The
Northwest has been a great place to begin and raise
Arabian horses. The location, climate, nature of the
people here in Oregon, attracts all those that love the
Arabian Horse.
Be
it a pet/friend, a trail horse, endurance horse, showing
4h, Class A shows, Regionals, Nationals... the Arabian
Horse gives those who love the horse a reason to have it
all.
View on the Stallion Barn ...
We
have bred International, National and Regional Champion
Arabian Horses. Deor Farms with the stallions, Eminant and
A-Jakarta, who stand at stud, training, showing and
marketing of foals, who have been bred by clients of some
25 years.
The
Pacific Northwest has been and always will be the perfect
place for breeding Arabian Horses!
Aude Espourtielle and A Jakarta
By J. L. Hardesty
At Midwest/Scottsdale *Elkana and Aude
Writer’s
Note: Since Aude and I have been friends for a quarter
of a century, and because Aude has a serious aversion to
talking about herself, David asked me to tell our friend’s
story. I hope when you finish reading this brief account
you’ll have some sense of who Aude is. Not only is she an
exceptional woman, she is one of the finest Arabian horse
breeders of this era.
Horses have been the central focus of Aude’s life for as
long as she can remember. She learned to ride almost
before she could walk. And in one “language” or another,
she’s always communicated with horses, understood them,
and known them on a level beyond simple comprehension.
Aude began her love affair with the Arabian horse in 1960
when she was nine years old. To keep her busy on a long
trip, Aude’s father gave her Lady Wentworth’s book, The
Authentic Arabian. She devoured that treatise on the train
ride between Le Havre and Paris and her life was changed,
then, for good and for all, it’s course irrevocably
charted.
Four years later, Aude’s 13th birthday gift from her
parents was the two-year-old Arabian filly, Sunlawn Marti.
Marti was a maternal granddaughter of *Zarif (sire of
Hallany Mistanny) who carried the blood of America’s
earliest Egyptian and Polish imports. For Aude, Marti bore
three fillies. With Aude, the pretty gray mare spent her
entire life.
Soon thereafter, Aude’s uncle, George De Cocq gave her
another young mare, the domestic bred, Tigerlily. Of
largely Crabbet heritage, carrying lines to Abu Farwa and
*Raffles, as well as the W.R. Brown Egyptian import Ghazi,
Tigerlily would prove the more prolific of the two mares,
producing foals by *BASK++, *Naborr and *Muscat, among
others. Tigerlily’s most successful offspring were her
daughter, Ming Jade, by *BASK++, and her son, The Jade
Tiger, also by *BASK++.
In 1967, when Aude was 16, the Espourtielle family moved
from her childhood home of Oregon to Arizona for her
parents’ health. Soon Aude became acquainted with the
LaCroixs and *BASK++ (who she calls to this day, his royal
highness!). Before long Aude was working at Lasma,
grooming horses, learning husbandry and breeding
philosophy from the master himself, Dr. Eugene LaCroix.
Time passed. The love affair continued. Every day, every
waking hour, Aude spent with the horses. There was nothing
else of real importance in her life then, or really, now.
Except, of course, for friends in the horse world who
became, early on, her family.
Nichols Sale.....1976
Still
working off and on at Lasma nearly a decade later, Aude
attended Mike Nichols’ first auction extravaganza managed
by Gene LaCroix Jr. in 1976. It was at that stellar event
that Aude found her dream horse, the gorgeous white
Arabian mare, *ELKANA, who, beside Aude, would ultimately
set the Arabian horse world on fire and establish a legacy
of great horses for the breed. In retrospect, it’s evident
that these two were destined to meet, to become life
partners, to make an indelible contribution. And so they
did.
I was able to convince Aude to share her thoughts about
that special mare.
“*ELKANA,” she said, “was my best friend in life. She was
that once in a lifetime gift from God to be treasured
forever. *ELKANA was the LOVE of my life! And it was an
Honor to care for her while she visited this earth. We
lived together for most of her life in a little corner of
paradise, a mystical place where dreams come true . . . a
place I named Deor Farms so long ago.
When *ELKANA became Aude’s partner, she had already earned
the honor of becoming U.S. National Champion Mare AND she
was in foal to National Champion Stallion and Park Horse,
the now immortal, *BASK++. In the years that followed, the
prolific and astonishingly fine producer gave the breed 17
foals (over a period of 22 years) by *BASK++, *Aladdinn,
Negatraz, Strike, Aikon, and *Aicyng among others. As Aude
has said, “*ELKANA became a LEGEND through her foals, who
then went on to produce their own National Champions for
their rightful owners.”
