Swampy Sparkle Summer

The weather gods have continued to play jokes on me. Like last weekend, when I had signed up and paid for a dressage test at the Majestic show, actually learned it ahead of time and practiced it, and was almost… kind of looking forward to trying out the Prelim test for the first time. I had even cleaned and packed all my shit the afternoon before and gotten everything ready to go. Really, I brought this on myself I guess, now that I think about it. Far too much preparation.

he agrees

Last Saturday was hot and gross but ya know… we’re used to that by now. The radar stayed blessedly clear, and I got Presto out after lunch to groom him and get him ready to go. After I loaded him up I checked the radar again, and some storms were starting to pop up. As I was driving to Majestic, the sky in my rear view mirror started looking blacker and blacker. By the time I got there 20 minutes later and went to get my number, you could hear the thunder, and there was now a red blob of a storm on the radar headed right towards the show. Estimated arrival time? Literally like 5 minutes before my ride time.

But it was just the one blob, and Florida do be like that, so I just plopped myself in the trailer to wait it out with Presto. But as it went along, the storm got nastier and nastier, with a TON of lightning. Florida is the lightning capital of the US for a reason, but this was definitely an extreme. There were several very close lightning strikes that scared the bejeesus out of me.

No exaggeration

Naturally the show went on a storm/lightning hold, and as that storm started to pass over us, I checked the radar again. In the time it took for the first blob to pass over (it grew tremendously as it did so, by the way), another one had popped up behind it, also headed straight at us. This is the point at which I was like nope ok, I’m out. Mostly because 1) Presto’s quarter was starting to run out. 2) the footing in those grass rings isn’t great right after a lot of rain, so what was the point. 3) Have I mentioned I hate lightning? I was ready to bolt. Every bit of desire I had to ride the Prelim test had quickly fled my body.

this is called a nope

So I just… got back in my truck and drove home. Come to find out later they actually ended up cancelling the rest of the show anyway, so even if I had waited it would have been for naught. That was a really annoying way to sacrifice an entry fee. Plus I still had to get ready and drive there. Boo. But ya know… that’s a Florida summer afternoon for you. The storms can absolutely come out of nowhere, and they’re violent when they do.

Womp womp.

But the weather cleared up within a couple hours, and that night we were able to head over to WEC to watch the last Saturday night Grand Prix of the summer season. I don’t think I’ve been to one since… last summer? But we met up with some friends, had some dinner, and watched some nice horses jump under the lights.

Crossover 4, my personal favorite of the night

Monday was my birthday, which was also the day Rubes decided he had cellulitis and needed an emergency vet call. Thanks buddy, I love getting antibiotics for my birthday, what a great gift. He felt very sorry for himself and was all the drama about the entire ordeal pretty much all week.

I did get a couple things with some of my birthday money though (aside from a vet bill). I’d heard a few people rave about the KL Select breeches so I tried some on last week and absolutely loved them. I’m so picky about fabric (especially in the summer) and have a hard time finding breeches that don’t gap at the waist or have extra fabric around the tummy. These were legit the absolute perfect fit with really comfy, stretchy, lightweight fabric and I wanted 97 pairs of them immediately. Unfortunately the shop didn’t have anything in my size in colors I liked, so I went looking online and found a fun new (to me) gem of a tack shop in Ohio called Equine Essentials. They had a 15% off code for new customers, so don’t mind if I do, and when I took a few minutes to peruse their consignment section, I found the most STUNNING brand new Waldhausen sparkle noseband for $10 and a zippered Spy Coast tote for $2. Add to cart. Quite a pleasing little mini haul, plus they sent along a bag of free goodies too.

