The Bloodstock Blogger : Part Three

THE BLOODSTOCK BLOGGER - AS SEEN ON THE GAITPOST

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In the countdown to the Dubai World Cup, Sophie Buckley goes racing at Meydan, Dubai, and ponders the question: is bigger really better?

There is a big change in our household at the beginning of February. The shooting season is over and my husband becomes a more familiar sight. It is not for long, however, as the showing season starts around the middle of March.

Soon after we got married we realised that a deal was going to have to be struck on the hobbies front. He shoots all Winter and I show all Summer and nobody is allowed to whinge! It generally works pretty well but there is definitely the odd reminder that a gun doesn’t need feeding all year round.

 

Introducing Gonzales – a new friend for Speedy!

Introducing Gonzales – a new friend for Speedy!

I had a trip to Tattersalls February sales where the remit was to try and buy another mare. Instead I came home with a yearling colt. Note to self, DO NOT IMPULSE BUY!

My excuse is that I tried to buy his listed placed mother but didn’t quite manage it. I have to admit to a quick trip to google to look up his sire, Caradak who is certainly far from fashionable but, it seems he was good horse himself and has produced some useful performers which, considering he stands in Spain, is probably not a bad achievement.

My friend and Irish event rider Aoife Clark was with me for this unexpected purchase and was looking decidedly nervous during the bidding process. I thought you were going to stop bidding at x price was repeated several times! She did the honours of naming him so the new Spanish boy is called Gonzales.

With my husband and I having a break from hobbies we went on a family holiday to Dubai. There was plenty of racing chat with racehorse trainers Charlie Hills and Johnnie Portman and bloodstock agent Alaistair Donald and their families all being on the same holiday.

We all went racing to Meydan where the Hills and Donald family both had runners. The Donald’s came out on top this time much to the devastation of the youngest Hills’s boy who was inconsolable for at least an hour. Nothing like having a bit of pressure from your children to win! 

 

Meydan Racecourse

Meydan Racecourse

With the countdown to the Dubai World Cupunder way Meydan will be preparing for its big night. Much like everything in Dubai, Meydan is all bigger, better and shinier! But is bigger always better? It seems that by nature people are always wanting more, but maybe when we are gaining more we are losing without realising it.

With the boom in corporate hospitality, segregation seems to be becoming the norm. I think I might be a hypocrite on this topic, as I love a warm hospitality box but when it is done on a large scale some of the magic of racing can be lost.

 

Thirsk Racecourse

Thirsk Racecourse

My most enjoyed racing last year was at Thirsk. That might seem strange to many but it was a glorious evening, the sun was shining, you can get close to the horses, champagne bar, bookies and I enjoyed great conversations with total strangers.

It is that intimate feeling that makes people comfortable and everybody is friends even if they have never met before.

In contrast, Meydan is so big that finding a friend has to be done with a mobile phone and then trying to locate them might take half an hour. But there is a place for everything and it is a great showcase for Dubai and what they stand for.

 

Hedge planting

On the farm we have been busy planting some more trees and hedges. With the hedging we are now starting to see the benefit of some of the planting we did when we arrived, but the trees will really be for the next generation to enjoy.

Whilst on the topic of the next generation, they took part in this year’s hedge planting but this child labour was far from cheap at 10p a spiral!

The breeding season is well underway and the mares have been under lights since January. The endless scanning has begun. I feel for both the mares and my lovely vet Bridget Gatehouse, there really are several downsides to being female and in a mare’s case scanning is one of them. It is not particularly glamorous for the vet either!

Luckily everything is going as it should and the first mare went to stud last week. So fingers crossed that next month I will telling you that she is in foal!

 

 

Useful Links:

www.thegaitpost.com

www.charleshills.com

www.jonathanportmanracing.com

www.sackvilledonald.com

The Bloodstock Blogger: Part Two

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THE BLOODSTOCK BLOGGER - AS SEEN ON THE GAITPOST

Choosing stallions, stud envy and building the business: our Bloodstock Blogger, Sophie Buckley, shares her latest plans for Culworth Grounds.

Mother to Albert and Athena, Sophie continues to ride as a hobby, in recent years producing champions at the Royal Dublin Horse Show, Royal Windsor and the Royal International Horse Show alongside many other wins at county level.

With Christmas long gone and the mass catering over it is back to business. Over the last couple of months, I had to begin choosing stallions for the two mares that I have.

Genetics is something that I should know a lot about as I did a module on it at University. It definitely was not an optional elective but I must have somehow survived my way through.

A lot of thought goes into what stallions to use, but is it worth it? With a full house of family for Christmas I had a look into my own family genetics. If I had been for sale at Tattersalls, would anybody have opened my door?

