| Our philosophy can be summed up in just a few words:
Do only those things that produce good horses.
I foolishly thought I would get off the hook real neatly by coming
up with a simple statement of our philosophy about raising horse.
“Do only those things that result in good horses.” Well talk about
trying to duck out on the real work!! The explanation behind such
a simple statement requires a great deal more effort, if I am to get my
point across.
Let us begin the process by seeking to define all of the categories
that need consideration. First, there is the breeding, the pedigrees,
the bloodlines or the gene pools to consider. Second, feeding, nutrition,
and prophylactic maintenance. Third, the aspect of time lines versus life
spans of horses. Fourth, the element of conformation as influenced
by breeding, by diet, by environment, by use, as expressed in terms of
soundness and mechanical function. Fifth, the horse as an end product
of a conscious effort to produce a better horse than the ingredient horses
that preceded it as its parents. Sixth, avoid doing those things
that are unethical and would knowingly produce an offspring that will be
an unsound horse.
Our philosophy is then, that we will produce Appaloosa horses, that
are the product of a gene pool that regularly and reliably provides
color and characteristics of the Appaloosa, but which concurrently provides
intelligence and disposition, longevity and length of useful life, mechanical
correctness and soundness in conformation, and who have the capacity to
reproduce those facets in their offspring.
We implement this policy by utilizing mares and stallions who are
themselves the building blocks of the facets we seek to promote.
Many of the branches of the pedigrees our animals represent, reach back
into a time when there was no problem with out crossing and dilution of
the gene pool. This is especially a problem of the seventies, eighties,
and nineties. It is common for our animals to have spanned fifty,
sixty, seventy years in only three or four generations back along their
pedigrees, to a time preceding the problems brought on in the present.
These same pedigrees show us the diversity and breadth of the genetic source
material from which we breed.
Our production of color and characteristics is not dependent on the
contribution of one or two horses, redundantly repeated and repeated.
We consciously avoid the breeding practices which lead down the road to
inbreeding and loss of the broad based source we have carefully assembled.
The use of “famous” horses in the breeding practice ignores the reality
of many equally good horses who never became known or famous or promoted,
but who carried the same worthy genetic material as those who did.
While we do, on one hand have notable “famous” or well known horses in
the bloodlines we have assembled, we have as many or more that were
little known or obscure, who lived out their lives as favorite working
and breeding animals as someone’s special horses, never making the spotlight
beyond that cast by the owner’s barn light.
The horses of the Americas, are the product of centuries of horses
imported to the new world from many sources over the years, who did what
they do best, in surviving and breeding as adapted “wild horses”
These horses became part of feral herds, who in turn were the horses of
the Native American in their development of the use of the horse, and later
they were the horses running loose in the United States during the 1800’s
and early 1900’s that fueled the development of the ranches of the West.
These were the source of immense genetic diversity which was available
to develop many of the later and better known bloodlines of
the American west, which we now refer to by their famous ranch or owner
names, years after the peak of their fame. This diversity is still
there, but you have to look for it. Our pursuit has been to find
and salvage what we can, and bring it forward to the present in current
day offspring. Our philosophy is based on the wise use of this base. |