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Snow Top Mountain (left) with Four Star's own, and Brownwood advisor, Tony Lacy and Keertana, held by Brownwood manager Darrell Curry. The half-sisters sold for $950,000 and $1,000,000, respectively. |
It has been an unseasonably warm January, which is always appreciated during horse sales, when buyers, consignors, and sales help spend eight-to-twelve hours working outside. Still, we were too busy showing horses to have much time to either complain about or enjoy the weather.
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Tony playing with Snow Top Mountain while she waited to be inspected. |
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Keertana getting tidied up for a potential purchaser. |
Having these two standout mares and a number of good foals (I especially liked our fillies by Hard Spun, Harlan’s Holiday, Tale of Ekati, and Flatter) in the barn kept us on our feet -- to the tune of 902 shows on our first day at Keeneland. Yep...nine hundred and two shows in one day.
The Brownwood legacy, based on more than half a century of building upon Hunter’s founding female families (with no infusion of new blood) and breeding to mostly modest stallions -- selling the colts and keeping the fillies -- produced the top two most sought-after broodmares at this sale, both fourth-generation homebreds. Millionaire Keertana sold to Craig Bandoroff as agent for $1,000,000. A short while later, Snow Top Mountain found a new home at Virginia’s Audley Farm on a final bid of $950,000 (making her the second most expensive broodmare in the Keeneland January catalogue). The Hard Spun yearling also sold well, going to chef and restaurateur Bobby Flay for $140,000. (Perhaps he liked her dam’s name, Whitefish?)
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The $140,000 Hard Spun - Whitefish filly whose dam is a half-sister to Keertana and Snow Top Mountain. |
Before and after the five-day sales stretch at Keeneland, I was able to attend a few open houses at stud farms -- a rare treat to visit stallions, including two that Four Star had sold as youngsters: champion
Uncle Mo (sold as a yearling) and Grade 2 winner Munnings (led out unsold as a weanling, sold as a yearling); and one, Malibu Moon, I had known as a foal during my time at Walmac Farm.
Below are some of the photos from those visits:
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Darley's Hard Spun, sire of the Whitefish filly. |
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Australian Horse of the Year Lonhro, at Darley. (I love this gorgeous horse.) |
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Lonhro floats over the ground when he moves. |
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Classic winner and leading sire A.P. Indy, now a 24-year-old pensioner at Lane's End Farm. |
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A.P. Indy's son Malibu Moon at Spendthrift. |
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Another son of A.P. Indy: champion Bernardini at Darley. |
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Bernardini |
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Bernardini's Grade 1-winning son Stay Thirsty at Ashford. |
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A.P. Indy's champion great-grandson Hansen (by Tapit) at Ashford. |
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2000 Horse of the Year Tiznow at WinStar. |
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WinStar's Colonel John, a Grade 1 winner by Tiznow. |
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Gemologist, another Grade 1 winner by Tiznow at WinStar. |
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Medaglia d'Oro (by El Prado), sire of 2009 Horse of the Year Rachel Alexandra, at Darley. |
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El Prado's Grade 1-winning son Paddy O'Prado at Spendthrift. |
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Darley's Street Cry, sire of 2010 Horse of the Year Zenyatta. |
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Uncle Mo, 2010 champion 2-year-old, at Ashford. |
LOVE the photos, FJK!! Lonhro is SUCH a gorgeous fellow, and the dapple on Bernardini is glorious :) What fun!
ReplyDeleteMedaglia d'Oro has his own wind machine fan at all times, huh? He always looks so dashing!
ReplyDelete