 

The conclusion was that there were plenty of family members with athletic ability but just in different disciplines. My own pedigree page would have looked pretty dismal with several runners in Greece and a National Hunt stallion for a father.

Front row, six from the right looking cold !

Front row, six from the right looking cold !

Commercially I would not have been attractive! However, there was one saving grace and that was my mother. She was a good solid Group 2 winning miler. Her speed was something that she did manage to pass on.

So if a canny bloodstock agent had taken a punt on me they would have got themselves a nice speedy two-year-old, probably a Group 2 Queen Mary winner, with a great temperament, of course. 

Sadly, I didn’t really train on and went hurdling with success, but I am not sure there is a race at Cheltenham for a 100m hurdler!

So the moral of the story is that there is hope of breeding that black type horse even if the page isn’t steeped in winners.

We would all like to start our breeding operations with a nice 1000 Guineas winner but realistically for most small breeders that is not going to happen.

Both my mares are winners. At whatever level, the will to win is a really important quality to pass on. Horses and humans can have lots of talent but they have to want to get their heads over the line first.

Both my mares have plenty of performers in their families so hopefully like my own family genetics they will produce me some respectable performers and maybe even a black type horse.

Hanella

Hanella

Hanella is by Galileo and was a middle distance runner herself, winning over a 1m2f the same distance as her listed placed mother Strutting. Nella has already proved that she can produce winners, with her first three foals being 80 rated winners.

For her I chose first season sire Hot Streak who stands at Tweenhills. Hot Streak proved that he had plenty of speed but also has some stamina further down his pedigree which will suit Nella. As buyers are focused on buying horses for speed he is perfect for breeders who are hoping to produce a nice speedy two-year-old.

Credit: Caroline Norris / Hot Streak

Credit: Caroline Norris / Hot Streak

He is a great looking individual with good limbs and plenty of bone. He also has the great strapline of his speed figure being on a par with Frankel in the Dewhurst.

Lolamotion was a sprinter and won over 5 furlongs. She will be going to Darley stallion Casamento who is a very risky choice for a breeder this year as he is about to have his first runners.

Lolamotion

Lolamotion

Casamento Credit: John Reardon

Casamento Credit: John Reardon

On the positive side his stud fee is low to try and encourage breeders to use him and I decided he is a risk worth taking. Casamento was a good two-year-old himself winning the Racing Post Trophy.

He had some lovely yearlings sell well at the sales and there was plenty of positive chat from trainers about the ones they have in their yards. He is also a lovely correct horse with plenty of size and substance which will suit Lola.

I went to see both stallions when I was at the sales in Newmarket. Visiting studs is a dangerous occupation for me as it gives me lots of ideas. I viewed Hot Streak at Longholes Stud and not only did I like the stallion but I also rather liked the viewing walkway. I am not sure whether I took more pictures of the stallion or the walkway!

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There was also the great sales pitch given to me by Michael Wilson who was impressed with my knowledge of Hot Streak’s stats. I had to break it to him later that I had spent time in the Tweenhills Tippee where the Hot Streak video was on repeat. Great marketing!

Culworth Grounds HQ

Culworth Grounds HQ

My trip to Dalham Hall where I used to work was a more familiar journey and it is like a palace for horses with a stud farm feel and although fantastic, it is not something I could replicate. Culworth Grounds has the feeling of a rural farm in the countryside which I also think is special and something not to be lost.

Winter and horses is always hard work, with endless mucking out and wet, muddy horses. They are the perfect New Year gym membership. There are so many jobs to be done but the weather is always holding us back. I often despair at my husband’s love of shiny machinery. The latest addition is mini digger. Apparently it is totally necessary to have a big and a little JCB digger, but I am secretly looking forward to the Spring when we can get them out digging and tidying up again.

The next development at Culworth Grounds is a new office building although more building means more mess and mud, hopefully the end result will be worth it.

I also have a perfect spot for that viewing walkway right outside it!

 

Useful Links:

www.thegaitpost.com/

www.tweenhills.com

www.darleyeurope.com

www.longholes.com

The Bloodstock Blogger: Part One

THE BLOODSTOCK BLOGGER - AS SEEN ON THE GAITPOST

We are delighted to welcome Sophie Buckley to The

Gaitpost. Sophie joins the team as a regular contributor

and will be sharing her journey as she develops her

blossoming bloodstock operation at home in Oxfordshire.

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Mother to Albert and Athena, Sophie continues to ride as a hobby, in recent years producing champions at the Royal Dublin Horse Show, Royal Windsor and the Royal International Horse Show alongside many other wins at county level.

Growing up on a farm in Ireland’s County Kildare, Sophie has spent her life surrounded by and working with horses.

In her teens she trained with international dressage instructor Gisele Holstein before spells with renowned Irish show producer Frances Cash, going on to land her first Champion at the Royal Dublin Horse Show, aged 17.

