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Lois Selby Perry Continued from Page 1
Michael was not only a superb endurance horse, he was fast. As far as I know, he still holds the track record at 2.5 miles (they dont even go that far any more). When he retired from that, at 12 years of age, Monte Foreman asked to have him back to take on tour. Michael won more for Monte in reining in open competition then any horse Monte had ever had. Michael was an athlete, best one I ever knew. He was built that way and proven that way. He was what I wanted in my horses.
By this time I had gotten married and moved to Connecticut to raise horses and a family. Michael came home to retire on welcome open pastures and began his breeding career at Partridge Hollow Park. He had proven the qualities I sought in my horses. I wanted that balance, that look, that feeling. I wanted everything that Michael had, with the classic beauty of intense *Raffles. Who says you cant be a beautiful athlete, anyway?
My selection in that direction was easy in my minds eye. It wasnt so easy to actually do the selecting. You often give away more than you keep in the stages of going from what you have to what you want to have. So what do you do? Ruthless culling. And by that I do not mean that the horses you are parting with are undesirables. They are simply deviations from what you are striving for. To the onlooker, it may seem that you are giving away better than you keep. But you must keep a clear vision of where you are going, or you will end up somewhere else.
I had sent Shereyn back to Alice when I went away to college and my Dad dispersed the horses. I kept Michael with me until he died at 28. His children are in my bloodlines. Michael was not afield from my breeding by any means but he had a different look. The *Raffles balance was round and compact, whereas Michaels was leaner and more athletic. I loved that about Michael and came to want that in my horses along with the classic *Raffles look. I bred back and forth into the *Raffles lines to attain the balance I was looking for.
My first broodmare, who I bought when Dad dispersed the horses, was Woengran, the dam of Garaff, Bill Munsons herd sire, and Rafden, Dick Lodwicks herd sire, both stallions by *Raffles. While I was traveling around, I farmed her out with Dick, my Ohio buddy, who was also working at being a second-generation breeder. Then when I settled in Connecticut I collected her.
I then bought Rafgida. I had the extreme good fortune to take advantage of perhaps the only weak moment Bill Munson ever had - when he let Rafgida be for sale. He sold her to Xanadu Arabians, and they being more into horse trading than horse breeding, soon made her available. I snapped her up and she became the queen matron of my breeding program.
I then got Azala and Azeda from Jimmie Dean. After leaving the management of the Selby Stud, Jimmie had sent his two old mares Bahia, a *Raseyn daughter, and Weda, by the *Mirage son Agwe out of *Roda, to Azraff to produce two special mares that gave so much to my entire program. Rafgida and Azala both produced dynasties with breeding stallions and mares of like quality.
I bought several mares from Betty Fisher as she retired. Her program was built on breeding daughters of the *Mirage son Image to *Raffles. This was a cross that had proven so successful for Selby Stud. I bought Pharaffa, Phagida and Phaerie Geym.
Then, when Alice Payne died, I had the opportunity to buy her senior sire, the intensely *Raffles inbred SYZYGY. He looked very like *Raffles. Gorgeous. Classic. He had the same inner fire yet a calmness that I guess is a confidence in what he is. These provided the nucleus - the very core of my breeding program.
I line-bred, selecting for what I wanted, then inbred it to set the type. Sometimes I would inbreed to the sire and sometimes to the dam. I didnt want to get stuck in one family, breeding myself into a corner for individuals to use, so I selected from multiple family lines of the *Raffles blood. This maintained the gene pool, gave it vigor and potential to express itself as I chose the direction. If I thought I needed to bring in some particular other quality, I outcrossed to another *Raffles family line - or should I say outbred since strictly speaking outcrossing is to another bloodline.
The most fun time is the spring when the foals come. The most difficult tie is weeding out the ones that you cant or shouldnt keep. It takes a long time to find the individual thats right enough to breed on with. If Im not breeding myself better - however small the step - toward the objective, what good am I as a breeder?
I questioned myself many times. I took detours. As something else came along, I had to try it. I was always disappointed. Good as it may have been in its own right, it didnt have the background genetic integrity that I had already instilled in my herd. So it was a detour that wasted my time and I didnt come out with anything I kept.
The quicker you recognize the direction in which you want to move and the sooner you know which cross is moving in that direction, the sooner you make a difference. Even if you are making crosses of animals whose blood you want, you cant just make one mating. It takes at least three of that match because the brothers and sisters vary, and out of that you pick the one that comes closest. If the variation is too much you may not be able to tolerate that match at all in where you are going.
These multi-facets are going on at the same time in your choices. Its a long process of pulling a lot of pieces together at the same time. It takes faith to know that your vision is right for your herd regardless of who the current champions are. If you do not stick to it long enough, like 20 years or more, its not going to show. Its not going to have your stamp on it. Its not going to speak to your brand with any enduring quality.
That this blood is still thriving speaks to its purity and strength, and to the quality and strength of those committed to it. I am humbled and inspired to see that the horses still not only continue but still look the part. The oldest is gorgeously classic PHP Beguile who at age 31 is retired and thinks she is in heaven with Mary and Ron Andress at Quest Arabians in Pennsylvania. The youngest is this years filly by Ahmeetz out of FFC LOrange, a delightfully balanced blend of *Raffles, Michael and old Crabbet. She was foaled at Fairfield Farm under the wise, experienced guidance of Barbara Moore, my long time friend and fellow crusader.
The classics endure in all their ageless glory.
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