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My photo of the week

Daughter and dam enjoy some baylage at Isa Lodge. This is Sun Isa and her Pegasus Spur filly foal, a tall and strong looking type.

An early dry summer in many parts of New Zealand means supplementary feeding out is already under way in many places.

Sun Isa and foal

Yum yum yum – a treat after a hot day.

In the Waikato we are fortunate to have had a couple of timely downpours to feed the grass roots, so mostly the paddocks are standing up well. But it is good to know we have plenty of baylage and hay on hand at Isa Lodge to help take the pressure off the paddocks.

 

The Harnessed magazine for January is out now, so I have added the last article in the series I wrote for that publication.

The article is about the sires who were “new boys on the block” 10 years ago, standing their first season in New Zealand. What happened to them?

The results show it is just as hard to make your career as a sire as it is as a broodmare – maybe for different reasons, but a hard row to hoe none the less.

The new sires of the 2004/5 season (and their service fees) were:

Red River Hanover, I Am A Fool and McArdle (all standing for $6000), Totally Western ($2750), Cammibest ($2500), Julius Caesar ($2000), and Danny B ($475).

Read the article – and others in the series – here.

(I am taking a short break from writing for the magazine due to “day job” commitments. But I recommend the magazine for subscription here or overseas. It is a good read about racing, owning and breeding standardbreds in New Zealand, and additional information on Australian, North American and European racing from a “Kiwi” perspective. Subscription details here It is published by Harness Racing New Zealand)

Another itch

Got it!

Thanks to Bradford Duplisea for supplying this photo.

Scratch that itch part 2 - photo supplied by Bradford Duplisea.

Scratch that itch part 2 – photo supplied by Bradford Duplisea.

My photo of the week

When you got an itch, you gotta scratch it!

Pegasus Spur filly foal from Sun Isa.

Ahhhh….

Sun Isa is 16 hands herself, and leaves striking looking tall foals. The filly is no exception. She is a full sister to Flying Isa, being by Pegasus Spur. Sun Isa is back in foal to Angus Hall.

Sun Isa and her Pegasus Spur filly foal

Sun Isa and her Pegasus Spur filly foal

Usually with the virtual yearling stables competition I ask you to pick a certain number of yearlings from the sales that you think will do well, and then we follow their progress.

But this time I want to develop a combined virtual stable based on interesting breeding. So this is a collaborative effort, not an individual competition.

The ‘pool” of yearlings includes the 2015 Sales of the Stars sales in New Zealand (the Australasian and the Premier), and also the APG sales yearling sales in Australia (Melbourne, Brisbane and Sydney), and the South Australia Yearling Sales. All the catalogues are available online (see links below) as well as hard copies.

Maximum of two yearlings per person please. Give their Lot Number and either APG or Sales of the Stars.

I’m looking for yearlings that have an interesting breeding match. By interesting I mean the match is trying something “outside the square”, or perhaps involving close double ups or following a pedigree matching theory which is more than just “breed the best to the best and hope for the best”.

I would also like us to have some newish sires (or newish damsires) in the stable, where you think the match is particularly interesting or well thought out.

Please include a short explanation for your choices. There must be something about the match that is interesting or intriguing.

You can include yearlings you have bred yourself so long as they fit the other criteria.

And your name, please.

Nominations close 31 January 2015.  

Send to bee.raglan@xtra.co.nz

Or you can post via “Leave a comment” at the bottom of this blog (if you view on mobile you may need to open this blog by clicking on its title to get the “Leave a reply” form at the bottom.)

Catalogues at APG website and PGG Wrightson Sale of the Stars website and SA Yearling sale (only 16 yearlings) http://www.saharness.com/2015-sa-yearling-sale.html

My nominations

I’ll start the ball rolling with:

  • APG Lot 467 A filly by Major In Art out of the Perfect Art mare Sunopal. That makes the full brothers Art Major and Perfect Art 2×2 in the pedigree and Artsplace and Perfect Profile both 3×3.  As far as I can see, that is the first time such a combination has been tried.
  • Sale of the Stars Lot 417 A Muscle Mass colt by the good trotting broodmare Princess Della  whom I have written about previously. She is by Last Lord (a son of Lordship, who was one of the last remnants of the Johnny Globe/Globe Derby siring line in New Zealand) and is the only Last Lord mare who is breeding. Princess Della is now 25 years old and this is her 10th foal. The match is complete outcross of sturdy colonial lines with the latest American trotting speed.

Over the past 6 months I have written a series of articles for Harnessed magazine, which I have now posted as part of the list under the Articles section of this blog. You can find the Articles section on the tabs across the top of my blog.

The articles track the breeding performance of fillies and mares who participated in some of the great races of 10 or 20 years ago, and the last one of the series (which I will post up when it has been published in Harnessed) does the same for the sires who first stood here 10 years ago.

Researching these articles was both inspiring and depressing. Depressing because there are so many descending lines from mares which either end poorly or never even start. There are mares who are hardly given a chance in terms of quality sires, and mares that are given many, many chances for little reward. There are mares who miss or slip repeatedly, and mares that breed almost entirely one sex or the other. There are many top race mares who leave nothing nearly as good as themselves.

But the research was also inspiring, because there are mares (often brought cheaply) who have excelled on the race track and in the breeding barn, and mares who have kick-started a fading maternal line and given it two or three strong branches for the future. There are breeders who have upgraded families, and breeders who have successfully taken chances rather than played it safe.

It all shows just how tricky it is for a maternal line to continue on successfully over a decade or more, and how challenging it is to be a good breeder.

