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Archive for the ‘Standardbred breeding’ Category

I’m taking a short break and heading down south to see this Friday’s races in Christchurch – the Free For All should be a beauty – and then head further south to visit Macca Lodge and see my newborn foals.

Can’t wait! There’s a Tintin In America colt from Nostalgic Franco who looks a cracker, and a Big Jim filly from Dreamy Romance which is also ideal because it is the mare’s maternal line and the cross with Big Jim that I wanted, so good to have a solid pedigree match to carry that line on. Nostalgic Franco has a year off, and Dreamy Romance will go to Mr Feelgood.

Along the way, I’m planning to see the 3yo filly Be A Legend, out for a brief spell at Brian West’s place after qualifying, and she’s started to turn a corner.

With any luck I’ll also visit Tintin In America himself at Nevele R.

I won’t be blogging while I’m away – just gathering up some photos and thoughts to share when I get back.

Meanwhile, closer to home, The Blue Lotus has foaled A Rocknroll Dance filly at Alabar. Will catch up with her in a week or so, but she looks lovely.

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Last New Zealand Trotting Cup (for pacers) was won by the great Bettor’s Delight mare Adore Me. There were two others by Bettor’s Delight in the field – Tiger Tara and Arden Rooney.

This year Bettor’s Delight has doubled his representatives – in the field of 18 (including emergencies), he accounts for 33% of the field with 6 representatives. It is to be expected, and perhaps less than you might expect, from a sire that is so dominant and has bred so many foals in those years.

It might partly be a reflection of his own “brand” as a sire that leaves early types, adds speed, horses willing to get up and going. And sometimes the wear and tear of that in younger years can cut down the proportion of them who remain sound right through – although Bettor’s Delight has been marketed on his own soundness and bone density.

Take nothing away from the super sire, having six quality horses in the Cup is huge, and they are all winning chances. He should, and probably will, shine.

From a potential breeding perspective, it’s interesting to note that only 2 of the Bettor’s Delights remain entires – Tiger Tara (from Dream Away mare Tara Gold) and Ohoka Punter (from Christian Cullen mare Millwood Minisota). Both their immediate families are still young and relatively unproven. With Ohoka Arizona, he’s a descendant of Armalight and what a great mare she was and a Cup winner in her own right, but it is a damn hard family to  follow and overall has been more disappointing than you’d have hoped. For Tiger Tara, his dam Tara Gold is a half sister to Power Of Tara ($846,608), such a tough customer on both sides of the Tasman and in the USA. Their dam, and so Tiger Tara’s grandam, is Atomic Gold and much of this family has been in the safe hands of  Ray Anicich for many years, but after getting a Bettor’s Delight daughter of Atomic Gold (Tara’s Delight, foaling this year to A Rocknroll Dance) Anicich sold Atomic Gold to Pat Laboyrie, not far from where I live, and she has had a couple more foals. More on that another time.

I guess my point here is that these horses will need to win the Cup to really nail their credentials as a potential siring son of Bettor’s Delight. They are both wonderful colts, handsome, speedy (particularly Ohoka Arizona) and tough (particularly Tiger Tara). But as Gold Ace, another local son of Bettor’s Delight standing at stud, has found it needs more than that to capture the imagination and the analysis of breeders. Strong families and particularly consistent maternal lines are the springboard for breeding confidence in a sire as much as their individual performance. Or in my view, it should be. On that score you would tend to opt for Tiger Tara. This is also the family of Miss Jubilee, the mare the Ray and Diana Kennedy have had with some success including two Bettor’s Delight daughters Patch Maguire and Jessie Maguire who won over $50,000 and are both broodmares in Australia now.

But we are still struggling to come up with maternal lines of really solid demonstrable strength to back some of these top performing colts if they enter the “siring line”. It’s an interesting issue and one I’ll come back to.

Will Bettor’s Delight find a “downunder” bred siring successor?

Or will his legacy be as a super sire himself and great damsire?