I do like presents

On Wednesday I had another jump lesson – my first lesson back in a couple weeks since Ellie and Alex were out of town on vacation. It was, to be fair, an absolutely SWAMPY day. 9000 degrees with 700% humidity or something like that, even at 10am. I was just walking liquid, really. Sweat was just pouring into my eyes and I couldn’t see shit. Luckily Presto is well acclimated to the weather, and to be honest I’ve been handling the heat a lot better since I’ve been swimming my 3 miles a week. It’s just helped my cardio fitness so much, and I swear I think something about the hypoxic breathing of swimming does something extra helpful when you live in an environment where you’re legit breathing as much water as you are oxygen. I’ve gotten used to having less oxygen or something? I dunno, I don’t have science to prove it, but riding in the peak of summer has been a lot easier for me this year versus years prior, even when I was doing a lot of cycling.

he was quite well-behaved, thanks humidity

We kept things fairly brief since the weather was so gross, but we worked a lot on putting Presto in more of a haunches-in positioning going into the corners so that he stays more balanced and doesn’t go quite so wide behind as we come out of the turn. Sometimes we achieved it, sometimes we didn’t, but it did seem to help us both. I swear 2024 is just gonna be known as The Year of the Haunches because I feel like moving his ass left and right has been the subject of 90% of our work this year.

whee

He feels good though, and I think we’re ready to start knocking some rust off at the schooling shows before the fall season ramps up! It feels good to be back on a more normal schedule and back in the swing of things. My ankle has been holding up pretty well… it gets sore sometimes (it def was sore the evening/next morning after the jump lesson) but I wouldn’t call it painful anymore. It’s progress!

Debby Does Ocala

We made it through the first hurricane of 2024! It’s funny, I think because this one was pretty weak, all things considered (just established as a Cat 1 before it made landfall) no one was really concerned about it. The number one thing you’ll see Floridians do before a minor hurricane or tropical storm? Mow their grass. Because it’s pretty much a full time job keeping the grass mowed here in the summer anyway, but if it’s not freshly mowed before it gets a bunch of rain dropped on it, you’ll be at jungle status within a few days before its dry enough to mow again. Everybody and their grandma was mowing on Sunday as it started to blow in.

so much water, this is the road in front of the farm

We’re pretty far inland so all we typically get is some wind and rain, and that’s what we got this time too. The wind wasn’t too terrible, but man we got A TON of rain. More than any of the last hurricanes from the previous two years for sure. It just absolutely poured buckets for like 24 hours straight. And it’s been raining a lot the past month anyway, so it was water on top of water. The biggest issue we had was flooding.

the arrow is where the edge of the pond usually is

I was concerned that with all the moisture and the wind we’d lose trees, and with that the secondary concern is structures, fences, or power lines. We did lose one tree but it was in an unused front area and it didn’t land on anything. We also got really lucky in that we didn’t lose power, although it flickered pretty hard a few times. Tons of people around here did lose power, there were trees down all over the place. We got lucky this time!

And even though we got something like almost 8″ of rain, as soon as it stopped actively pouring from the sky I was able to get the horses turned back out. Gotta love that Florida sandy soil… as long as it’s not a low area it dries quick and isn’t slick.

Rubert’s first Florida hurricane

We ended up only missing one day of riding, so aside from being water-logged in our drainage areas, things have been back to normal.

Presto exploring the pond extension

My trainers were on vacation last week so no lesson last week or this week. I did take Presto over to Sweet Dixie yesterday to gallop, but it was so freakin humid that even he wasn’t that enthusiastic after the first few minutes.

had some initial concerns

I think he was also unenthusiastic because he was alone. Like really really alone, the only horse on the property. It’s always quiet there in the off season but not usually THAT quiet. He kept looking around for his BFF Wally and seemed genuinely disappointed to have no friends. The ground felt GREAT though, and he’s starting to feel stronger again (both muscularly and cardio) after all that time off he had. I’m ready to skip ahead to September so we can get past the worst of the summer and get closer to doing things again. This is truly the swampiest, most boring time of year.

there’s a little roadside bakery on the way to Sweet Dixie and I finally stopped to acquire some goodies

Although I signed us up for a dressage test at Majestic tomorrow… Prelim A. That’ll be our first time tackling that test, which I totally definitely have memorized and have ridden through more than once. Tooooootally. Definitely.

