I look forward to hearing opionions.
What do you think is more important in choosing a stallion?
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thevetswife
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What do you think is more important in choosing a stallion?
I'm new to this board and wondered what the general opinion is regarding choosing a stallion. Do you put more weight in the nicking of a certain cross or hypothetical matings? Obviously conformation plays a role as well (the foals of one of our mares seems to be inluenced more by a stallion than the others).
I look forward to hearing opionions.
I look forward to hearing opionions.
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INIT2WINIT
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Picking any stallion without foals on the ground is a shot in the dark. If there is sufficient offspring on the ground to judge consistent quality (even before any have gone to the track), I will always pick conformation and quality, of the foals, above all. Speed and hopefully pedigree will follow. There are lots of million dollar pedigrees that are dismal failures at stud.
It is all a numbers game, anyway. You would have to really have a bad sire not to get something if you breed enough mares. I forget who it was or the horse in the early 80's (in Florida) who the owner bet he would make him the leading juvenile sire - he won the bet by buying enough mares to mathematically assure it.
It is all a numbers game, anyway. You would have to really have a bad sire not to get something if you breed enough mares. I forget who it was or the horse in the early 80's (in Florida) who the owner bet he would make him the leading juvenile sire - he won the bet by buying enough mares to mathematically assure it.
In this day and age, were I ever to make a breeding decision, I would go with :
1) soundness. Sire should have made many starts and retired sound
2) good female family
3) balanced conformation
according to condition 1, I guess I'd be a breed-to-race
1) soundness. Sire should have made many starts and retired sound
2) good female family
3) balanced conformation
according to condition 1, I guess I'd be a breed-to-race
All shouting does is make you lose your voice.
----Arrested Development
----Arrested Development
Stallion choices
We breed to race, so my laundry list goes this way:
1) Female family: dam's first, then stallion's, because the dam contributes the mitochondrial DNA (energy producing cells) exclusively to a foal. I'm a Rasmussen groupie for that reason. Linebreeding and inbreeding to superior female families is key for me.
2) Breeding a winner to a winner may increase your chances a bit, though unraced is more desirable than unplaced.
3) Size matters
: we try to keep the physical types close to each other.
Obviously, if a very correct stallion can improve a mare's conformation faults and vice versa, that matters a lot, but breeding a giraffe to a pony is probably unwise.
4) Our particular program focuses on more classic (in other words, not fashionable at the two year old sales) pedigrees and nicking patterns. If we want runners, we're perfectly content with late bloomers who can cover a route of ground and run for many years.
1) Female family: dam's first, then stallion's, because the dam contributes the mitochondrial DNA (energy producing cells) exclusively to a foal. I'm a Rasmussen groupie for that reason. Linebreeding and inbreeding to superior female families is key for me.
2) Breeding a winner to a winner may increase your chances a bit, though unraced is more desirable than unplaced.
3) Size matters
Obviously, if a very correct stallion can improve a mare's conformation faults and vice versa, that matters a lot, but breeding a giraffe to a pony is probably unwise.
4) Our particular program focuses on more classic (in other words, not fashionable at the two year old sales) pedigrees and nicking patterns. If we want runners, we're perfectly content with late bloomers who can cover a route of ground and run for many years.