Prejudice led to great T’bred line

Nogara was a mare for the ages. Photo courtesy of Horse Collaborative.

Nogara was a mare for the ages. Photos courtesy of Horse Collaborative.

BY DENNY EMERSON — If you ride a thoroughbred in 2015, anywhere on planet earth, you do so because back in 1934 an Englishman had a prejudiced attitude toward Italians.

WHAT?

Yup.

In 1934, an Italian horseman named Federico Tesio had a mare, Nogara, that he wanted to breed to Lord Derby’s champion race horse, Fairway.

But Lord Derby’s stud manager, the person responsible for accepting mares into Fairway’s book, was prejudiced against Italians, and refused Tesio’s request.

Tesio bred Nogara to Pharos, the full brother of Fairway, when he was declined a breeding to Fairway.

Tesio bred Nogara to Pharos, the full brother of Fairway, when he was declined a breeding to Fairway.

So Tesio bred Nogara to Pharos, the full brother of Fairway.

The resulting foal was Nearco, a great champion on the racetrack, but an even greater sire of sires.

Nearco sired many foals, but the reason virtually all modern thoroughbreds descend from him is because he sired the three stallions— Nasrullah, Nearctic and Royal Charger.

Nasrullah sired Bold Ruler, Nashua and Never Bend, plus many others.

Nearctic sired Northern Dancer—’nuff said.

Nearco was the result of second-choice breeding decision.

Nearco was the result of second-choice breeding decision.

Royal Charger sired Turn To, Turn To sired Hail To Reason.

Have a look at your thoroughbred’s extended pedigree. Chances are you will find all three of Nearco’s sons back there. Almost certainly, you will find one of them.

And, had that stud groom not been prejudiced, Nearco would have never been foaled, nor would any horse descended from him.

And THAT is “the rest of the story.”

About the author:
Named “One of the 50 most influential horsemen of the Twentieth Century” by The Chronicle of the Horse, Denny Emerson was elected to the USEA Hall of Fame in 2005. He is the only rider to have ever won both a gold medal in eventing and a Tevis Buckle in endurance. He is a graduate of Dartmouth College and author of How Good Riders Get Good, and continues to ride and train from his Tamarack Hill Farm in Vermont and Southern Pines, NC.

* This article was reprinted with permission of Denny Emerson and the Horse Collaborative.

A ‘miracle’ he got out of Bastrop, La. kill pen

When Bev Strauss of MidAtlantic Horse Rescue saw this picture of A Miracle's On, she moved heaven and earth to save him from the Bastrop, La. kill pen.

When Bev Strauss of MidAtlantic Horse Rescue saw this picture of A Miracle’s On, she moved heaven and earth to save him from the Bastrop, La. kill pen.

A ratty chestnut gelding who by a stroke of luck was able to catch a ride out of the Bastrop kill pen in Louisiana, and be spared the slaughterhouse, is expected to make a grand appearance at a Kentucky horse show next month.

A Miracle’s On, a 3-year-old gelding rescued by MidAtlantic Horse Rescue earlier this summer has been entered to compete at the Kentucky Horse Park as part of the Retired Racehorse Project’s Thoroughbred Makeover show, says Bev Strauss, president of the horse rescue.

A Miracle’s On
Barn name: Mo
Sire: In a Walk
Dam: My Foriels On
Foal date: May 12, 2012
“It was a miracle that we got this horse out of the kill pen and onto our trailer,” says Strauss, explaining that last-minute details that can bottleneck a negotiation were handled in record time with help from friends who pulled out all the stops to get A Miracle’s On added to a shipment of rescued Thoroughbreds.

It just as easily could have been a ride to the slaughterhouse, says Strauss, who notes that A Miracle’s On was saved only by fluke.

Strauss had already arranged to purchase three other Thoroughbreds with funds that had been bequeathed to her charity for the purpose of horse rescue, and with additional funding raised by a community of her supporters to ship them north. And after everything was in order—the horse dealer had been paid, the shipper had been hired, and the trailer was on its way—A Miracle’s On appeared at the kill pen, and across Strauss’s radar.

After removing this meat sticker, the MidAtlantic Horse Rescue plans to reveal the show horse beneath.

After removing this meat sticker, the MidAtlantic Horse Rescue plans to reveal the show horse beneath.

“When I saw his picture, and he looked so ratty, I thought that we already had a trailer going down, and we had funds to add him on, but that the stars would really have align to get him up on this load,” she says.

Doubting she could get it all arranged in time, Strauss called on her friend Shelly Grantham Riley, who agreed to make a special trip for him and the other horses for quarantine, and then reached out to Georganne Hale, vice president of Maryland Racing, and willing friend who helped grease the wheels. Hale is the creator of the Totally Thoroughbred Show at Pimlico, and was happy to pick up the phone to help.

“I knew he’d raced at Evangeline and that Georganne” could be very helpful in getting all necessary health certificates and Coggins reports, she says. “And the stars really all did align, and he loaded on the trailer.”

Already he is proving to be an "uncomplicated" ride.

Already he is proving to be an “uncomplicated” ride.

In the weeks since his rescue, A Miracle’s On has proved such an agreeable animal, that when it came time to re-think horses the charity would show at the well-known Thoroughbred Makeover Project in Kentucky next month, he sprang immediately to mind, she says.

“We’d originally entered five horses in the show, but three were adopted, and one we decided not to bring. So I looked around my field and was looking for horses who were ready to start training,” she says, noting that the unassuming young gelding seemed perfect. At 15.2 hands and in a growth spurt, A Miracle’s On deserves this chance to be seen in a better light, she says.

His rescue, and that of the three other Bastrop kill pen horses MidAtlantic Horse Rescue acquired, was made possible by an unexpected donation from friends and family of well-known executive Stephen Racioppo, whose obituary requested donations to MidAtlantic Horse Rescue. “We understand that Stephen loved horses and because of his passion, we received donations from as far away as England and California,” she says.

Strauss adds, “We had the funds to purchase these horses thanks to the many friends of Steve Racioppo’s, but no way to get them north,” she says. “It was an amazing effort by (MidAtlantic Horse Rescue’s) many friends and supporters, to raise enough money to ship these horses north. We could never have rescued the 3+1 without EVERYONE rallying to help! Shelly Grantham Riley picked the first three up and quarantined them, and then made a special trip back to get this guy in time for the ride north. We really appreciate what everyone did for these four deserving guys!”

Photo of the Week: A bug’s tale

I'malightningbug, right, loves people so much he comes running, "talking" t he entire way.

I’malightningbug, right, loves people so much he comes running, “talking” t he entire way. Photo by Kelsie Buckley

I’malightningbug has been lighting up life for the Driscoll family of Goffstown, N.H. since the bay grandson of Belmont Stakes winner Touch Gold arrived in January 2012.

The adorable T’bred now nicknamed, Bug, traveled to the Granite State to serve as a companion horse to the family’s beloved 23-year-old horse Alomar, but soon showed he was really much more of a “people” horse.

“I have to say that I have not met a horse like Bug. Having grown up with horses, I’ve been exposed to different personalities, but none quite like him,” says Elise Driscoll. “He gets excited when he sees us and comes running, ‘talking’ the entire way.”

Pictured on the right with Driscoll’s twin daughters Ruth and Clare, Bug has been in training at Walnut Hollow Farm in N.H., learning basic flatwork. Though a previous knee-chip surgery limits him, he is on a path to becoming a pleasure/trail horse.