The other colts in the field are Franco Nelson (by Christian Cullen from the No Regrets maternal line), Messini (by Art Major from Mesmerizing – this is an Australian family that looks deep and strong), Brilliant Strike (by Shadow Play, from the Woolley/Kerslake family of Tondeleyo, Adios Star, Bionic Chance et al., a great old family that has struggled to kick on in recent times until this lovely stayer came along), and finally Sky Major, (by Art Major, a stunning colt who could well win the Cup, and his dam was a good racing filly. The family may well be on the rise, or rather this branch of it, but again as a potential sire he would be relying mainly on his own merits and his sire Art Major, rather than the underpinning family record.)

Am I being harsh? Not really, it’s just the reality of how hard it is to make it as a sire even if you win the Cup. Ask Flashing Red. Or Iraklis. Or Il Vicolo. The brilliant and tough Changeover is making a good effort. Terror To Love is going to have his go.

Only Christian Cullen in recent decades has climbed that New Zealand Cup mountain and then gone on to conquer the siring peak as well.

It all adds another dimension to watching the NZ Cup tomorrow. Enjoy!

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66-percent-green10 out of 15 ain’t bad. You can hardly fault the effort from top sire Bettor’s Delight to be represented as the sire of 66% of the 3yo colts and geldings in the field of the Sires Stakes on Tuesday (including the two emergencies).

On top of that he is the damsire of Shandale, the classy northerner.

Will he be the sire of the winner? That’s another step, although the odds are well and truly in his favour, and Chase The Dream and Lazarus will have huge support.

Mach Three has two representatives as a sire, and one (Classie Brigade) as a damsire. Art Major has two as a sire, and Jereme’s Jet one (second emergency Imola who is unlikely to get into the field). That foaling year, Bettor’s Delight had 220 live foals in New Zealand. Art Major had 49, Mach Three 94, Jereme’s Jet 57 (his last crop here).

So yes it is partly a numbers game, but it is also cream rising to the top of a lot of milk. Will it turn into beautifully matured cheese? Wait for my next blog which looks at the Cup field itself…the older stars who shine.

The 3yo race should be a cracker, with the draws levelling the field if something can cross the insiders and push the second row stars further back on the fence.

But this blog isn’t about the result – it’s a tip o’ the hat to the sires, mares and breeders who laid the foundation for the moment.

Breeders of the Sires Stakes field 2015

I want to note especially three runners bred by Breckon Bloodstock from the same family: the very good mare Megaera, a daughter of Alberfeldy, which is how the Breckon brothers first got “bitten” by harness racing. In this race there is Bite The Bullet from the Presidential Ball mare Pistol Packing Mama, and Cash N Flow from the In The Pocket mare Karen Donna (both of them are by Mach Three).

Karen Donna is the dam of Pistol Packing Mama (and also the dam of Katy Perry). So that is a dam and daughter with offspring in the race. Both of those mares descend from Ken Breckon’s foundation mare Megaera, and Megaera (a daughter of Aberfeldy) is also the grandam of another horse in this field of classy 3yos – Shandale. So big congrats to Breckon Bloodstock for having three in the race from the same family line – that is remarkable and a fitting result for a passionate and astute harness racing breeder/supporter, and also for Jan and Sandy Yarndley who were the “keepers” of that Black Watch/Aberfeldy line for so many years.

Both Karen Donna and Pistol Packing Mama were part of the “clear out” draft Ken Breckon sent to the Autumn Weanling and All Age Sale in May 2013, with Karen Donna selling in foal to Art Major for just $1000 and Pistol Packing Mama likewise for $2250, both sold to Mike Stevens. A very canny buy and a reminder about how hard it is to predict which lines will suddenly fire and which will not, and the struggles that all breeders have to get a return. The winner of most races is Hindsight.

Also I’d like to give a tip o’ the hat to damsires and especially our “downunder” Direct Scooter line. Christian Cullen is the damsire of 3 horses in the field, and Christian Cullen’s sire In The Pocket is the damsire of another 2. A quirky note – two of the damsires are sons of Jate Lobell, being Village Jasper and Caprock. What an influence that horse has become!