When you read these articles, remember that the statistics for progeny were correct at the time of writing. Many of the mares’ progeny will have raced and hopefully won since I wrote the articles, new foals will have been born, and yearlings sold for big or small prices at the 2015 or future yearling sales.

You are welcome to update, correct or add to the articles in the “Leave a comment” area at the bottom of the Harnessed magazine articles page.

Finally I urge you to subscribe to Harnessed magazine as a top quality monthly publication about harness racing and standardbred breeding in New Zealand, and insights from further afield. It is the official publication of Harness Racing New Zealand. You can subscribe here

My photo of the week

The blue Lotus with foal

The Blue Lotus enjoys a carrot while her foal enjoys a rest.

Lovely to have The Blue Lotus back home with her Shadow Play colt foal at foot.

She’s back in foal to A Rocknroll Dance.

More photos below.

The Blue Lotus and Shadow Play colt a

The Blue Lotus with her Shadow Play colt 31 December 2014

Lottie loves carrots

May your 2015 year be as sweet as a carrot!

In the back pocket

Following on from my last post, where I noted the absence of Western Hanover as a damsire of commercial sires, this time I look at our local sires and see where the damsires are coming from.

Once again, there is a big name almost totally missing – In The Pocket.

In The Pocket, a super son of Direct Scooter, was the southern hemisphere equivalent of Matt’s Scooter, and he did a similar remarkable job as a sire of speedy sons and daughters.

But unlike Matt’s Scooter, so far In The Pocket’s influence on New Zealand sires is very much as a sire of sires (Changeover, Christian Cullen, Courage Under Fire) rather than as damsire of sires.

To date there is only one sire standing with In The Pocket as his damsire, and that is Tintin In America (by McArdle). That surprises me, given In The Pocket’s record as a sire here over such a long period. There is also one sire with Christian Cullen (top sire and son of In The Pocket) as a damsire, and that is Highview Tommy (by Bettor’s Delight).

There’s several reasons why I would love to see more of In The Pocket in the damsire role of our locally bred sires. He was a horse not only known for his speed and determination, but also his heart. Whether or not you totally agree with the “x factor” theory of Marianna Haun, there does seem considerable evidence to show that a larger heart may be passed on the x chromosome, i.e. able to be passed from a male horse to his female progeny but not to his male progeny.

If this is the case, then one of the most important qualities of In The Pocket will be able to be passed on to a sire when he is in the maternal line.

In the Northern Hemisphere, this role has been picked up by Matt’s Scooter (as well as him being a sire of sires).  He is a key element in the maternal line of some of the good sires coming through – American Ideal of course, but also Shadow Play and Well Said.

Becoming a successful sire is very hard. Becoming a sire of sires is almost impossible. Becoming an important damsire of sires is also a mountain to climb, or rather a totally different and more technically difficult face of the same mountain perhaps.

I hope Tintin In America can advance his cause in that regard, and I also hope In The Pocket gets more chances in the future as a damsire of champion sires. We need him in the “engine room” of more of our sires – the the back pocket where we like to keep our reserves of cash.

 

 

I was flicking through the 2014/2015 Register of Standardbred Stallions of New Zealand today (while listening to the NZ vs Sri Lanka cricket test) when a strange fact jumped out at me:

Western Hanover is almost totally missing from the maternal line of sires. In fact the only sire available here with Western Hanover as his damsire is the Canadian newcomer Prodigal Seelster (Camluck x Platinum Seelster). Apart from him, the closest we get is A Rocknroll Dance whose bottom maternal line is the same as Western Hanover’s (and same for the sire Modern Art in Australia).

Shark Gesture is the only other one I can think of, and he was only here for one season in 2011, but was quite well received and his foals look lovely types. They will be 2yos this season. But Shark Gesture has not been given much of a chance to shine in the breeding barn to date – read the Harnesslink review of his career as racehorse and sire to date here. A huge pity as I think he brings a lot to the table in terms of his pedigree and performance, and would be an interesting option for the daughters of Western Hanover line sires. (See a blog of mine about his yearlings last year.)

Since we get access to many of the top international sires now, the absence of Western Hanover so far as a damsire of top sires seems to be a phenomenon wider than just New Zealand.

On the other hand, Artsplace is already the damsire of Well Said and Rock N Roll Heaven, and in New Zealand also two lower tier but interesting newcomers Raging Bull and Net Ten EOM.

Beach Towel was also born around the same time as Artsplace and Western Hanover and has damsire credits for Somebeachsomewhere and our own Sir Lincoln.

And Matt’s Scooter, only just a few years older than Artsplace and Western Hanover, is the damsire of American Ideal and Shadow Play.

Falcon Seelster was renowned as a sire of good broodmares, and he has managed damsire credits for Art Official, and for New Zealand-bred sires Ohoka Arizona and Charles Bronson.

So the lack of Western Hanover in the damsire position of top stallions is really intriguing. His own sire No Nukes has proven really potent in the maternal lines of sires. So why not Western Hanover himself?

It’s almost as if his whole legacy is concentrated as a sire of sires.

Have I missed something? What do you think the reason is? Is there anything on the horizon to change that?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seasons greetings to all b4breeding blog readers.

Since recently “downunder” we imported the idea of monte racing from Europe, I wondered if we could also follow the Arctic nations example and add reindeer racing to our winter agenda (or given that Christmas time here is usually warmer and sunnier maybe we could find an alternative with Christmas cow-ski-racing over newly cut grass just before it is rolled up into haylage bales??)

If you can’t believe your eyes, just google “reindeer racing”.

Reindeer racing

Have a wonderful Christmas and New Year, and a successful and happy 2015.