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Archive for the ‘Pedigree matching’ Category

As I said in my last post, this time of the year is the “sneaky peek at the presents”. In this case not Christmas presents but the yearlings that will be up for sale in February 2016

Last post I introduced Leo (aka The Snow Leopard, Lot 100 at the Australasian Classic yearling sale at Karaka).

This time it is Taffey (aka The Shooting Star, Lot 133) who is by Rock N Roll Heaven x Zenterfold.

She is smaller than than the colt, very different type, built like a brick shithouse and looks like an early type in the Killer Queen and Rocknroll Princess mould.  She has her mother’s attitude and natural independence mixed with a love of working with people.

You can see other photos on the PGG Sale of the Stars website, but here is a less formal “photo shoot” of her for my blog readers:

Rock N Roll Heaven x Zenterfold filly

Rock N Roll Heaven x Zenterfold filly

The Shooting Star

The Shooting Star Lot 133 Australasian Yearling Sale

The Shooting Star

Preparer Kym Kearns with The Shooting Star Lot 133

Over the next couple of months I will, as usual, cover some of the yearling sales entries that take my interest – not usually the top ones, or the obvious ones – but rather some of the ones that show breeders taking real care in their selections or thoughtfully going outside the square or are particularly interesting: “THINK b4 breeding”

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Introducing my yearlings grown up and almost ready to go.

This time of the year is the “sneaky peek at the presents”. In this case not Christmas presents but the yearlings that will be up for sale in February 2016 – and it is a very interesting catalogue, thank heavens, after a drought for a couple of years.

Introducing you to my two yearlings, whom I have blogged about before as they developed.

It seems such a long time since I saw “Leo” (Shadow Play x The Blue Lotus) and Taffey (Rock N Roll Heaven x Zenterfold) as shy foals alongside their much loved mums.

Here they are now with only weeks to go before the yearling sale in February at Karaka. They are teenagers with personality and bodies that are well enough developed to show off type and character.

Luckily I have two lovely ones to put up and heartfelt thanks to the mares Zenterfold and her daughter The Blue Lotus.

The Shadow Play colt is well grown, athletic and has personality plus, a guy with a sense of play but wanting to have something to do. He will come up as a 2yo but if someone has the patience, he will be so much better as a 3yo. I love this colt. He is so interested in life, loves being around people and even not fazed by standing right outside our house rather than in a paddock. He is curious, learns fast, he thinks.

Here are two more personal photos for my blog followers about The Snow Leopard (Shadow Play x The Blue Lotus).

Similar for my filly from Zenterfold, will follow.

Kym Kearns

Preparer Kym Kearns with The Snow Leopard

The Snow Leopard

Leo aka The Snow Leopard, getting to know where we live.

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Went to see this filly foal last weekend and delighted with her, and lovely to see The Blue Lotus looking so good at Alabar. Thanks guys!

This is a lovely A Rocknroll Dance foal .

The Blue Lotus’s first foal is the Bettor’s Delight filly Amazon Lily – 3 starts, 2 wins. (Forget that last race. She was the only one willing to challenge the hot favourite leader until the last swoop, and paid the price.) Proud of her. The next foal is the Shadow Play yearling colt who is a stunning type with heaps of character, and off to the sales in February (Lot 100 at Karaka), and this filly is her 3rd foal.

Reminder – The Blue Lotus is a Grinfromeartoear mare – look what she is producing! There are some really nice Grin mares out there that deserve a chance with well matched sires.

Contact me on bee.raglan@xtra.co.nz if you want some ideas/advice/encouragement to breed from your mare.

Filly foal A Rocknroll Dance x The Blue Lotus

Filly foal A Rocknroll Dance x The Blue Lotus

The Blue Lotus

The Blue Lotus foal by A Rocknroll Dance – lovely type and he is leaving some very nice foals.

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It is late in the season now, and some of us (me included) are still waiting to see if/when some of our mares are positive.

Others still have a mare to breed (or not) and can’t decide.

So what do you do for that last minute fertile “go for it” low-cost service?