Here’s the full list of breeding, and breeders, for the 3yo colts and geldings Sires Stakes Final field 2015:

  1. Mowtown, Bettor’s Delight x Touch Of Grace – Walton Hanover (Breeder: D J Bennett, Ms L A Joyce)
  2. Franco Cristiano, Bettor’s Delight x Cherish A Franco – Caprock (Breeder: Spreydon Lodge Ltd)
  3. Bite The Bullet, Mach Three x Pistol Packing Mama – Presidential Ball (Breeder: Breckon Bloodstock Ltd)
  4. Art Form, Art Major x Highfields Diamond – Holmes Hanover (Breeder: C H Barlow, Mrs T J Barlow )
  5. Cash N Flow, Mach Three x Karen Donna – In The Pocket (Breeder: Breckon Bloodstock Ltd)
  6. Imola (E2), Jereme’s Jet x Imprint – Life Sign (Breeder: A J Johnstone)
  7. He Can Fly, Bettor’s Delight x Falcon’s Flybye – Falcon Seelster (Breeder: P G Argus, J M Argus, B Robertson, C Robertson, T Ryder, L Ryder)
  8. Kimani, Bettor’s Delight x Lizzie Maguire – Christian Cullen (Breeder: Rosslands Stud Ltd)
  9. GI Joe, Bettor’s Delight x Breath Of Life – Village Jasper (Breeder: Mrs D C Cournane)
  10. Chase The Dream, Bettor’s Delight x Christian Dreamer – Christian Cullen (Breeder: V L Devery, Mrs D L Devery)
  11. Lazarus, Bettor’s Delight x Bethany – Christian Cullen (Breeder: G Chin, Studholme Bloodstock Limited)
  12. Alta Las Vegas (E1), Bettor’s Delight x Bethany – Christian Cullen (Breeder: Alta Breeding Co Ltd)
  13. Can’t Refuse, Bettor’s Delight x Dream Offer – Dream Away (Breeder: Woodlands Stud (NZ) Ltd)
  14. Classie Brigade, Bettor’s Delight x Trigirl – Mach Three (Breeder: Miss S A Matthews, R Faulkner, Mrs C A Faulkner)
  15. Shandale, Art Major x Delightful Dale – Bettor’s Delight (Breeder: Breckon Bloodstock Ltd)

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Among all the flashly-bred qualifiers getting their racing ticket this Spring is a 3yo filly called Olde Oak Ellie who is as far removed from modern sires as you can get these days. She’s the first foal of her dam Exceptional Star, a Presidential Ball mare.

But what makes her filly exceptional is the top and bottom lines of her pedigree – because Olde Oak Ellie is a daughter of the colonial sire Magic Rule, the last in New Zealand I believe from Globe Derby siring line. That’s the line that has its origins in Hambletonian’s son Strathmore, and in this neck of the woods comes down to us via Logan Derby (AUS), then Johnny Globe, then Lordship and Starship, the sire of Magic Rule.

Magic Rule

Magic Rule

The pedigree interest for Olde Oak Ellie doesn’t end there.

On her maternal line, Olde Oak Ellie also descends from Starship’s dam, Star Nurse.

This 3yo filly’s great grandam is actually Venetian Star, a full sister to Starship. So that makes the filly 3×4 to Lordship and 3×4 to Star Nurse.

You can check out Olde Oak Ellie’s pedigree here on the HRNZ Info Horse database. Venetian Star is the dam of Anvil’s Star (15 wins, $444,705) and the family has produced a few good races horses over the years although not as many as you might hope given its sprawling branches.

Olde Oake Ellie is bred, owned and trained by the Reedys, and she qualified yesterday at Westport (on the west coast of our South Island in New Zealand). The Reedys then sent Exceptional Star to Bettor’s Delight for a now 2yo filly.

Note: Magic Rule was a good racehorse himself, not in the very top class, but he achieved 10 wins and 10 placings in just 46 starts. His interest as a stallion was as one of the few remaining “colonial bred” sires in New Zealand from the Globe Derby line, rather than his potential to breed a modern racehorse. But he did garner some minor support from breeders to at least give him half a chance to leave something. He had three recorded small crops in New Zealand and his last foals were born in 2013. (There are just 9 of his foals who are 3yos, 12 who are 4yos and only one registered 2yo in the HRNZ database. Five of his progeny are still colts.) Magic Rule died in 2013, as an 18yo.

