|
|
Lovely Stallions: The Process of Selection
Lithgow Houdini left behind a fabulous example
of what is Welsh in a
colt; Glynmagic Copper Comet. Copper is a wonderful blend of his
dam and sire. Like his sire, he is proud, spirited, loaded with
substance
and a correct and balanced mover. He gracefully combines these
wonderful qualities with that of being a kind hearted athlete.
His dam,
Bristol Rachel-Rachel, a champion in her own right, was sired by
the
many time National, Supreme, and Grand Champion Bristol Sun God.
Copper has inherited his father's tremendous movement and gentle
temperament and the athletic ability of his grandsire, Sylvia's
Comet.
Initially, we had expected to sell Copper's sisters but as we
discovered
they too had inherited the same athletic abilities, correct
movement and
were so easy to train it simply made sense to retain them in our
breeding program. Thus the need for a second stallion became
apparent. To view Copper's get click here. |
|
The search for a second stallion from proven performance
bloodlines
The search actually continued for 5 years. My requirements were
simple. I needed at least a medium, bold movement, the same
gentle
temperament that Lithgow Houdini possessed in spades and had
imprinted on my herd, and the sire had to enable me to continue
my
fledgling line breeding program that nicked back quickly to
Criban
Victor (5 time winner of Royal Welsh Show and one of the three
Welsh
founding fathers). Most importantly our new sire had to descend
from
proven performance lines. It seemed simple until I seriously
started
looking. I found the prettier the pony the more limited its
movement.
Fast, flashy colored, halter ponies without proven performance
history
in the open show world, were easy to find. Many of these ponies
have
weak loins which means the power is not there to drive the front
end.
The result is little or no hock driving under the animal and
although the
pony looks fancy upfront, the rear movement doesn't match and
the
pony is unbalanced. Strong, large strided movers that engaged
their
hind quarters and moved straight from the shoulder had become
almost
nonexistent. Section B Welsh ponies had become smaller and
finer.
They had evolved into ponies whose movement was elbow driven.
What was missing was the power driven, large strided and most
important, balanced movement of the sensible GlanNant pony that
was
abundant in the performance show ring ten years ago. These
ponies
were being shown by children both in halter and performance and
they
could hold their own in the hunter show world and trainers did
not
complain that they lacked a brain. Gone are the big athletic
Mollie
Butler ponies that could do it all (show hunter, endurance,
eventing,
driving, etc.) and still remain sound.
Returning to the Welsh show world after years of being away
showed
me that judges now forgive the absence of correct movement,
solid
performance and appropriate behavior in favor of refined
attractiveness
and flashy colors. The 'new style' Welsh pony no longer has the
ever
important pony character, instead they resemble small
Thoroughbred/Arab crosses. Today's Welsh
enthusiast/breeder/judge
seems to value this refined and flashy appearance over
performance.
Few of the halter pony winners are actually shown by children
today and
even fewer of these winners are shown by children in
performance. The
ponies I now see in the Welsh show ring are simply too hot to be
shown
by anyone but an adult and generally that adult is a
professional
handler. Many ponies that placed well were very fast movers but
generally lacked the long stride and correct movement. Several
judges
looked at little other than the head and neck of the pony.
Crooked legs,
bad rears, weak loins and sausage bodies lacking the necessary
depth
in the girth were often placed at the front of the line. In
performance
judges asked for few individual tests. Poor behavior was
accepted.
When judging we can't forget to consider the importance of
behavior
and temperament. Judges and show committees must not accept
inappropriate or dangerous behavior in ponies/exhibitors.
Rewarding
bad behavior propagates the problem by not getting the message
to
parents whose children are not suitably mounted, to owners whose
animals are out of control, to exhibitors who "accidentally"
free the pony
they are showing so it's movement obviously shows better, or to
breeders who then lack the incentive to breed defects out of
their herds.
These animals and situations are a potential danger to everyone
on the
show grounds especially the children for which we claim Welsh
ponies
are perfect.
Where are we headed with our breeding programs?
The fact is the original Welsh pony loaded with pony character,
substance, and scope that I had initially fallen in love with is
out of
fashion and in danger of extinction. Certainly the breeder
should strive
for perfection but this must be done within the guidelines set
by the
breed standard. Without substance supporting strong, bold,
properly
engaged movement there is no superior performance. Without
substance ponies can not hold up to the rigor of the real world
for which,
in all fairness to the pony, we should ultimately be preparing
them.
Movement is the key to performance be it human or equine.
Substance
is the key to great movement. How many delicate and refined
Olympic
athletes do we see? Do I want to produce the popular delicate
refined
pony whose performance career is most likely over by the age of
5 or 6
because their body lacks the substance to withstand the demands
asked of it? No! However, that is where the Welsh trend is
today. It is
selfish to breed ponies for the limited use of showing in hand
or as
pasture ornaments. How did we get to this extreme in the
breeding of
Welsh ponies and where is it taking us. Can we possibly be
making the
conscious decision to breed inferior performing ponies for
aesthetics?
Many of the biggest halter winners in WPCSA halter classes only
place
well as yearlings or two year olds and barely, if at all, show
in
performance. This is especially disturbing in the stallion
division
because people blindly buy breedings to these unproven
stallions. It is
time Welsh breeders reevaluate their herds, take their ponies to
open
shows and see how their stock stands up to competition among
other
breeds. If the majority of the Welsh produced can compete in
open
shows and still place respectably it will be safe to say we are
on the
right track. However if we train our judges to judge our Welsh
stock
based upon what apparently has become the "new standard" for
Welsh, continue to weight conformation below type and test
performance at such a basic level at our Welsh shows without
going to
open shows to keep our perspective, we will continue to
deteriorate the
versatility and durability in the Welsh pony breed.
So where do we go from here?
Rosmel's Bey Cracker
14.1 hh Section B Stallion
In the spring of 2002 I visited Rosmel Pony farm and was spellbound
by
Rosmel Cotillion. His extreme movement and scope were exactly
what I
had been looking for. Most importantly, Cotillion descended from
many
generations of super performance bloodlines. Later the same
summer I
found a Cotillion son, Rosmel's Bey Cracker, offered for sale. I
called
Rosie Gillette-Norris and she kindly forwarded pictures of Bey
Cracker's offspring by their Houdini daughters. My search was
over!
After all the looking and contemplating I had finally found a
"proven
stallion" for my Houdini daughters descending from performance
bloodlines. A large section B stallion that was full grown, a
joy to handle
and had already crossed well with our bloodlines!
Bey Cracker's sire, RosMel Cotillion, is a many time Supreme
Champion in halter and National Champion in performance that has
produced an impressive list of winners in both Welsh and open
performance venues. His grandsire, GlanNant Tango, is the 1998
Legion of Merit Sire who was a grandson of the renowned mover
Coed
Coch Ballog. Cusop Call Boy holds the distinction of being named
Horse of the Year twice in the United Kingdom. To view Cracker's
pedigree click here.
Bey Cracker is the consummate gentleman who loves to be handled.
He has the huge, powerful reaching trot I first saw in his sire.
Our plan is
to cross Bey Cracker, with all his fabulous performance genes,
on our
Lithgow Houdini daughters who carry the talented performance
lines of
Sylvia's Comet. Our first crop of Cracker foals has shown that
Bey
Cracker does pass on his tremendous fluid movement and his
wonderful pony qualities, especially his fun personality, to his
offspring.
Our second crop of Bey Cracker foals proved to us that even when
bred to our larger mares Bey Cracker produces attractive,
sensible
|
Lithgow Houdini









 |
|