The Christmas shop window is full of enticing goods displayed. I’m talking here as a NZ breeder as the local low-cost scene in Australian states is completely different and wider but possible with less performed sires.

But when I look at options like Smiling Shard, Mr Feelgood, Highview Tommy, Tintin In America, Raging Bull, and Alta Christiano….just to name a few….my goodness, we are spoilt for choice (even if not spoilt for numbers of buyers later on!!)

The thing that attracts me with some of these cheaper options is that they are not a “discount” in terms of value.  Mr Feelgood and Smiling Shard are two quite different examples of that. You could not get better performers and good maternal lines to back them up. Forget about the Grinfromeartoear factor if you don’t hold that sire in high regard. These are matches that have clicked in a very fundamental way and given their chance will be good sires. Smiling Shard has foals on the ground and the ones I have seen look good. Mr Feelgood too, but foals are only in Australia where the reports sound very good in terms of  type. Big numbers over there for that sire last season, and NZ breeders can ride on the back of that as they show up as he will have only a few here in NZ.

Alta Christiano and Raging Bull are both by our best sire line downunder – In The Pocket and his son Christian Cullen, but importantly crossed with great mares or families. You’d add in Stunin Cullen to that list of course, and with his first yearlings going to the sales in 2016 you can do your homework locally and check out what the types are like.

Now I want to do a plug for the sire I bred, Tintin In America, because having put my money and breeding choices where my mouth is, I’ve got some really nice results to share. And it gives some of you, hopefully, more confidence about choosing him as a sire. If you mare is nicely bred, good size but needs speed – go for it. If your mare has speed but lacked stamina, remember he went on to win as a 4yo in the Messenger and was runner up to Monkey King in the Auckland Cup. Check back on my blog re things in pedigrees that I think click well with this family.

Bee’s Christmas Shop Window of a Tintin foal, a Tintin yearling and a Tintin 3yo filly:

  • Jack Tar (yearling) – Tintin In America x Sophie’s Choice currently spelling after breaking in with Brent and Sue Donnelly (great people to deal with, lovely with the young horses). They are really pleased with the way he broke in and his attitude.
  • Next is my latest Tintin – from the Rustler Hanover mare Nostalgic Franco. Look at this photo – doesn’t it remind you of the way Tintin just stood there, waiting, knowing, before his big races? He’s down south at Macca Lodge and Brent McIntyre describes him as a standout foal.
  • Finally we have 3yo filly Be A Legend, from a Safely Kept mare and a good family. She has that tough roman nose and the Tintin attitude – harness that and you have a winning racehorse. So far, so good and tip o’ the hat to Chris McDowell in Christchurch for the preps and getting her qualified. He has really understood how you can work with their keenness and energy rather than fighting it. “Harnessing” the qualities as well as the horse. Thanks Chris!

 

Jack Tar (yearling)

Jack Tar by Tintin In America

Jack Tar with Sue Donnelly – spunky, willing and lovely temperament

Tintin In America foal from Nostalgic Franco:

Tintin In America colt foal 2015

Tintin colt standing like Tintin In America used to before his races. This foal has a real presence about him.

The 3yo filly Be A Legend:

Be A Legend

Powerful back end and some real attitude – I like this filly!

Be A Legend by Tintin In America

Worth waiting for – she’s getting to be a strong, bold filly.

 

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Can knowing more about where Christian Cullen has come from, throw some light on where his sireline might be going?

Christian Cullen

Christian Cullen

He has been such a profoundly great racehorse and sire that just the mention of his name in a pedigree is enough to give owners and breeders confidence. With his half sister Kate’s First as a back up (winning the Auckland Cup amongst other things), it seems almost rude to probe into the pedigree of the family. But that is what I’ve been doing lately.

It’s been interesting. To be honest, from 10 registered foals of his grandam Pleasant Evening, and 12 from his dam Pleasant Franco, you might have expected even more than what we got. I have often said that consistency is gold, and a mare that can produce consistently good horses and some very good ones is the aim of most breeders.

The reality is for most families that is very hard to achieve – including this family of Christian Cullen.