Read article from 2011 when he moved to Macca Lodge to stand at stud

Happy to receive current information from those involved in the Globe Derby Society (if it is still going) or breeders/trainers who can report on any other “colonial bred” foals who look to have potential on the track. Either add response to the blog, or email me at bee.raglan@xtra.co.nz

 

 

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Morning drizzle and then clouds cleared to blue skies and sunshine, and the families were out in force at the Harness Waikato meeting today – horses well outnumbered by excited kids of all shapes and sizes chasing each other across the sloping lawn (best view to catch the race and keep an eye on the kids), and sulkies were almost outnumbered by prams and pushchairs!

This was an afternoon where you didn’t even need bouncy castles and balloon man, as the kids just made their own entertainment, aided with complex modern technologies like…ah..the bocks you have to climb up to show 1st, 2nd and 3rd for greyhound post-race photographs, or the long stretch of grass alongside the home straight where future Olympians may be in front of our eyes. Yes, kids just doing it for themselves.

And of course the total winner on the day, the Clerk Of The Course Horse, who always draws the younger fans.

Fantastic racing too, from the younger generation who showed off their skills with their trotting ponies in the Kidz Kartz races, to the younger drivers who were competing in the tote races.

Very cool, and thanks to everyone involved.

Harness Waikato 2015 local meeting

Introducing families to harness racing on a lovely fine spring day at Cambridge, Waikato, New Zealand.

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Nimble is a bit of a buzz word at the moment. Keeping up with trends and putting yourself in the position to respond promptly and effectively to the signals of the market.

As breeders we need to be nimble. But if we are nimble, do we know to jump in the right direction?  And what is the cost of jumping into thin air or jumping on a bandwagon without a good product?

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“Jack be nimble” – this is Jack Tar (Tintin In America x Sophie’s Choice) showing a bit of nimbleness.

Breeding horses is always going to be a high risk venture. Not for the faint hearted. But it is a passion for those of us who love to beat the odds, who love the families of mares we have, who believe in thinking before breeding and not just ticking a box.

Nimble is good, but sometimes a longer term strategy is more important, with nimble tucked in as an option should the opportunity arise. That might mean aiming for the yearling sales but being open to selling as a weanling or ready to run, or trialing up and selling as a going proposition. Nimble might also mean considering a sire you pooh-poohed two years ago as a new kid on the block but you can’t help noticing he’s not doing bad and he matches well with your mare.

So nimble really just means keeping an open mind. Being willing to change.

With breeding we need at least two years to produce a saleable foal – from the time of deciding in our minds and making a service contract, to the positive test, to a resulting foal being born, raised to a weanling, and grown to a yearling. Still pretty much untried and unsure. So we don’t have the luxury of making quick changes. They need to be thoughtful.

Often “being nimble” needs to be within our parameters: Costs. Time. Available sires. The mares you have.

But constraints give birth to invention and thought. In my case, I have hardly ever gone outside a $5000 service fee mark because of my own financial constraints, but that has never held me back from breeding to sires that really suited my mares plus my aims.

But being nimble can also mean being aware of what the market wants and responding to that. (My proviso here is that merely following fashion can also bite you in the bum if you do not have a commercial product, e.g. a poor producing or uncommerical mare will not make a fortune just by going to Bettor’s Delight, and even though the foal may turn out to be her best, it may not make a sale that gives the breeder a “bettor” profit margin, if any.)

Being nimble for breeders is also about not over-stocking or over-committing, holding some of your scarce resources back to fight another day. That can be difficult. It’s a blink of an eye (or a mare’s back end!) before another foal seems to be eating up your grass, eh.

Nimble can be about collaborating and syndicating. It can be about doing deals and sharing and asking for help or advice. Or even taking a year or two out, to give you or your mares a break.

It can be about reassessing why you are breeding and what direction you need to go in, rather than just ticking things over year after year.

Being nimble for breeders is most of all having an open mind and working out where your passion and the future market may intersect in a way that gives you both satisfaction and wanting to keep doing it.

Many breeders are a bit older than we used to be. Ha! We should also be a bit wiser. Believe it or not, older bones and minds do not make us less nimble. Rather they make as able to be more canny and more inventive. It is our choice.

