Called To The Post

~ Covering racing, horse photos, and my travels from time to time (all content copyright reserved)

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A visit with Groupie Doll and Brass Hat

26 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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The morning of April 20th, with pleasant blue skies and spring finally settling in to the Bluegrass region of Kentucky to stay, seemed like a perfect time to take a short drive from Lexington to Frankfort to visit Groupie Doll and her buddy Brass Hat at the Bradleys’ Indian Ridge Farm.  They are quite generous in opening the doors to fans of these horses (with appointments, of course).  Given that Groupie Doll is due to go back into training soon, the time to see her at the farm was growing short.

I had been fortunate enough to see her at Keeneland, also with Brass Hat, before the Breeders’ Cup wins and before her name became widely known.  Yet I still jumped at the chance to see her at the farm, more in her “element.”  It was definitely worth it, to see her and Brass Hat in this setting, where they were free to run and play.  We could have stayed all day to watch them play, scratch their withers, and feed them peppermint nuggets.  They probably would have liked that as well!

But as Groupie Doll will return to Churchill sometime after the Derby, there is the next phase to look forward to, and I wish her and the Bradleys the best of luck with her 2013 campaign.

Groupie Doll
Brass Hat: looks like running around with Groupie Doll keeps him in excellent condition


Sometimes a horse just wants to do a vampire impression


 

 

Keeneland Spring Meet 2013

04 Thursday Apr 2013

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Spendthrift, first day of spring 2013

04 Thursday Apr 2013

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The gates opened shortly before 8 a.m. and the sun began rising over a field, casting a lovely golden light upon their breeding shed, the mares coming and going, and the stallions entering the breeding shed one after another.  It left no doubt the breeding season was in full swing, and all the activity was carried out with the precision of a carefully choreographed and thoroughly rehearsed dance.  I had visited numerous farms before, but this was my first time seeing the busy pace of the breeding season and the way it seemed to create an equine version of rush hour on a busy highway. 

Yet it also seemed apt to call it a dance; while I knew the steps of the process, I had not seen them all carried out before. The efficiency it took to never miss a beat drove home the practice this took, and that this was a dance I did not yet  know well.  But that was the purpose of my visit, to learn these steps; for I was here today as part of my internship with a breeding farm, instead of the racing fan that I usually found as my role during farm visits. While I had lightly worn the title of “future racing industry professional” during those visits, I had never been to any of them solely in that capacity and it was a paradigm shift.

I still saw things with a photographer’s eye, however; that may yet be the role I play in the racing industry when I am a professional.  It showed me the nobility in the eyes of the mare waiting to be bred.  She was from the farm where I interned, and so far I had only seen her in the stall with her young filly and outside at a distance, in her pasture. 

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I tried to capture the look in her eye; it was quite captivating, as were (to a lesser degree) the way the sun illuminated her and cast shadows upon the wall of the receiving barn.  Presently we  moved to the window, overlooking the floor of the breeding shed. Historic for its site as the conception of Triple Crown winner Affirmed, a reminder lingering in the plaque above the floor, you knew hopes and dreams of what might be lingered here, as they did in breeding sheds all across the Bluegrass on this first day of spring, where this year’s foals already ran across the fields, hopefully building stamina or speed and the will to run above all…

The mare was an absolute pro in the shed, and she neighed once as she left the shed. She quietly walked into the trailer, and our ways parted for the day.

Across the parking lot and on the other side of the shed, Wilburn was already being led into the shed and the dance continued…

I said a quick hello to Paddy O’Prado, at the side of his stall overlooking the driveway, (the racing fan side of my persona coming to the fore again) and drove down the tree-lined drive, knowing that this cold snap will break soon and these same trees will burst into bloom and soft green leaves, and they will race again at Keeneland. It’s not that way now, but as sure as the new foals racing on the grass and the busy flow of traffic to the breeding sheds, that too is one of spring’s surest signs in this region. The countdown begins….

Gallery

Farm Visits, February 2013

28 Thursday Feb 2013

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This gallery contains 13 photos.

Calumet Visit, January 2013

28 Monday Jan 2013

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alydar

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Our visit to Calumet began with an instant sense of the farm’s legacy, lingering in echoes in a quiet barn graced with the names of Triple Crown winners and other greats.  Along the wall, the new era was evident, displayed in the halters of their current roster of stallions. 

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Aikenite

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Aikenite

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Aikenite returns to the barn

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Lentenor

I admit to a sentimental connection with this horse, due to the impact Barbaro’s brief yet brilliant career and fight against laminitis had on me.  I first saw Lentenor at Keeneland in a race, and was struck by how the similarity in appearance to Barbaro that he had.  A quick search of Barbaro images reveals that even the splashes of white on their heads are quite similar. 

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Sun and sky reflected in Lentenor’s eye

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Eye of the Leopard

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Eye of the Leopard

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Lentenor on the way to the paddock

January 2013 Open Houses

10 Thursday Jan 2013

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Giacomo, Adena Springs
Einstein
Einstein

Get Stormy, Crestwood Farm
Get Stormy

Get Stormy
Mutadda: something about him was just captivating




Lemon Drop Kid, Lane’s End

Curlin
Quality Road
Union Rags

Union Rags
Cemetery at Lane’s End
Dixieland Band statue, Lane’s End cemetery

Winter sun over the cemetery at Lane’s End
Kingmambo statue, Lane’s End
Bullet Train, Wintergreen Stallion Station

Bullet Train: he had a lovely starry dappled neck, and the rest of him seemed to gleam like copper.