What is often more likely is one or two or perhaps three exceptional horses spread over a few generations, and from quite a few branches.  And that is the case here. His dam Pleasant Franco has left two outstanding horses in Christian Cullen and Kate’s First, plus a few more good ones that many people would be happy to have (including Julius Caesar who never had a real chance to shine on the track before breaking down, and Tiger Woods, both of whom got a chance as lower tier sires), and in that sense Pleasant Franco stepped up the family to a higher level of consistency. But whether Julius Caesar would have made it a hat trick of great racehorses we can never be sure. So far Pleasant Franco’s fillies are tracking okay but not spectacular.

But before Pleasant Franco, the family was a bit of a tease.

Christian Cullen’s grandam Pleasant Evening (by Overtrick) won 3 races herself and 7 places, if minor, and left plenty of foals but what a mix they were. Pleasant Franco was her first, and definitely her best. Many of the others were raced in Australia (including a Gee Whiz II mare called Robo’s Whiz who never raced, was obviously hard to get into foal and left nothing of any interest to a range of trotting sires from Sundon to Aldebaran Yankee and a Life Sign thrown in). Another filly was by Klondike Kid and she has done nothing to date. But a Holmes Hanover filly called Prime Time Franco had better results – 10 wins, 17 places from 50 races and a total of $33k. But again, her progeny haven’t fired. Note: There is a pattern with Pleasant Evening of briefly trying and selling on the horses from between Franco Breeding and Australian owner David Shammall, a connection that exists through to today as Peter O’Rourke (ex Nevele R) and Shammall are co-founders of “Stallions Australia“.

The males bred from Pleasant Evening turned out to be average on paper at least – Franco’s Promise by Holmes Hanover was the best with $73k plus after 92 starts. Franco Paragon chipped away for 7 wins from 50 starts for just $12k. It is always hard to know at a glance whether some of them might have been sold on to North America and done ok. I know Falconbridge (Falcon Seelster x Pleasant Evening) won a few here and was exported to America, and did race well over there. But to be honest, nothing leapt out of the ground. Her last foal was Evening Dash, a trotter by Sundon who was raced by the Trotting NZ Syndicate and had been bought at the yearling sales in the late 1990s for just $12,000, but only won one race and later retired as a hack.

So we are pretty much left with Pleasant Franco to carry the line forward.

Just before looking at her record, I want to go back another generation or two, firstly to Lumber Dream mare Romanda, the dam of Pleasant Evening. Remarkably, her only other foal was a very, very good trotter in Australia called True Roman. He won over half a million dollars – 73 wins in 135 starts, finishing racing when he was  12yo. So an accumulator, but a good one. If you look at his pedigree, you will see a close double up with Knight Dream. and that theme occurs now and then in some of the family’s best results. It might also explain the selection of trotting sires as matches for some of the family (as mentioned above).

And yet another generation back is the U Scott mare Romarin – of her 6 foals, 5 were fillies but Romanda is the only one I can find that has added value to the line in an decent way. At this stage the family was firmly rooted in Australia. The best performer from Romarin’s foals was an Overtrick filly called Pleasant Roma (so Pleasant Franco, being by Overtrick, is closely related in blood to this mare) who raced in the 1970s and had 5 wins and 12 places, $24k, but again she appears to be lightly tried to less quality sires. I’m hoping some of my Australian blog readers might be able to fill in the gaps or mention some offspring from the family that have forged a thriving line over there, but I cannot spot anything myself.

That reminds me, the other thing I want to mention is how “Trans Tasman” this family is. Christian Cullen’s family is very much a “downunder” venture, with many of them performing in both countries or crossing The Ditch at some stage of their lives. I hadn’t really realised that before.

Pleasant Franco (Bo Scots Chip x Pleasant Evening)

The success of Kate’s First (by Holmes Hanover, breeder G E May) and then Christian Cullen (by In The Pocket, breeder Paul Bielby) opened up opportunities for several of her foals. Tiger Woods (by In The Pocket) broke down before he’d hardly started but stood as a lower tier sire in Australia for 25 winners from 190 foals. Here’s a link to the announcement of his 2013 stud shift to South Australia, which also notes a good point that Pleasant Franco is one of very few mares to ever have 3 sons at stud at the same time – being Christian Cullen, Julius Caesar and Tiger Woods. I see Tiger Woods is noted as deceased but I cannot recall when what happened and Google hasn’t helped me regarding the circumstances. The usual Aussie snake perhaps?