My ride time is like 2:40pm though, which is really testing my resolve to participate. But unless it’s doing some kind of death thunderstorm I really have no reason not to, and I’ve already paid, so… let’s go? I guess?

Rubes and his ridiculous fly gear

Next week we should be back to our lesson schedule and starting to pick up some steam again, or at least be back to things that are more interesting. Now if we could turn Florida’s thermostat down a little bit, that would be superb.

PoulticeLicker

Ya know that feeling when you mean to post something on Tuesday and then forget, and next thing you know it’s Thursday? Whoops. Things have been poppin’ around here! Or maybe I’m just getting old and forgetful. Maybe both.

Rubes has been going to Groundwork Kindergarten every day and he’s just a little Rhodes Scholar (Rubes Scholar?). He’s figured out that when I come to get him it means mints (these remain his favorite treat, although I’ve gotten him to eat German Horse Muffins too. He’s not very enthusiastic about anything else.) and groomies, so he always makes an absolute bee line for me. I would be flattered but it has nothing to do with me and everything to do with my services rendered. He is DOWN for a nice long full-body curry, heavy on the belly scritches.

The groundwork is doing wonders for his focus though, and him having and knowing rules and boundaries seems to help his brain settle a bit too. He’s a lot more like Henry in the brain… he’s very eager and always thinking ahead, which is good, but he can also get anticipatory and is really sensitive about being wrong. So we keep things very methodical and consistent and black and white.

sweet boy

The groundwork has really helped him figure out how to take a deep breath, focus, and wait for me. He’s been working on staying out of my bubble, stopping when I stop, moving away from me if I move into him, yielding his front end and his hind end, backing, and the verbal cues for whoa, walk, and trot on a circle. This week I also starting teaching him to sidepass over/park up at the mounting block, which he’s starting to understand pretty well. Oh, and he’s learned to smile a little bit, although his is considerably smaller and much slower than Presto’s.

Bess Frenny

It’s really almost no “work” but it does seem to occupy his brain pretty well, and he’s gotten into the routine. I’m pleased that, if nothing else, he’s a horse that you can now lead around anywhere and never have to even touch the lead rope, vs when he came and was accustomed to kinda dragging people around by a nose chain. For this lifestyle it is a significant improvement in his general day to day handling.

my lil baked potato

He really does detest the bugs here though, like if there’s one fly on him he thinks he’s being viciously attacked, so he wears a lot of fly gear. Mask and boots at the very least, and fly sheet when it’s not too suffocatingly hot/humid. He got his own fly sheet (from Bow Horse USA, the first thing I’ve tried from them!) so he doesn’t have to keep borrowing Presto’s. He looks absurd when he’s all dressed up, but he’s happy to be bug-free, so… whatever RubenOnRye wants I guess.

In the meantime, I had another jump lesson last week on Presto, with more course work, and it was also good, like the week before. He had one feral moment when a dog came shooting across the ring (Ellie finally got to see what I call his patented Sit And Spin maneuver) but he was really rideable about the jumps. She and Alex are out of town for the next couple weeks so lessons are on hiatus until their return.

And then on Friday Presto came in with a chunk missing out of his fetlock and a puffy leg. I feel like I deserve an award for not freaking out as much as I wanted to freak out, because my first inclination was omg what if there’s a puncture I can’t see and it’s in the joint and he’s gonna end up in the hospital with a joint infection and cellulitis and and and. I’m fine. It’s fine. There was indeed not a puncture, and with some cold-hosing and bandaging and poultice and long walks it was back to normal within a couple days.

what the

What isn’t normal is the fact that Presto is obsessed with licking the poultice off his own leg. He’s such a weirdo about injuries or topical medications… he always wants to lick, like a dog. That’s how he ripped his stiches out last summer if you recall – with his own teeth. Something wrong with that weirdo.

Yesterday we went for a fun casual XC day with my friend Emily, just popping over a few small things so we (mostly me, who always wants to go too slow/underpowered XC) can remember our job. We ended the day by coming the bigger way through the water and he was really super. I wish it was easier/quicker for me to get myself back into the more forward/attacking XC mode… I think I really need to come out once a week and just gallop a few fences so I don’t lose the feeling entirely.