Over the years Aude has been blessed to know some
wonderful people, all, she says due to their shared love
of the Arabian horse. She counts among her most important
mentors, Dr. Eugene LaCroix, Mike Nichols, Dr. Howard
Kale, Sheila Varian, Dr. Ignacy Jaworaski, Roxann and Karl
Hart, Judith Forbis, and Walter Mishek.
When we asked Aude where she gained her own foundation as
a breeder she said: “Dr. LaCroix, Dr. Jaworaski, and Mike
Nichols taught me much more than I can say about breeding
Arabians. They helped me to understand phenotype and
genotype. They showed me what to expect from future
generations, how to cross and how not to cross. Again I
was blessed –– in this case, with an absolutely priceless
education.
“Overall,” Aude says, “I’ve been most influenced by the
legendary programs of the Polish State Studs, where both
*Elkana and *BASK++ were bred. I’ve owned several *BASK++
offspring over the years and bred *Elkana to *BASK++
several times with amazing results! Needless to say I've
been inspired by the Lasma breeding program, as well as
the Varian Arabians program, the Waltons (breeders of Bey
Shah) and Lenita Peroy who bred Jullyen El Jamaal, the
sire of A Jakarta.”
When we asked Aude to explain the objective of her
breeding program –– in addition to producing a better
Arabian horse. This is what she had to say.
“Beauty, of course, is essential. This is what draws us
all to the Arabian horse. Largely from Dr. LaCroix I
learned that the Arabian should be artistic looking. He so
loved the look of the Arabians painted by the great artist
Adolf Schreyer. But he, and I, always wanted more from the
horses than mere comeliness. It has always been essential
to me that my horses have the mind, the heart and the soul
to make them a joy to be around and to enable them to
become the best they can be at whatever they’re most
suited to.
“Regardless of pedigree, we can’t always predict what a
horse will do best. Full siblings in horses differ as much
as do full siblings in humans. So, in nearly thirty years
of breeding, I’ve learned to accept and honor the
differences. I don’t demand that every horse be highly
competitive in halter or breeding classes. Nor do I expect
every foal to come out trotting over the moon. I love a
good western horse as much as I do an English horse. All I
want is for the horses I breed to have the tractability
that makes it possible for them to excel at whatever
discipline their conformation dictates.
The good ol days.....1980.
“What I
want most,” she says, “is to produce a horse that will
take your breath away AND be an extraordinary athlete.”
Isn’t it interesting how time and time again it’s been
proven that such a horse can and does exist through the
generations that descend from Aude’s beloved *ELKANA?
Aude loves to ride, although she says she doesn’t take
time to ride often enough. Perhaps this is part of the
reason good minds are so important to her. And then, of
course, there were those horses that taught her about
greatness . . . *ELKANA, and *BASK++ and *ALADDINN, the
finest of fine minds and hearts; the greatest of souls and
spirits.
“I guess I was a little spoiled by those three,” Aude says
wistfully. “I don’t think I’ll ever be really satisfied
with much less.”
We wondered, as a breeder, what she uses to measure her
own accomplishments. In her signature attitude of
understatement, she said:
“I measure my own accomplishments as a breeder by the
successes of the horses I have bred that have then gone on
to contribute to other people’s breeding programs.
“Of course, starting with *Elkana I did have the deck
stacked in my favor . . .
Take, for instance, A Love Song by *Bask out of *Elkana).
My great friends, the Chur's have bred her to *Aladdinn,
Cognac, Tempter and Cylebrity with amazing results. A Love
Song has produced the multi-National Champion Park,
English Pleasure and Pleasure Driving horse Allience (by
*Aladdinn). By the great *BASK++ son, Cognac, she produced
the gorgeous Reserve National Champion Park horse and
twice Top Ten English Pleasure mare To Love Again. With
the Cognac son, Tempter, she gave the Churs A Temptation,
who was National Champion open AND Jr. English Pleasure
Horse and Reserve National Champion in Pleasure Driving.
The Chur's also have Elegant Crystal (*Aladdinn x *Elkana)
that I bred, and she is the dam of the great Ericca (by
Tempter), who in addition to being National Champion Mare
was also National Champion Jr. English Pleasure Horse, a
feat never duplicated.”
What were we saying moments ago about those
take-your-breath-away-extraordinary -athletes that have
come from Aude’s breeding program and that she wants to
continue to produce?