Julius Caesar (by In The Pocket, breeders C N Radford, W E Radford, Mrs D E Richardson), was the foal born in 2000, and is a full brother to Christian Cullen. He always struck me as a much lankier framed animal, although very good looking. He raced four times as a two-year-old, finishing runner-up in the Group 2 NZ Sapling Stakes and Cardigan Bay Stakes before being retired due to injury. He took a record of 1:57.5. Would he have raced on to be a champion? We will never know, but I think his type would have benefited with having time. He could have become more a tough stayer, as indeed many of his progeny have been. His record as a sire is not bad. I covered off his development as a sire in an article I wrote earlier this year for Harnessed magazine about the “new boys on the block”.

Another male foal was Oscar De La Hoya (by Jaguar Spur, breeders G H Beirne, P R Bielby) and he was a buy-back at the yearling sales for $200,000 but turned out to be just a solid but not spectacular performer from 3yo to 7yo, earning a total of $47k. He got his 6th win from 14 starts as a 5yo – I can’t recall, but there must have been soundness issues or injury breaks to be that lightly raced.

There is one last male foal from Pleasant Franco who is not at all well known here in NZ but might be recognised in Australia – his name is Great Place (Ina Great Place for his racing in Australia), and he is by Artsplace (breeders C N Radford,W E Radford,Mrs D E Richardson),  and although he is not a star in the same way that Christian Cullen is, he ground out a good racing career with 146 races, 16 wins, 21 seconds and 16 thirds, and a total of $105k stake earnings. I see he was racing right up to Sept/Oct this year, getting some good placings at Albion Park in the latter part of September 2015.

Pleasant Franco had 7 filly foals in total, so no lack of opportunity to carry on the maternal line: Kate’s First (Holmes Hanover, 1993), Dreamsaregold (In the Pocket, 1999), Cracker Kate (Holmes Hanover, 2001), Special Ball (Presidential Ball, 2002), Arty Alice (Artsplace, 2003), and two unraced fillies Lucky Pocket (In The Pocket, 2006), and Courage A Plenty (Courage Under Fire, 2007).

Kate’s First was exceptional (19 wins, $624k) but only one of the others could win a race (Arty Alice). Cracker Kate was the only other one tried as a race horse and had a record of 32 races for no wins, 8 places. The value of the remaining filly foals (and of these two racemares as well) was obviously a strong factor in whether they would be racing horses or diverted early on to breeding. The mana of their dam and Christian Cullen was strong enough to over-ride other considerations.

But what lines from this family will continue to flourish? And is it the basis for a siring line?

The next generation

Is the family kicking on after that burst of brilliance from Pleasant Franco as a broodmare?

And the answer seems to be mixed but in some cases promising.

Arty Alice is a success story so far – she’s left 6 foals to date, all from top sires, and 4 are winners so far, some yet to start racing. Her first two are Earth Angel by Mach Three (13 wins and $79k and still racing) and Beach Shack (Somebeachsomewhere, 9 wins and $94k and also still racing). The breeder is listed as BFJ BLOODSTOCK TRUST, VIC.  A younger filly by Rocknroll Hanover is called Rockstar Angel and she has already had a win and two places from just 6 starts. These are well-bred fillies that hint well for the future of the family.

Cracker Kate is chipping in with her NZ-bred foals including star gelding Heez Orl Black who has won over $300k. You’d be very happy with that. He shifted to Australia midway through 2013 after an excellent 2yo season here (including winning the Welcome Stakes) and a solid 3yo and part 4yo season. Her next foal was the lightly tried filly Cracker Three by Mach Three, who is just starting her own breeding career, as is Cracker Kate’s next foal an unraced Art Major filly. She is named Code Cracker, and that filly sold for a surprisingly light $34,000 at the 2012 Premier Yearling Sales in Christchurch. Out of interest, (Heez) Orl Black sold in the 2010 yearling sales for $57,000. Since then, Cracker Kate has proven difficult to breed – there is a Changeover colt who is now a 2yo but nothing else.)