I’m very clearly not going to be back in the swing of things well enough in time for the August Ocala recognized. I briefly debated just entering the Training, but if I’m gonna do that I might as well just do the unrecognized (which has starter through Training) a couple weeks later and spent 1/3 the money. So, meh. Instead I entered just a dressage test a couple weekends from now (the Prelim test, which I haven’t ridden yet!) at the Majestic schooling show, and then maybe I’ll enter a Modified CT or a M/T three phase at the POP schooling show. We’ll see how things are going a month from now. There’s legit no rush, but it’s prob time to start stepping it back up!

“The Rails Here are Free”

Alright, alright, Rubert has really dominated the last couple weeks around here so I suppose I should talk about what else has been going on. But first, a couple more pics of Sir Rubes. Sorrynotsorry.

He got his feet done by my farrier for the first time last week – no more racing plates!
I just wanna squish him

Okay, we can move on now, I swear.

I’ve had a couple more jump lessons in that time, one with Ellie and then one with her husband Alex. I like both of them, although they both teach differently. Ellie is a lot of fine minute detail and Alex is a lot of big picture. With Ellie we did a lot of grids and rideability type exercises, keeping it small and simple. In my last lesson with her I was definitely getting frustrated about my ankle… it’s just not functioning the same as, well, as before I broke the dang thing. To be expected, but still annoying. My base of support doesn’t feel the same, and the leg doesn’t lay quite the same. It’ll take time, I know, but ugh.

Ellie had me focus more on sinking into the right seat bone when I wanted to use that weaker leg, and it did seem to help. We also got sent home with an exercise to work on, something she does pretty much every time, which I love… yes, please gimme homework!

bounce cavaletti in the corner on a circle, much joy

Last week I rode with Alex, and he started me out over some simple exercises back and forth, then sent us around a course at about Novice height. Legit my first actual course since the 1* in April. What I really appreciate about Alex is that he’s a nice balance to my brain that really thirsts for everything to be in great detail and control, because it can also get really micro-managey and over-thinky. Alex is just kinda like “go forward, jump the jumps, let him make mistakes, it’s not a big deal”. I need to hear that sometimes because I can get so stuck in my own head.

His feedback was basically that I’m trying to do too much (hm, never heard that before *insert heavy sarcasm*) and I needed to trust my training more. He said that the horse was obviously well-schooled on the flat, knew his job, and we were capable, so I needed to just… let him do it. He thought I should let Presto keep moving forward more down the lines so he could get deeper to the out and learn to make a better shape off the ground, and he said that my “whoa” should just be as small as moving my shoulders back a few inches. He was like the horse responds to that rebalancing aid perfectly well on the flat, so he can do it over fences too, and if he doesn’t, the consequences are on him – let him get too deep, it’s how he learns. “The rails here are free”, he said. Aka, let Presto make the mistakes at home, that’s part of the training process. That little quip has really really taken root in my head to represent the fact that I have to let the mistakes happen when they need to, and trust my training more.

I have no lesson media because I’m there by myself, but here’s a Pasta Pic for tax anyway

After that he put the jumps up to Modified height and we did it again, with the advice of just moving my shoulders back as a rebalancing aid in the line. He also had me start out with a more forward canter keeping him in a rounder shape. It worked quite well, really. Presto ignored my rebalancing aid a bit in one line (expecting a stronger aid, probably) and ended up deep at an oxer, but didn’t make that mistake again. He was jumping great.

Overall it was nice to be back to jumping courses, as well as something with a little more height again. If only to remember that we can in fact still do it. It’s amazing how quickly you lose your mojo.

“speak for yourself, lady, I always has mojo!”

The weekend before last I also spent some time volunteering at a POP show. These schooling shows at Florida Horse Park are my favorite, I feel like they’re everything a schooling show should be. Good courses, great footing, professional staff, but also really laidback and casual and accommodating. Usually I’m there competing but I sat this one out, so I volunteered for XC instead. And they gave me a job I’ve never done before: chase cart.