Bullet Train: with his pedigree and the fact that he’s much closer than Frankel, I’d breed to him if I was in the business, without a doubt.
Stream, Wintergreen Stallion Station. This farm is lovely, and I can only imagine how much more beautiful it must be in the spring.

Barn, Wintergreen Stallion Station
Not the best image, but we happened to drive by Monarchos out in his paddock at Nuckols Farm. Bonus sighting of a Derby winner!

Cigar

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A slight change of topic from the open houses:  I received Cigar’s halter in the mail the same day we went out to see Bullet Train and Union Rags, and it seems like an occasion to share a few photos and memories of Cigar.  The first two photos are from June 2012, and I had never really before been able to get Cigar’s attention. I didn’t really then either, but some of the Arabians on their way to the ring for the Egyptian Event certainly interested him. After he watched them go by, he and I were eye to eye.  I followed his race career avidly, and every step of his journey through retirement from racing, to Ashford, to fertility treatments, and finally to the Horse Park, where his admirers can at last visit as often as possible.  It was a bit sentimental the first time I got to see him at the Park.  He is the first “big” horse of my lifetime, and I would still rank him as the best I have ever followed, even with the horses that have raced since.  In light of that, this moment in these photos when it was just he and I across a fence line, face-to-face, felt like a gift he gave me.  I’m not trying to veer into overly sentimental territory, but it does happen at times.

So to receive his halter felt like a similar gift. I never really anticipated having something he once wore, but when I heard the Horse Park does sell their champions’ halters, I knew I would want the opportunity to have his when the time was right.  It’s not often, after all, you get to buy the halter of a horse who has been one of the best you’ve ever seen.

While on the subject of special horses, after visiting Bullet Train, I roamed through Damselfly Gallery in Midway, and came across this lovely photo of Rachel and her foal. I don’t remember the photographer’s name, but it was something I wasn’t able to pass up.  This shop is definitely worth a visit for racing enthusiasts.

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Keeneland January Sale

Invasor colt

Interesting facial markings

Gallery

Farm Visits, November and December

10 Thursday Jan 2013

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This gallery contains 25 photos.

November Auctions, 2012

10 Thursday Jan 2013

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Fasig-Tipton, November 5th

Tapitsfly
Tapitsfly, now incorporated into a broodmare band in Japan; thanks for the memories!
This seemed like a unique photo op: the dams of this year’s Derby winner and Derby runner-up, being sold at the same auction.

Untouched Talent, the dam of Bodemeister
Summer Bird weanling
Summer Bird weanling

Ponche de Leona, Mucho Macho Man’s dam
Ponche de Leona
Sweet Havre de Grace, who I went to see before she goes off into a broodmare band and out of the public eye. The people at the sale with her let us feed her carrots and take photos with her.

Zagora, straight out of her winning effort in the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf
Zagora

In Lingerie: turned out she was retired after this and booked to Frankel, so I’m glad I caught a few of her races.
Parading weanling
Another look at Grace, before she lit up the sales ring with a $10 million purchase price


Keeneland, November 6th

Pure Clan; the last time I saw her she was winning a race at Churchill in the summer of 2008. She was one of my favorite racehorses and popular at the sale as well, going for $4.5 million.

Liszy, the dam of Kentucky Oaks winner Plum Pretty
Negligee
Plum Pretty

Samantha Nicole, Rachel Alexandra’s yearling full sister
Samantha Nicole

Samantha Nicole, purchased by Stonestreet Stables. She’s got big shoes to fill, but I look forward to her racing career nevertheless.
Samantha Nicole and handler share a quiet moment
The family resemblance: Rachel Alexandra (left, March 2011); Samantha Nicole (right, November 2012)

Gallery

Keeneland Final Weekend, October 2012

10 Thursday Jan 2013

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This gallery contains 17 photos.

Keeneland and New York, October 2012

10 Thursday Jan 2013

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At the Lexington airport, waiting to depart
Evidently, as I discovered in July, police horses are common in Times Square. Still, my slight horse obsession leads me to appreciate finding a horse even in Manhattan’s streets.

Times Square
Wishes for the following year that people put on the “Hopes and Dreams” wall…
…and I like that I found this wish. That could be one of my wishes too.

The ball that drops on New Year’s.
The full-sized Ferris Wheel in the Toys R Us store. I’d love for my nephews to see this someday.
The new World Trade Center rises above lower Manhattan.

I went to a charitable fundraiser in the boutique Longchamp, in SoHo, and this was a photo on their wall.
South Street Seaport

Part of the span of the Brooklyn Bridge
The Brooklyn Bridge

Ship’s wheel


The Titanic Memorial Lighthouse
Interesting shopping area near South Street Seaport

An old printing press, used by this shop to make cards and other items. I never realized how ornately decorated they are.

The lights on the new World Trade Center tower
Subway station near the Seaport

Back to Kentucky

It was only a little more than a week after I left New York that they were inundated by Hurricane Sandy, including in some of the parts of lower Manhattan that I had visited.  It was somewhat surreal, even having heard the news reports about what a massive storm it would be, to see parts of the city and the subway stations underwater.  One thing that is certain about New York though, it is a strong and resilient city.  With help, they will rebound.

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