Kate’s First filly foal by Artsplace (called Katesplace) sold for $95,000 in that same 2010 yearling sales. Kate’s First has been an asset in terms of producing valuable foals, but erratic at producing well performing foals. Daniel Anderson (by In The Pocket) was her first foal and in terms of race track performance it was nil, regardless of what ability he may or may not have had, and in the siring barn where he had only 48 live foals not one of them was a winner and only 4 qualified. What a handsome horse he was. But in the end, he could not add to the reputation of this family re producing sires and siring lines – that is a much, much harder row to hoe. From Kate’s First fillies we have the “on paper” best opportunities to see the quality of the line unfold. But it is never that simple, always tempting and yes, there is an exceptional one in the wings. But which one? Kate’s Rocket was the first filly from Kate’s First, and she got 2 wins from 6 starts – with that breeding, that’s enough! Since starting her broodmare career she has produced a Bettor’s Delight filly called Kate De Goldie (trained by Robbie Holmes and 3 wins from 13 starts but very lightly raced and now a 5yo), then a Santanna Blue Chip filly with 1 win from 6 starts, also racing out of the Holmes stable, and a 2yo Art Major filly called Major Rocket, not sighted yet. Kate’s First’s next filly was a Western Terror foal called First Western (born 2006), who was lightly raced but showed ability. And subsequently First Western had a McArdle filly called  Marion Keisker (I presume after the woman who was a huge influence in Elvis Presley’s early recording career), and she is still racing in Australia with 50 starts for almost $39k – don’t write off her potential progeny from that breeding with McArdle as he brings in some classy Knight Dream references amongst other things. First Western’s only other filly foal has since died. Kate’s First third filly foal Rocknroll Ruby has had no luck on the track or the breeding barn to date. Kate’s First’s fourth filly is  Katesplace who got a win in Australia and was then sent to broodmare duties, and has had one or two foals, but early days.  Kate’s First’s colt foal Hurricane Stride (by Holmes Hanover) has been disappointing in terms of results to date.  The next colt foal from Kate’s First is Maverick (by Bettor’s Delight, breeders K N Spicer,Mrs A M Spicer, P J Nicholson, Mrs R Nicholson) who sold at the 2013 yearling sales for $45,000 and has done a professional job to date for Nigel McGrath and is on the improve (right now 21 starts, 6 wins and 6 places).  The latest of Kate’s First foals to the race track is Kate Black, a full sister to Maverick, who is just starting out at workouts, trials etc in New Zealand. You would imagine her future as a broodmare and the overall success of this family might lead to some hopes for another top horse along the way.

Special Ball (Pleasant Franco’s Presidential Ball mare in Australia) has left a nice enough Grin colt (Smiling Cullen, 7 wins, $28k to date), and has a couple of younger Sportswriter foals and an Always A Virgin foal following. It’s a work in progress.

Dreamsaregold (Pleasant Franco’s unraced In the Pocket mare) has kicked on well to date with her progeny – Hurricane Anvil (racing in Australia, 8 wins and 18 places to date for $84k), Close To Cullen likewise in Australia for 47 starts, 7 wins and 7 places to date. Dreamsaregold’s very lightly tried NZ-based 2009 Falcon Seelster filly The Princess now has a Betterthencheddar foal, and Dreamsaregold also has a Bettor’s Delight filly called Chevron’s Champion currently going great guns over in Australia (14 starts, 6 wins and 3 places to date, and $46k plus so far).

AND...Just to bring us right up to date, there are a couple of youngsters from the family lining up at the Christchurch Premier Yearling Sales in February 2016 – a Mach Three filly from Courage A Plenty (Lot 170) and an Art Major colt from Lucky Pocket (Lot 284).  Check out those pedigrees.

Here is a family that has a very average background but some hints of exceptional ability. Then a burst of talent, absolutely TOP PERFORMERS, like a fireworks rocket with Catherine Wheel attached. Since then, some nice Showers and some loud Jumping Jacks. But you get the feeling there is more to come from a mass of fillies and several branches – often high level talent seems to skip a generation.