Pursuing her dream to work within the racing industry, Sophie became assistant to Shadwell Racing Manager,

Angus Gold and Derrinstown Stud Manager, Hubie de Burgh, travelling to bloodstock sales in the UK, US, Ireland and France, developing a keen eye for horses with premium potential.

On graduating from the University of Edinburgh with a BA in Rural Resource Management and an MBA in Equine Business Management from the Royal Agricultural University in Cirencester, Sophie joined Darley as a Marketing Executive.

In 2006, Sophie and her husband Charles bought Culworth Grounds intent on developing the farm and its equestrian potential.

Since then, under their direction, Culworth has grown to accommodate a number of equestrian disciplines, owners and professional riders and is now the base from which Sophie runs her showing and racing operations as well as a working farm.

A view from my bedroom window but sadly there are no horses at home since I have left.

A view from my bedroom window but sadly there are no horses at home since I have left.

“For many the start of the November foal sales at Goffs in

Ireland signals that the end of the sales season is in sight.

For me however it was the beginning in more ways than

one."

I grew up in Ireland so it is always great to have another excuse to go home. Luckily Coolcarrigan, where my parents live, is only twenty minutes’ drive to the sales. As I drove down the avenue past the church on my way to the sale, I thought of my grandfather turning in his grave with the thought of me going foal shopping. Horses were the ruin of many good Kildare families in his opinion!

Right: The pre parade ring at Goffs where all the last minute decisions are made.

Right: The pre parade ring at Goffs where all the last minute decisions are made.

After the first week at Goffs, I quickly realised that I had great taste in horses alongside the people who also had much deeper pockets than I did.

So I decided that I was just going to have to put that week down to a good learning experience.

The following week I set off to Tattersalls in Newmarket, full of enthusiasm and after the first day of looking, I had a good long shortlist of at least thirty foals. Surely I would be able to acquire one? 

Working into the night at the pre-parade ring at Tattersalls

Working into the night at the pre-parade ring at Tattersalls

After bidding on at least fifteen horses and watching the other fifteen go up in the bidding so quickly that I didn’t have time to put my hand up, the day ended with nothing purchased.

Speedy (bay) and Quick (chestnut) enjoying life in the field at Culworth Grounds with their new friend Pirate

Speedy (bay) and Quick (chestnut) enjoying life in the field at Culworth Grounds with their new friend Pirate

Luckily the week improved and with the help of Matt Coleman from StroudColeman Bloodstock and Sam Hoskins from Kennet Valley Thoroughbreds we purchased two lovely colts, now named Speedy and Quick. They are getting a daily pep talk about how they have to live up to their names.

The December sales are usually freezing, this year wasn’t too bad but I am always cold, I blame my Greek grandmother for that gene.

For somebody who is always cold going around with Matt was perfect because he was always hungry and delighted to stop for something to eat. So as I defrosted, Matt ate!

Working at the sales is not as easy as it may seem and we were joking about how after two weeks of hard work, over a thousand horses, endless analysis of pedigrees, conformation, dams letters and future sales positions, I only managed to buy two foals but the market was buoyant and there were braver people than me out there.

There were nice foals by new stallions such as Lethal ForceHavana GoldHarbour WatchCasamentoSwiss SpiritDragon Pulse and Mayson, which kept cropping up on my shortlists but never made it home to the Culworth Grounds paddocks. However, I will still enjoy following the progeny of these stallions when they have their first runners and seeing whether the nice models turn into good racehorses.

You would think that two weeks of horse shopping would be enough but the following week the mare sales began and the whole thing starts again but with different criteria. I purchased a Galileo mare who has bred some winners. I thought she was lovely, correct with a great walk and a lovely temperament and will run nicely with my other filly that I had privately purchased.

Hanella by Galileo out of Strutting having her first photo taken at Culworth Grounds

Hanella by Galileo out of Strutting having her first photo taken at Culworth Grounds

With all my new purchases home and safely ensconced in their fields the fun bit of seeing them grow and develop has begun.

“Sometimes it is the simple things in life”, is a good saying to sum up how good it feels to be up early on a lovely morning feeding the horses. Now of course, when it is chucking it down with rain it is another feeling altogether but the good days make up for the bad ones!

Nutwood Mimic getting ready for Christmas

Nutwood Mimic getting ready for Christmas

Next month I will be writing about choosing stallions for my mares, but for now it is Peppa Pig and Minecraft that are top of the next shopping list!

Wishing you all a Happy Christmas and a very Happy New Year.”

Sophie

Useful Links:

http://www.thegaitpost.com/

www.coolcarrigan.ie

www.goffs.ie

www.tattersalls.com

www.stroudcoleman.com

www.kvtracing.com