Given Aude’s credentials as a breeder, asking her what
advice she would give to fellow breeders around the world
is particularly significant?
“Learn what quality really is,” she began in answer to
this question. “Find people who are truly knowledgeable
and experienced in the world of horses and horse breeding.
Figure out what you like best in a horse, what’s most
important to you. Don’t follow trends. Be true to your
ideals. Be patient. Horse breeding is a LONG-TERM
commitment. If you’re not willing to make such a
commitment, don’t get into it. Just buy an occasional good
horse and enjoy it. Breeding is NOT for the faint of
heart.”
And what, we wondered, were some of Aude’s defining and
most memorable moments? In answer she recalled first,
taking *Elkana's lead line at the Nichols Sale and
realizing that glorious mare was hers. Then she smiled at
the memory of watching Kim Potts present *ELKANA’s son,
Ricard, (By Negatraz) to his U. S. National Top Ten
Championship in Stallion Halter in 1992. Then I reminded
her about the year (1995) that she, herself, led *ELKANA’s
son Cartier (by *Bask) to his Scottsdale Championship and
U. S. National Top Ten Championship in AOTH Stallion
Halter. That led to her memory of presenting *ELKANA’s
last son, Eminant (by Aicying) to his National Top Ten
Championship in AOTH Stallion Halter in 1999.
“What about *Pesenka,” I asked, recalling how Aude, one of
the few women EVER to enjoy such an accomplishment, led
that beautiful daughter of *Salon to a U. S. National
Reserve Championship in Mare Halter some two decades ago.
“Well, yes,” she said. “Pesenka was one of those really
special horses. Next to *Elkana, she was one of the most
incredible mares I've ever had the privilege of caring for
. . .”
So what is Aude’s personal standard for the Arabian horse?
“Arabians,” she says, “I love them to have artistic style
and romance. The oriental Arabian with his head short,
small, shapely ears, long, arching neck, legs that are
long and fine and correct and the high tail carriage that
signifies pride and happiness. I also love an Arabian with
tons of animation and lightness of being. This is the
charisma of the breed, that freedom of spirit that makes
them dance above the ground in brilliant contrast to their
gentleness in dealing with us mere mortals.”
David and Jakarta
And what
influences her the most when making her own breeding
choices, genotype or phenotype?
“As a breeder,” she told us, “my decisions are based
equally on genotype and phenotype. I've studied and
absorbed what has worked for the great breeding programs
of our time, then blended these breeding philosophies with
my personal ideal of the Arabian horse.
“First of all a horse must have good conformation, IE:
straight, strong legs, strong, well-shaped hooves,
relatively short back, good coupling, a long upright neck,
a deep, strong hip and croup. And it MUST have big,
beautiful eyes –– for me always an indication of a horse’s
mind. It's as easy as that.
“If a horse has all of these qualities, I look at its
pedigree. Are there any weak individuals or glaring
bloodline faults I need to worry about? Will the stallion
I'm mating to a particular mare be able to compensate for
any genetic or phenotypical weaknesses, and vice versa?
Finally, when I’ve looked carefully at a horse’s
conformation and pedigree, then I make what I feel is the
best breeding decision for a given pair of individuals.”
I wanted to know how Aude would explain the importance of
Midwest as pertains to the marketing and breeding of
Arabian horses.
“Midwest,” she said, “is essential to the Arabian horse
industry. Why? Because David Boggs is open to new ideas
and new adventures. And because David Boggs works harder
than almost anyone in the world works at anything in the
world.
“David loves Arabian horses and he’s the antithesis of
barn blind. He never gets so fixated on a bloodline, a
breeding program or an individual horse that he can’t
recognize or appreciate anything else. For this reason, he
continually brings into the Midwest mix the best horses
from all over the world . . . creating in this process the
BEST OF ALL WORLDS.
“Add to this Midwest’s great team work, which makes them
number one in the show ring. Then throw in David’s
extraordinary marketing capabilities and you have the
equation that makes Midwest number one. People yearn for
this status and gravitate to the happiest group of Arabian
breed enthusiasts in the world. Midwest offers their
clients and their horses the most and the best in
everything. Midwest is more than a team, more than
training barn, more than marketing organization. Midwest
is the essence of camaraderie, an extended family that far
surpasses any standard definition of friendship. And
Midwest is FUN, FUN, FUN!