One of the most interesting things for me when investigating this family (not perfectly at all, just looking thank you) is that it shows how any family can sometimes have burning embers that flare and spark into life, and if we breathe on them the right way we can start a fire. Whether that fire continues to burn requires luck, thought, and some good lungs. lol

OKAY the question remains – does his family background support Christian Cullen to be not only a great racehorse and a great sire, but also a sire of good sires?

Comment on this blog or to me at bee.raglan@xtra.nz if you would like to share your thoughts with readers.

  • Are there any success elements in terms of the genetics or performance qualities that give us a clue? The two themes I flagged up in terms of pedigree matches are Knight Dream and maybe some element from  Tar Heel (Holmes Hanover and In The Pocket has been important crosses).
  • Is a sire dependent on his maternal line (in combination with sire line) to be a success at stud?
  • Is Christian Cullen’s maternal line strong enough to support an ongoing sire line?
  • And which of the sons of Christian Cullen available now that you see as the best chance for his siring line to continue (and why

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Update: How did I go? (See original blog below)

I kicked off the night with a Lis Mara quinella  which I actually missed in terms of putting my money where my mouth is, but for the purposes of this blog we’ll treat it as a 1ew bet on both Music (Lis Mara x Radio River) who paid $11.10 and $1.90, and Aveross Brachole (Lis Mara x Gth Aveross) who paid $4.80 for a place. Race 3, Romanite (Art Official x Roman Tear) came 2nd and paid $1.60. Race 4 Nek Time (Gotta Go Cullect x Braithwaite) hung on for 3rd and paid $2.20. I was bullish about Carrickmannon (Lis Mara x Harper Road) and Cullect A Guiness (Gotta Go Cullect x Charlotte Lea) in race 7 but 5th and 7th was there lot in a fast paced race.In race 9 my heart was with the winner (Ashton K, Grinfromeartoear x Spicey) but my 1ew bet went on Easy Rider (Art Official x Divine) and Chasing Shadows (Gotta Go Cullect x Impact’s Legacy) but they couldn’t get into the race and finished 9th and 10th.

At Alexandra Park I also started on a good note with Culinary Delight (Lis Mara x Culinary Affair) finished 3rd and paying $3.10, then in Race 2 Van Mara (Lis Mara x Van Sera) rattled home for 2nd and paid $2.60. In Race 6 Jaccka Mara (Lis Mara x Marianna Jaccka) and Tazzy’s Devil (Lis Mara x Tas’s Pocket) didn’t fire, and Wimbaliri (Gotta Go Cullect x Festina Lente) was scratched.

So all in all, I “invested” $24 and won $27.30.

Just for fun let’s compare how I would’ve gone if I had bet 1ew on all the Bettor’s Delights running at those two meetings. There were 23 starters, 9 of them paying a dividend. I would have invested $46 and collected $31.90.

So all in all, thank you to the lesser sires for taking care of me!

Original blog post:

Tonight I’m watching races in hindsight, and betting against the odds.

This breeding season in New Zealand three sires are no longer on offer, and in all cases their departure has been predictable, although in two cases it has been very low key.

Lis Mara, Gotta Go Cullect, Art Official.

All have different stories to tell. Lis Mara was initially promoted as speed, but the impression we have of the whole Cam Fella line in New Zealand is not that – and I’ve blogged on this before. So he had to make breakthrough early results that countered our intuition (like Bettor’s Delight has done was a descendant of Cam’s Card Shark) or we were always going to put him in a different category. LisMara progeny were almost always needing time, and not enough really delivered at the top end even if you did wait. For all our love with Most Happy Fella in Smooth Fella and New York Motoring etc, Cam Fella line has always struggled to get a foothold in these shaky isles.

Art Official, lovely looking and well bred, and our connection with Falcon Seelster in his maternal line should have rung happy bells – but he has struggled to get early performers (that so-high bar we set) and also he leaves a much more varied type of foal than his sire, they are not Art Major lookalikes and I think that is what everyone was hoping for – at a cheaper price.