Experience is the base of being nimble. It is like jumping from a rock, rather than jumping from wet sand.

Breeding season 2015 ….and here we go again, jumping off that rock.

Yeeehaa!!!!!

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Three Tintin In America fillies hit the South Island workout tracks last week, and another one at Cambridge today.

What A Curtainraiser (Tintin In America x Next Live Show – Live Or Die) is a 3yo filly who was at her third workout (North Canterbury, 14 October) and seems to be improving each time. What A Curtainraiser has always shown a quick turn of foot and a very competitive nature, but also a tendancy to pull or want to over-race. But patience and education is sorting that out now. The dam of What A Curtainraiser is the Live Or Die mare Next Live Show who had a twisted leg that prevented her from showing what she might have on the race track.  Trainer Kevin James says she did look good, however, and he thought enough of her to put her to Tintin In America, a horse he admired, aiming to add speed. It seems to be working.

Kevin James has four in training by Tintin In America and each one is quite different.  What A Curtainraiser is a smallish filly, but another of his Tintin youngsters is Go Ellmer Go (from a medium sized mare Ellmer Joy) who has turned out to be 16-plus hand, and he has one who has been teasing Kevin by changing preference to trot or to pace. Another of Kevin’s Tintin In America foals is the 2yo colt from Dazzle Bromac called Tuahiwi Express which he describes as  a”nice going pacer, and a chestnut colour”.

At the same North Canterbury Wednesday workouts Tintin In America 3yo filly American Vogue was having her first workout of the season, after qualifying as a 2yo in March. She sat at the back and when she looked to improve stylishly, she started to hang and pace a bit rough, losing ground before running on wide again at the back of the field. She is still a bit keen and green, but has plenty of ability once the penny drops and the manners are better. The breeding is nice, she’s from the family of Stylish Sweeheart and is from Presidential Ball mare Style By The Mile, who is the dam of MacIntosh, a Mach Three gelding who did a really nice job in Australia particularly as a 3yo and 4yo.

The other Tintin In America filly to hit the workouts last week (Motukarara, on 10 October) was Be A Legend. This is the 3yo from A Legend (a half sister to Bit Of A Legend) that I co-own with Brian West of Studholme Bloodstock. This preparation she’s been in the care of Chris McDowell, who has used patience and education to get her manners in better order. She can still be a bit keen, but is learning to settle and at the workouts he travelled her at the back in a Learners pace and let her run home nicely for second. She’s lining up at the workouts again today and the idea is the same – give her experience without a lot of pressure. Chris feels she has a bit of strength and speed.

And finally today (17 October) I was at Cambridge workouts to watch yet another Tintin In America filly go around – Love American Style – and the theme is a bit the same, with ability there but manners not. She hang badly most of the way in an easy run workout, but wasn’t pushed which is good. Again, patience is the key. The breeding of this filly is very David Phillips/Hambletonian, with the dam being the Road Machine mare Love To Travel who is also the dam of Selkie (the American Ideal mare who also raced well in Australia before retiring late last year.)

Being green and keen has more in common with speed than just having “ee“. It was the same with Tintin In America himself, and it took patience and education to channel that competitive nature and ability into manners and speed that turns on when the driver pushes the go button. My impression is that many of these trainers like what they feel in the Tintins – that there is clearly ability and speed worth being patient for.

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The loss of Kerry Hoggard is huge, and only outstripped by the legacy he has left – such an astute business mind, a wider intelligence, a passion for breeding and always willing to talk with the smallest players in the game like me, a small breeder up at the Auckland workouts to watch a yearling of mine he bought at the sales step out on to the track for the first time (that was Destination Moon).

His full contribution to the developments at Alexandra Park and to dragging harness racing into the modern era will only be seen a few years down the track. He was part of a team up there that I really admire for their ability to rise above the petty politics of racing and push new, innovative ideas through but with as much buy-in as they can get.

People still gripe about the tough racing at Alexandra Park, but in the end it is setting a standard we should be striving for – good racing, better stakes, and a well run operation that delivers fine entertainment.

Thank you, Kerry, for all you have done to help this industry mature and set its sights higher and wider.

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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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