish and showed a nice gait and speed when he was trotting smoothly. He’s a work in progress for Derek Balle and Owen Gillies, and being only a 3yo, there is plenty of time.

Isa Smiling, the 5yo mare by Pegasus Spur, sat third of the three main runners for all of the race except in the straight, where she pulled out and ran away to win easily. It’s a big tip o’ the hat to John Dickie, trainer, as it looks like she is on track for another serious go at the racing game, after having her first foal.

Isa Smiling 5yo mare

Coming down the home straight, Isa Smiling moves to the front in cruise mode and goes on to win very comfortably.

Also of interest at these workouts was the number of Real Desire 2yos making their presence felt – not just the two mentioned in this blog. So I will look into that more closely next time and post up a few more photos from the morning.

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Dean Baring and his colleagues in Australia have pulled off a very good website that builds on their Facebook page/forum as a place to go for thoughtful, intelligent and independent views on the harness racing industry and breeding.

www.harnessbred.com

harnessbred website a new place to find good stuff about harness racing “downunder”

Congratulations! Well worth checking this out at www.harnessbred.com

Love the low key videos making chatty announcements that have a really nice positive flow to them, without being the “PR-speak” of any organisation. However I would like to see a bit more transparency about who the website team is and how they got here – for those who don’t know the story.

Two news articles that attracted my attention for starters:

And also a series of well produced video clips that show their approach to stallion profiling, which is a mix of pedigree and performance, nicely wrapped up, perhaps lacking in a bit a back up re the mare’s pedigree and other factors that would best suit a sire.  That is easy to fix – a link to the website that might provide some more detailed analysis of the breeding and other factors that your mare might add, but not canvas the whole spectrum of mares as many of the studs’ websites tend to do, just to make sure your mare is somehow on the list!!

Their first sire analysis is on Western Terror.

The best thing about Dean’s website and Facebook page is that it is determined to find a good future for harness racing. It’s committed, and some frustration with the current industry has not stopped his team coming up with a very active and independent news site.

It complements Harnesslink and from the USA Harness Racing Update newsheet as good places to go when you want independent, interesting, sometimes opinionated but always thoughtful, articles about our beloved industry. None of the nitpicking, point-scoring forums of old, or the paid-for-advertising promotions.

I’ve found myself lately needing a renewal of energy to keep coming up with a positive and fresh approach to the industry, having just had the “soft looking brick wall” reaction to my latest efforts in New Zealand by those who control these debates. So I am delighted to see Dean’s website adding to the mix of people pushing constructive ideas and views across the industry and across countries.

Stimulating. Interesting. Informative. We are unstoppable! (I’m tempted to invent a super hero called Harness Man, but I think that might attract websites we don’t want as sponsors lol.)

Subscribe to www.harnessbred.com

It has my warm recommendation.

Meanwhile don’t forget to tune into www.b4breeding.com now and then to get that quirky, in depth, and definitely independent view of harness racing breeding – and an encouragement personally for those who want to get into breeding.

You are welcome to contact me direct as many do, on bee.raglan@xtra.co.nz

 

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Addington main stand fire

Addington main stand fire

A fire alarm callout at Alexandra Park tonight recalled the historical event from 1916 when the stand caught fire at Addington raceway.

I recall a number of photos of the event, and some of them show not only the blazing stand, but the on track punters turning their backs on the fire to watch the exciting final straight finish of the race that was happening at the time. Go, you passionate harness racing followers!  It was, after all, NZ Cup Day.

Another fire in the stand happened in the 1950s, again at Addington.

Is this the night for Courage Under Fire horses to show their worth?
Good to see the old guy is still available to Australian breeders at $5,500, and he deserves a good book. One of my all-time favourites is “Might Mouse” as he was known. As smaller horses can show as racers and sires (like Bettor’s Delight, Tintin In America, Highview Tommy, and in older days ones like Good Time), size only matters when it comes to the size of the cup you win or the stakes you make.

Update later same night: Ah, there you go, winner of the last at Forbury Park tonight a talented 4yo Courage Under Fire x Denice’s Dream (Armbro Operative) who now has 8 starts for 2 wins and 3 seconds. Nice. Australian blog readers might know the family through (I’m Elmer Fudd) who got about 8 wins and $50,000+ here before crossing the ditch to more or less double that in total.

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