Very well built. Does she have a brother that could be frozen?
best
Bruce Peek
P.S. I don’t mean to hand out unsolicited advice but how soon will you be getting her in foal.. and are there any Muniqi asils in France or anyplace else for that matter that could ship semen?
I’ve heard of others breeding three yearolds. And for sure Mustang fillies are frequently in foal at a young age without dire consequences. No- my question had to do with the necessity to preserve the few rare asils we can actually have access to. Its just a shame that there isn’t a better way of spreading the genetic improvement represented by the cradle country asils into Arabian sporthorses. For example Vermiculus who came 5th recently at Rolex was a John Rogers line CMK anglo arab.. He was Serafix in the sire line of course with Thorayah(sp) and Meteor. Karen O’connor was saying in the t.v. coverage that Vetrmiculus doesn’t get as tired in the cross country, and is super careful in the show jumping. These are traits that we need in our three day eventing horses. If you’ve trained an arab for sport you know they have buckets more try than the warmblood Thoroughbred crosses now dominating with the modern short format. And,if you can keep your horse sound, with willingness to try again to get it right as it were, you will advance up the levels with your horse.
best
Bruce Peek
Spectacular!
She is starting to look more like Chatham as she gets older.
Is she in age to ride her? If answer is yes, do you ride her?
Very well built. Does she have a brother that could be frozen?
best
Bruce Peek
P.S. I don’t mean to hand out unsolicited advice but how soon will you be getting her in foal.. and are there any Muniqi asils in France or anyplace else for that matter that could ship semen?
Bruce, do you mean that three years old is too young to breed? I was planning to breed her in July, to a stallion from Lyman’s and Rosemary’s.
I like how she is built and how she moves.
I’ve heard of others breeding three yearolds. And for sure Mustang fillies are frequently in foal at a young age without dire consequences. No- my question had to do with the necessity to preserve the few rare asils we can actually have access to. Its just a shame that there isn’t a better way of spreading the genetic improvement represented by the cradle country asils into Arabian sporthorses. For example Vermiculus who came 5th recently at Rolex was a John Rogers line CMK anglo arab.. He was Serafix in the sire line of course with Thorayah(sp) and Meteor. Karen O’connor was saying in the t.v. coverage that Vetrmiculus doesn’t get as tired in the cross country, and is super careful in the show jumping. These are traits that we need in our three day eventing horses. If you’ve trained an arab for sport you know they have buckets more try than the warmblood Thoroughbred crosses now dominating with the modern short format. And,if you can keep your horse sound, with willingness to try again to get it right as it were, you will advance up the levels with your horse.
best
Bruce Peek
Jenny Lees gave me semen from her Bahraini stallion and I will use that this year on one mare or two.
I have a egyptian mare to foaling this summer,of my Syrian krush stallion,I wiII use him in one mare more, egyptian
Pippa ,spectacular!!very well built
Pippa was bred to Tamaam DE on June 4 and 5.