“I had the joy and pleasure of sharing the winner’s circle
with David and Team Midwest recently when David led A
Jakarta to the Region IV Championship for Breeders
Sweepstakes Yearling Colts. What a thrill! It was extra
fun to watch because it looked like both David and Jakarta
were having great fun. I was so proud of them and so happy
to be a part of this loving family. With Midwest, time and
again, DREAMS DO COME TRUE!”
And .. . what about this latest dream horse?
A Jakarta
So why this colt that carries only a fraction of the blood
of *BASK++ and none of *ELKANA? Why did Aude choose him
for the next step in her breeding program?
“Well,” she says, “I guess I have to admit that I didn’t
choose him. He chose me.”
How so, you ask? Here’s the story.
On a visit to Petroglyph Arabians in Eagle Point, Oregon
looking for fillies that might be interesting to purchase,
Aude was called by this yearling colt that everyone else
seemed to ignore.
“He just kept nickering to me,” she says, “begging me to
come to his stall. I couldn’t resist. I just FELL FOR HIM.
He grabbed my heart in a way no other horse has since
*ELKANA. So what was I to do? It didn’t matter to me how
he was bred. I didn’t even ask. I just knew that I
belonged to him and that I was being called to care for
him in this life.”
Says long time friend Chris Petford of this new alliance,
“I haven’t seen this sparkle in Aude’s eyes since *ELKANA
left us. It’s like she has a new lease on life, as though
she knows a special secret. And because I believe in the
mystical connection Aude has with these horses, I believe
this colt is something very, very special.”
Tara and Eminant
As fate
would have it, even though Aude didn’t care a bit how this
colt was bred, it turns out that he represents a really
exciting genetic out cross for her mares, all grand
daughters of *Elkana by *Aicyng, Cartier (by *BASK++) and
Eminant (by Aicyng). And, all the breeders who see him and
his pedigree agree that he’ll also be a magnificent out
cross for daughters of Padrons Psyche, Magnum and his
sons.
“The future for a stallion that can offer a strong and
viable out cross for the best sires of the day is
limitless,” Aude says. “I’m beyond excited about A Jakarta
and his potential. It doesn’t hurt that this colt
possesses all of the attributes I mentioned as essential
to me. Like *ELKANA, he’s artistically beautiful,
romantic, and charismatic. He carries himself with that
same air of knowing he’s magnificent.”
Jakarta is a blending of the finest show and breeding
bloodlines available today, taking the best
characteristics from each group. From Ali Jamaal and the
Gainey lines on the female side of his pedigree, he shows
exquisite type and smoothness.
From Bey Shah he carries forward long legs, a short back
and that charismatic show horse attitude for which Bey
Shah was so legendary.
From Azraff and *BASK++ (both of whom astute breeders have
long used for this trait) he has that elegant, long
“snaky” neck that hinges well at the poll.
Robin Field Gainey recalls A Jakarta’s second dam, Gai
Chardonnay, by Ferzon out of the Azraff daughter Azleta,
as a mare that not only possessed this kind of neck, but
passed it on with awesome regularity.
With three lines to *BASK++ as well as lines to El Magato
and other great Heritage Farms trotting horses, Jakarta
also shows and promises to pass on the free motion we all
love so well.
But above and beyond it all are the eyes . . . the mirror
of the soul in horses as in all of God’s other creatures.
From *BASK++, Azraff and Ferzon, A Jakarta inherited the
huge dark eyes, set wide in pronounced bone structure that
more than any other attribute sets the Arabian horse apart
from all others.
Finally, there are the heart and the mind that matter so
much to Aude, and other fine horsemen. Again, from
*BASK++, Azraff and Ferzon, comes the great heart and
gentle spirit that, as Aude said earlier, “make horses a
joy to be around and enables them to become the best they
can be at whatever they’re most suited to.”
When asked what breeding crosses she feels will work best
for the blood of Jakarta, Aude had this to say: “ He
should be a wonderful cross on our *Elkana grandaughters
who are sired by Cartier (*Bask x *Elkana) and Eminant
(Aicying x *Elkana). We are also very excited about seeing
him bred to daughters of Magnum Psyche and Padron's
Psyche, he is the perfect out cross for the *Padron sire
line. With his strong Gainey dam line, Jakarta would also
cross back in beautifully with mares of Azraff and Ferzon
breeding via the Gainey program. He has such a strong
breeding pedigree he could be used on Spanish, Polish,
Russian and Egyptian mares with equally predictable
results.”
So, for A Jakarta . . . stay tuned . . . there’s lots more
excitement to come!