Basically, the way they keep the number of required volunteers down to a minimum for these schooling shows is by eliminating the need for people actually sitting at the jumps out on the XC course. Instead they have a few people assigned to chase carts, aka UTVs, who act as starter, timer, and XC jump judges. There were 3 of us on the carts rotating through, so basically you nudge your cart up to the start box, count the rider down from 10 when they’re ready, hit your stopwatch when you get to zero, and then follow the rider around the course (from a safe distance obviously) in the UTV. Our courses here are pretty open, so it works to where you can see everything pretty easily and you just radio back to control if you have any issues. When the person crosses the finish you hit your watch again, go back to control and give them the jump penalties and the time, and then await your next starter.

getting ready to do some chasin’

It’s a simple job but it’s kinda fun, and does make the day go by pretty fast. You’re just… constantly trailing behind horses on XC in a motorized vehicle. I’ve had worse days.

Also, trainers and friends tend to ride along in the cart so they can watch and video, which is really nice. I tried to make sure those people got good shots and angles of everything, because ya know… sometimes we do it for the ‘gram. Oh, AND, such a weird and random blogosphere connection. At one point a guy was getting in the back of the cart for a ridealong and I kinda looked at him a second time going “that dude looks familiar… why do I know him”. Come to find out later that it was Olivia’s husband, who I have only ever seen in pics on her blog. And he lives in VERMONT. Turns out he was down here in Ocala trying horses and happened to be at the show that day to watch one go. I didn’t actually realize that’s who it was until I posted that pic on my story and Olivia was like wait I think my husband was just in the back of your cart. Small world, guys. Really small. Sorta felt bad that I told him he better hold on tight because if he fell out I wouldn’t go back for him. Jk I didn’t feel bad at all.

Lets see, what else…

OH! I got a new helmet! I’ve been mega-stalking the ARRO helmets since I first saw them at Kentucky a couple years ago and I finally got one. My XC helmet was up for replacement this year so I really dug into the comparison shopping again, and the ARRO was just such a clear winner for lots of reasons.

I opted for the glossy and I love her

I’ll have more posts coming about these helmets and their safety ratings and testing and all that stuff, because it’s really a lot and SO interesting. I chatted on the phone with the founder of ARRO last week and spent a lot of time talking to the rep here when I was getting fitted, and they’re just super cool and backed by so much actual data, it’s definitely worth digging into. I don’t think anything else on the market compares, and we gotta talk about it. Y’all know I can’t resist a nerdy safety equipment deep dive.

Speaking of, I’m a few weeks into being back in the pool again and really loving it.

it’s always empty there

I’ve worked my way back up to a mile per swim, which was my goal from the start, so last week I swam a total of 3 miles. That’s what I’d like to maintain going forward. I’m not a super fast swimmer when I focus on my form, so It takes me about 40+ minutes to swim the mile, but man it’s been such a great workout. Head to toe, I feel it, but I also already feel stronger too. Plus it’s indoors and it’s not hot, so like… mega bonus for a Florida workout activity. But mostly I just love how peaceful and serene it is when I’m swimming. No phone, nothing else I have to be doing in the moment, stealing a little time away from the farm, with literally nothing to distract me. It’s just me alone with my thoughts, which is both terrifying and therapeutic at the same time. I forgot how much I love swimming.

In other non-horsey things, last week we also finally made it back to the Ocala Oddities Market, which is my favorite thing to do here. It’s a monthly market of just straight up weird art shit with a DJ that plays great music, and food trucks, and the best people-watching in town. I love everything about it. I usually try to buy at least one thing from one of the many local artists that sets up a table, but nothing grabbed me this time. They were giving away t-shirts though, so I snagged myself a true classic.