Gotta Go Cullect, touted early on as the “heir apparent of Christian Cullen” and boy, did he look the part – athletic, proud, bred to be fast and tough. And he did get very decent books and has left some nice performers, but the clock ticked on and not enough really stood out, and suddenly he became more of a Live Or Die sire prospect i.e. genuine, but take time to strengthen, some have high speed but the actually percentages of top quality horses are not enough for a top sire. Take nothing away from what he will add to a mare’s pedigree. He will be one of those that shows up like an Adios Butler in pedigrees of good horses down the line. I also wonder if his early retirement (from injury) as a racehorse went against him. In the end we wanted him to duplicate his own type and early speed, so it is possible the type of mares he got were not adding much of that themselves. And maybe his own genes were more about toughness than genetically carried speed factors.

Cut to the chase, tonight I’m doing some sentimental betting but for a reason.

I like to show respect to all those sires who stand here – such a hard ask to survive and thrive in this competitive environment. These are three horses who were excellent on the racetrack and bred to be that way. They carry good genes but how that is expressed as sires (and in our broodmare pool) is another thing. Frankly the fact they have gone is not a mark against them, but just an acknowledgement of how hard it is for any sire to break into the longterm stallion market.

Tip o’ the hat to these three horses.

Both Art Official and Lis Mara will continue to stand back in North America, and I understand Gotta Go Cullect has been sold to Australia.

Tonight I am going “one each way” on all the progeny of these three sires racing at the good meetings at Addington (Christchurch Met) and Alexandra Park (Auckland).

Putting it out there now, and so far only two races done while I’ve been blogging, for a 2nd with Romanite, the Art Official 4yo gelding, and a 3rd from Culinary Delight, the 5yo Lis Mara mare.

What else is coming up? Not sure about scratchings but…

At Alex Park we have Race 2 Van Mara (Lis Mara), Race 6 Jaccka Mara and Tazzy’s Devil (both Lis Mara, although I must confess my bigger bet of 5ew will be on American Flyebye the Tintin In America filly), Race 8 Wimbaliri (Gotta Go Cullect). At Addington we have Race 4 Nek Time (Gotta Go Cullect), Race 7 Carrick Mannon (Lis Mara) and Cullect A Guiness (Gotta Co Cullect), Race 9 Easy Rider (Art Official) and Chasing Shadows (Gotta Go Cullect.

 

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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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Peak, Alabar stallion parade 2015

Peak, Alabar stallion parade, October 2015  (Photo: Bee Pears)

He's Watching, Alabar stallion parade October 2015

He’s Watching, Alabar stallion parade October 2015  (Photo: Bee Pears)

Sunshine Beach, Alabar stallion parade October 2015

Sunshine Beach, Alabar stallion parade October 2015  (Photo: Bee Pears)

Today I saw some serious horses. And actually got to hold and  get photo taken with a World Champion. Be still my heart! (And thanks to Wayne at Alabar for trusting me for a few minutes to hold the lead rope….)

Very different types paraded at Alabar this afternoon and all of them looked great.

I’ve covered He’s Watching and Sunshine Beach in previous blogs but it was good to see them in person. I know a lot of breeders don’t worry about seeing a horse in person. I really relish the opportunity. You get to understand a wee bit more about his personality and his conformation. And with most stallion parades, they will tell you a few anecdotes that help flesh out the picture of a potential mate for your mare.

If you care, try to be there.

Some of us breeders were there today, and good to see them. This is a great chance to look up close at the best horses in the world. Why would you not want to?

But yes, many cannot, so here are some photos to help share the moment.

And can’t help but add in this one of Bee with He’s Watching….

He's Watching

Bee Pears with champion race horse He’s Watching  (Photo: Thanks to Lynn Neal)

 

 

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I remember hearing “back in the day” about mares being left down in the back paddock, getting in foal to some convenient or cheap sire, and breeding foal after foal who hardly ever made it to the races. I used to look through the stud books when I started out breeding and saw the results, and vowed never to go that path even if I had the land to do it.

Time passes and now breeding numbers are down and costs are up – and land is scarce. Back paddocks are in maize or dairy cows, or lavender plants or houses.

