Kellie helped me find my all-time favorite horse. RM Touchin Velvet. AKA "Jessie"
That little mare was my best friend for many years and she taught me a lot... and put up with a lot :) I showed her all over the south east and she gamely did everything I asked her to do.
One of the other horses that proved to have a great influence in my life was the very first Morgan I ever bought. Her name is Rose Hill Crystal. I bought Crystal as a two year old in 1983 and owned her for several years. Eventually I got up to 8 horses and the time came for me to sell some of them. Crystal was one of the ones I sold, and she went to live with a nice lady in Newnan, GA. Eventually life got busy and complicated and I sold all of my horses and was out of the horse biz for a couple of years. However, I always kept track of Crystal over the years and in late 2000 when I decided I was ready to get back into horses, I bought Crystal back. At this point Crystal was nearly 20 and she'd never been a great riding horse, but that was ok. I wasn't looking for a riding horse. I wanted a broodmare and Crystal had the bloodlines and the conformation and the movement I was looking for... and I knew just who I wanted to breed her to.
This is Turfwood Royal Flush. He is one of the great stallions to ever grace the Morgan breed. Kellie and her husband Bob owned him when I met them. I learned to ride on "The Old Man" and when I bought Crystal in 1983 it was with the intent of breeding her to Royal. That didn't happen then, but nearly 20 years later I finally got my act together and in July of 2001 the deed was done and I'm glad it was as we lost Royal the following spring and in June of 2002 Crystal presented us with Royal's last daughter, Ancalagon's Royal Rose. AKA "Callie."
Callie was everything I had hoped for from this cross. She got the best of everything from both her parents and is one of the sweetest, smartest horses I have ever known.
I had Callie for the first 3 years of her life and then life intervened again when I decided to up and move to California. My original intent was to ship Callie out here once I got settled, but after some serious soul searching, I decided that as much as I missed my baby girl, I just couldn't do that to her. She's used to having acres and acres of pasture to run around in and trapping her here in a 12x12 stall just seemed wrong.
So now Callie lives at Kellie's place and seemed very happy there when I went to visit her last fall. She looks an awful lot like daddy and has grown up to be a beautiful mare.
However, I learned a long time ago that I can't stay away from horses for long. I'm now the manager at LA Saddlery at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center and have been re-bitten by the "horse bug" and bad... I'm riding at Jim Bennett Farms and while I love the Saddlebreds that I get to ride there...
... I'm still (and always will be) a Morgan girl. I've spent a lot of time on the various horse sale websites looking at what's for sale out there and while I've found a lot of nice horses, I keep coming back to the fact that there probably isn't anything that I'm going to like better than a foal that I breed myself. Once again, I know what I want, and I know the cross I need to get it... Which once again leads me back to where I started. Kellie's barn and Crystal and Royal's daughter, Callie.
Kellie now owns this fantastic little grulla stallion named Stormwashed. Grulla is a rare color for Morgans and I'd be lying if I didn't say that his color is partially the reason I want to breed Callie to him. But it's only PART of the reason. In any color color, "Tig" is a great little horse. He should shorten up Callie's back and she can hopefully lengthen out his neck and I should have a fantastic dressage prospect with lots of hair... who is not chestnut :) Don't get me wrong, I've loved all my bright red horses, but I knew I didn't want chestnut this time, and since Tig is homozygous for black, I know that's not gonna happen.
So next spring we'll introduce Callie and Tig and sometime in early 2012 I'll have a nifty little baby horse.
Black or grulla, colt or filly, I don't really care. I'm just looking forward to what this cross will produce. I already have names picked out :)
I would like to thank Kellie Sharpe for everything she has done for me over the years. She has taught me a lot and has introduced me to some amazing horses. Here's hoping the one we create next will be the most amazing of them all :)
One of the other horses that proved to have a great influence in my life was the very first Morgan I ever bought. Her name is Rose Hill Crystal. I bought Crystal as a two year old in 1983 and owned her for several years. Eventually I got up to 8 horses and the time came for me to sell some of them. Crystal was one of the ones I sold, and she went to live with a nice lady in Newnan, GA. Eventually life got busy and complicated and I sold all of my horses and was out of the horse biz for a couple of years. However, I always kept track of Crystal over the years and in late 2000 when I decided I was ready to get back into horses, I bought Crystal back. At this point Crystal was nearly 20 and she'd never been a great riding horse, but that was ok. I wasn't looking for a riding horse. I wanted a broodmare and Crystal had the bloodlines and the conformation and the movement I was looking for... and I knew just who I wanted to breed her to.
This is Turfwood Royal Flush. He is one of the great stallions to ever grace the Morgan breed. Kellie and her husband Bob owned him when I met them. I learned to ride on "The Old Man" and when I bought Crystal in 1983 it was with the intent of breeding her to Royal. That didn't happen then, but nearly 20 years later I finally got my act together and in July of 2001 the deed was done and I'm glad it was as we lost Royal the following spring and in June of 2002 Crystal presented us with Royal's last daughter, Ancalagon's Royal Rose. AKA "Callie."
Callie was everything I had hoped for from this cross. She got the best of everything from both her parents and is one of the sweetest, smartest horses I have ever known.
I had Callie for the first 3 years of her life and then life intervened again when I decided to up and move to California. My original intent was to ship Callie out here once I got settled, but after some serious soul searching, I decided that as much as I missed my baby girl, I just couldn't do that to her. She's used to having acres and acres of pasture to run around in and trapping her here in a 12x12 stall just seemed wrong.
So now Callie lives at Kellie's place and seemed very happy there when I went to visit her last fall. She looks an awful lot like daddy and has grown up to be a beautiful mare.
However, I learned a long time ago that I can't stay away from horses for long. I'm now the manager at LA Saddlery at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center and have been re-bitten by the "horse bug" and bad... I'm riding at Jim Bennett Farms and while I love the Saddlebreds that I get to ride there...
... I'm still (and always will be) a Morgan girl. I've spent a lot of time on the various horse sale websites looking at what's for sale out there and while I've found a lot of nice horses, I keep coming back to the fact that there probably isn't anything that I'm going to like better than a foal that I breed myself. Once again, I know what I want, and I know the cross I need to get it... Which once again leads me back to where I started. Kellie's barn and Crystal and Royal's daughter, Callie.
Kellie now owns this fantastic little grulla stallion named Stormwashed. Grulla is a rare color for Morgans and I'd be lying if I didn't say that his color is partially the reason I want to breed Callie to him. But it's only PART of the reason. In any color color, "Tig" is a great little horse. He should shorten up Callie's back and she can hopefully lengthen out his neck and I should have a fantastic dressage prospect with lots of hair... who is not chestnut :) Don't get me wrong, I've loved all my bright red horses, but I knew I didn't want chestnut this time, and since Tig is homozygous for black, I know that's not gonna happen.
So next spring we'll introduce Callie and Tig and sometime in early 2012 I'll have a nifty little baby horse.
Black or grulla, colt or filly, I don't really care. I'm just looking forward to what this cross will produce. I already have names picked out :)
I would like to thank Kellie Sharpe for everything she has done for me over the years. She has taught me a lot and has introduced me to some amazing horses. Here's hoping the one we create next will be the most amazing of them all :)
3 comments:
One thing is absolutely certain: You take GREAT pictures of horses.
Thanks Ed! :)
Beautiful horses! and great pictures! Miss you!
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