The theme this month was “Goth Girl”

Small Rubert update: mostly he’s just been coming in to get groomed and work on whoa/staying out of my space when he’s leading. He thinks he’s got places to be, and to his chagrin, he does not. I just love how intelligent he is though, such a fast learner and always looking for the right answer, even if he’s got ants in his pants. I had two interviews about him last week – one zoom call for a Parx Racing show, and one for an article about him on PA Bred. It’s like a little Ruby Bleu press junket over here.

This week I’ve got another lesson with Ellie and then mostly just work stuff. I’m starting to ponder my plan of attack for the fall season, which will probably include doing something (no idea what yet, but something) at the next couple schooling shows so we can dip our toe back into things. We’ll see how the next few weeks go.

Ruby Bleu’s Pedigree Deep Dive

Y’all knew this was coming, right? I mean if I do a “Behind the Breeding” column for EN with top event horses, you can guarantee that I’m doing one for all my horses too. And Rubert is a really interesting one, I think!

Baby Bleu!

First, the Ruby Bleu stats. He raced 100 times, hit the board 59 times, and won 23 times. He finished 3rd in 4 different stakes races: the Turning for Home Handicap and Roanoke Stakes when he was a 4yo, the Storm Cat Stakes when he was an 8yo, and the Washington Crossing Stakes when he was a 9 year old. All total he earned $939,169 and although he was claimed away from his breeder Donald Brown several times throughout his career (it’s hard to avoid claiming races when horses run out of conditions), Donnie always made it a point to go get the horse back. He raced very consistently year after year, with no long breaks in his schedule, and he just kept showing up. This horse ran and ran and ran and ran, with the kind of frequency and longevity you don’t see very often.

Anyway, on to the breeding. Let’s start with his sire!

Messner was, to be entirely fair, a flop as a racehorse. With his exceptional pedigree he sold for 160k at Keeneland as a yearling, but went on to only race twice and win a measly $809. As a 4 year old he ended up at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Mixed sale, where he sold to Rubert’s breeder/owner Donnie for $7500.

To be fair his pedigree did make him a VERY interesting stallion prospect. Messner was a 3/4 brother to the phenomenal runner and sire Malibu Moon, who at the time stood in Kentucky for a $70,000 fee. Messner and Malibu Moon share the same dam, Macoumba, and Malibu Moon is by AP Indy whereas Messner is by AP Indy son Bernardini.

Malibu Moon

Messner stood for a fee of only $1500 while in PA but didn’t attract a huge number of mares. He stood in PA for 2013 and 2014 before being sold to Haras Las Trinitarias in Venezuela. Ruby Bleu was one of his first foals and remains by far the highest earner. However, many of Messner’s foals have had good longevity on the racetrack.

Bernardini, however, had quite a different experience as both a racehorse a sire. By the legendary AP Indy and out of grade 1 stakes winner Cara Rafaela, Bernardini was a multiple grade 1 winner, including a win in the Preakness, Travers, Jockey Club Gold Cup, and second in the Breeders Cup Classic. He also earned the champion 3-year-old male title in 2006 and earned over $3 million in his career. One article quotes Bernardini’s trainer as saying “He was one of those types that if he was a human, he would have been quarterback on the football team in high school with the GQ looks and incredible athletic ability. He would have been valedictorian, too, and then roll on to win a Nobel Peace Prize.”

Bernardini entered stud in Kentucky in 2007 and was shuttled between the US and Australia from 2008 to 2011. He was known for his kind temperament and was often used to teach new employees the ins and outs of a breeding farm. Bernardini sired 80 black-type winners that have earned around $100 million.

In addition to producing excellent racehorses, Bernardini has also made his mark on the sporthorse world, particularly when it comes to eventing. He’s the sire of 5* horse Humble Glory, 4* horse Global Victory, and 3* horse WE Empyrean. He also has two stallion sons in the US that have competed to the Prelim/2* level, Saketini (Fey’s sire) and Redtail Achiever.