Local cheap sires have to prove themselves up against tough opposition on the track and the breeding barn.

Yes, it is an overall decline in numbers, but it also reflects the reality of economic shifts and time moving on. These days breeders need to be innovative, canny and passionate. And – a particular requirement of mine – thoughtful.

THINK b4breeding.

Today Kym and I have washed, brushed and trimmed up two of our tiny broodmare band. And we are so proud of them.

We know them well, and their families. We follow their foals’ progress as supporters but also to see what we can learn.

Our mares Sun Isa and The Blue Lotus have spent the past few of months together in a lovely paddock, enjoying each others company and with visits every second day by yours truly after work to give them the broodmare feed they need this time of their pregnancy.

Today we floated The Blue Lotus to Alabar, where we also got up close (but not too personal!) with the lovely looking, great natured Peak, trotting sire, who was getting a wash-down from Wayne who was on hand to receive our mare.

We’ll see more of Peak tomorrow when we go back up to Auckland to deliver Sun Isa to Woodlands and then track over to Alabar for the parade of Peak, He’s Watching and Sunshine Beach, three really interesting stallions on Sunday 4 October 2015 at Alabar.

Hope to bring you photos of that tomorrow night.

Below – we are so proud of our mares. Be proud of yours, get to know them, listen to what they need.

Kym with Sun Isa, 3 October 2015

Kym Kearns with Sun Isa, 3 October 2015

The Blue Lotus and Bee Pears October 2015

Bee Pears with The Blue Lotus, 3 October 2015

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Back in 2012 I picked Charlie Chuckles (Grinfromeartoear x Charioteer) and Delia (American Ideal x Merrily Merrily) as part of my “2012 virtual yearling stable“.

They both qualified and showed enough ability that I was hopeful to get some satisfaction watching them race. Charlie Chuckles had just one race for a win, and Delia won her qualifying trial by about 2 lengths. That was in early 2014.

Then they both dropped out of sight.

Coincidence is a great thing, and this week I noticed (1) Charlie Chuckles was back at the races, at Methven on the grass today, Race 7, and (2) He’s trained by John Hay, who also trained Delia when she was in work. Another coincidence with Delia is that new sire He’s Watching led us to once again consider pedigrees that cross back to Three Diamonds or other parts of the K Nora/Adora family. And of course the 3×3 cross to Three Diamonds was one of the things that had originally caught my eye with Delia.

Check other blogs on this topic:

So a phone call to John Hay was essential, and he kindly caught me up with what had happened to Charlie Chuckles and Delia.

Charlie Chuckles had a troublesome foot problem that they couldn’t get to the bottom of. In the end it was only the use of a heat scanner that pinpointed a hairline fracture where the cannon bone meets the fetlock, which could never mend while he was in work. Treatment and plenty of time, and now Charlie Chuckles is back at the races, although John Hay warns he will need the run today and may even be scratched if the track is too wet. One to follow over the next few months.

[Update: Charlie Chuckles first up run today 20 September was a good one, finishing on well for fifth after having to sit parked and wide. Same day, different race track – in Invercargill today his younger half brother Only In Rome by Bettor’s Delight had his first race win from 5 starts. Tip o’ the hat to their dam Charioteer. Her American Ideal foal Ideal Roman had his first win, also from 5 starts, in June this year as a 2yo. Three nice foals from the Christian Cullen mare who comes from the family of Adios Dream, OK Deb, Courage Under Fire, Advance Attack et al.]

Delia is also a story of a niggling injury that is hard to pinpoint. John says she always seemed a bit sore in her back end, right from when they got her, but she was a horse with plenty of ability – John thinks she had at least 4 or 5 wins in her – and her win at the Chertsy qualifying trial is worth a look. Again a heat scan showed the soreness was going to be an ongoing issue, and the call was made to put her in foal instead. Owner Brian Davidson sent her to Changeover and the foal is due on 11 November this year. Here’s hoping it is a lovely foal and a boost for Brian who had an accident while loading cattle and has only just got out of hospital after three months, and is facing rehabilitation for a head injury.

 

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