Messner’s dam, Macoumba, raced in France, where she was a Grade 1 winner before being imported to the US to serve as a broodmare for Walmac International. Her dam, Maximova by Green Dancer, was a Grade 1 winner against the colts in France, and she also placed second in Ireland in the Irish One Thousand Guineas. Maximova produced five stakes winners: Septieme Ciel, Grade 1 winner by Seattle Slew; Macoumba; Maxigroom Grade 3 winner by Blushing Groom; Balchaia by Nureyev; and Manureva by Nureyev.

Macoumba

Whew. That was a lot and we’re only halfway through. Props if you’re still with me. Moving on to the dam’s side…

Ruby Bleu hails from Thoroughbred mare family 8-c, which is also home to some heavy hitters such racehorses Uncle Mo and Ruffian, Derby winners Fusaichi Pegasus and Orb, as well as steeplechasers Brave Inca, Kicking King, Roman Hackle, and Grand National winner Hedgehunter.

Ruby Bleu’s dam, Ruby Soul, was bred in Kentucky by Charles Fipke. She raced a grand total of one time and finished last… she was slow to break and never made much effort. As a 4 year old she sold at Fasig Tipton for $4k, and then was sold again at Keeneland (to Ruby Bleu’s breeder, Donnie) in 2013 for $4500 in foal to Super Saver. She produced a handful of foals in the US for Donnie, with Ruby Bleu being the most successful.

Ruby Soul’s sire was the Irish-bred stallion Perfect Soul, a Grade 1 winner of over $1.5 million who was the 2003 Champion Turf Horse in Canada. True to his pedigree, he raced exclusively on the turf. Also true to his pedigree, he produced some very successful steeplechase horses.

Surprising Soul

Perfect Soul’s sire, Sadler’s Wells, has left a huge legacy in both turf racing and steeplechase both directly and via his sons, particularly in Europe. This line is known for both jumping ability and longevity, and Sadler’s Wells also shows up in the pedigree of some top eventers, including as the damsire of 5* horse Just Kidding.

Sadler’s Wells

Perfect Soul’s dam is the famous Ball Chairman, a Secretariat mare that was an excellent producer for Fipke’s breeding program. And we all know about Secretariat, right?

Ruby Soul’s dam, Ruby City, raced only as a 2yo, making six starts, winning once, and earning a total 35k. Her value really was mostly in her pedigree. Her dam, Island Kitten, was a stakes-placed racehorse and an excellent producer. Island Kitten’s most famous offspring was the Grade 1 winner and prolific sire Hennessy, and she also produced three other stakes winners: Shy Tom, Wild Kitty, and Pearl City. Island Kitten’s dam was the Reines-de-Course mare T.C. Kitten, who produced Grade 1 winner Field Cat as well as the mare Beware of the Cat, dam of Editor’s Note and Hold That Tiger. It’s a really nice line of race mares! Which is how Ruby City found herself selling for $200k at a Keeneland sale when she was 10yo in foal to Stephen Got Even.

Island Kitten

Ruby City proved to be a pretty decent broodmare herself, producing 6 winners as well as one stakes winner, Tale for Ruby.

Ruby City’s sire was stakes winner Carson City, who is known in sporthorse circles for producing horses with good temperaments and longevity.

Ruby City’s damsire was the South-African bred Hawaii, who was an excellent racehorse known for his intelligence and soundness. Although a flat runner himself, he produced a high number of timber racing horses, and many also made it over into the sporthorse world. His best-known offspring is probably 5* eventer and Eventing Hall of Famer Molokai who completed Badminton, Burghley, and Kentucky.

Molokai

Hawaii is also the sire of the phenomenal sport stallion Porter Rhodes, sire of 5* horses Majas Hope and Spring Panorama, 1.50m showjumper Newtown Jumping Jack, and 4* horses Kiltealy Rogers, Porters Hill, Stellor Rhodes, and Diesel Green.

As you can see, I think Ruby Bleu lives up to his pedigree. There are a lot of horses on his page that are known for their longevity and intelligence, and he certainly has the Bernardini phenotype. There’s also a lot of proven jumping blood in his pedigree… I’m excited to get him going and see what he can do beyond the racetrack!