Stallion News
- Sparrow Castle
- Posts: 6087
- Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2013 6:44 pm
Nicole Russo @DRFRusso
17m17 minutes ago
Left to right - Champions Mineshaft, A.P. Indy, and Honor Code at @LanesEndFarms
Nicole Russo @DRFRusso
21m21 minutes ago
.@LanesEndFarms knows how to warm up a cold afternoon - the great A.P. Indy flanked by his champion sons Mineshaft (left) and Honor Code
17m17 minutes ago
Left to right - Champions Mineshaft, A.P. Indy, and Honor Code at @LanesEndFarms
Nicole Russo @DRFRusso
21m21 minutes ago
.@LanesEndFarms knows how to warm up a cold afternoon - the great A.P. Indy flanked by his champion sons Mineshaft (left) and Honor Code
- Sparrow Castle
- Posts: 6087
- Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2013 6:44 pm
Nicole Russo @DRFRusso
15m15 minutes ago
Leading active sire Candy Ride flanked by his two sons standing at @LanesEndFarms: Twirling Candy (right) and #NewSires18 Unified
Nicole Russo @DRFRusso
12m12 minutes ago
Candy Ride, the sire of likely Horse of the Year Gun Runner. @LanesEndFarms
15m15 minutes ago
Leading active sire Candy Ride flanked by his two sons standing at @LanesEndFarms: Twirling Candy (right) and #NewSires18 Unified
Nicole Russo @DRFRusso
12m12 minutes ago
Candy Ride, the sire of likely Horse of the Year Gun Runner. @LanesEndFarms
- Miss Woodford
- Posts: 2162
- Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2013 3:34 pm
If anyone uses a horse being old as an excuse for why they're skinny, show them the photos of Indy.
-
- Posts: 312
- Joined: Thu Sep 19, 2013 9:09 am
Just like people, some horses carry more weight than others. Regardless of age.Miss Woodford wrote:If anyone uses a horse being old as an excuse for why they're skinny, show them the photos of Indy.
Thanks for the pictures, Sparrow Castle!
Last edited by TBird on Wed Jan 17, 2018 7:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Ridan_Remembered
- Posts: 1854
- Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2013 2:15 pm
Such an amazing set of photos. Indy at 29 with his two sons. Way to warm up a cold, snowy day.
- Sparrow Castle
- Posts: 6087
- Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2013 6:44 pm
Lots of folks are tweeting and re-tweeting pics from Lane's End today. The old boy still takes center stage.
Lane's End @LanesEndFarms
Honor Code has big shoes to fill #apindy#honorcode#fatherson
Lane's End @LanesEndFarms
5h5 hours ago
Lane’s End Legend flanked by his sons #apindy #mineshaft #honorcode #LEpresspass2018
Justina Severni @JSeverni
3h3 hours ago
It’s that frozen whiskers time of year for A.P. Indy who was enjoying a sunny winter day in his paddock.
TDN @theTDN
3h3 hours ago
The king and his castle. A.P. Indy in his paddock at @LanesEndFarms.
Lane's End @LanesEndFarms
Honor Code has big shoes to fill #apindy#honorcode#fatherson
Lane's End @LanesEndFarms
5h5 hours ago
Lane’s End Legend flanked by his sons #apindy #mineshaft #honorcode #LEpresspass2018
Justina Severni @JSeverni
3h3 hours ago
It’s that frozen whiskers time of year for A.P. Indy who was enjoying a sunny winter day in his paddock.
TDN @theTDN
3h3 hours ago
The king and his castle. A.P. Indy in his paddock at @LanesEndFarms.
- Ridan_Remembered
- Posts: 1854
- Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2013 2:15 pm
Indy looks fantastic for his age. I hope he makes it well past 30.
- Diver52
- Posts: 3393
- Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2013 12:44 pm
- Location: Redlands, CA
I was just thinking that his barrel is--as round as a barrel!Miss Woodford wrote:If anyone uses a horse being old as an excuse for why they're skinny, show them the photos of Indy.
I ran marathons. I saw the Taj Mahal by Moonlight. I drove Highway 1 in a convertible. I petted Zenyatta.
- Northport
- Posts: 4696
- Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2013 12:13 pm
- Location: probably near the food
Some seniors are easier keepers than other, I wouldnt hold it against someone if their 28 year old horse had some ribs showing. AP Indy’s coat is also an inch long, which is going to make any horse look more filled out.
weeeeeeeee
- serenassong
- Posts: 4710
- Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2013 4:36 pm
- Location: Connecticut
Indy looks so fuzzy and huggable (not sure if he is)
HC is giving his dad the famous side eye- got it from pops apparently
HC is giving his dad the famous side eye- got it from pops apparently
"I reject your reality, and substitute my own!"- Mythbusters
"Oh, What fresh Hell is this?!"- Sheldon Cooper(quoted from Dorothy Parker)- Big Bang Theory
"Sometimes I think he's the King of Stupid" - Old Man- Pawn Stars
"Oh, What fresh Hell is this?!"- Sheldon Cooper(quoted from Dorothy Parker)- Big Bang Theory
"Sometimes I think he's the King of Stupid" - Old Man- Pawn Stars
- Ridan_Remembered
- Posts: 1854
- Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2013 2:15 pm
Speaking of Indy, his son, Friesan Fire, is the 2017 Leading Sire in Maryland. For 2017 he was:
#1 Maryland sire
#2 MidAtlantic sire
#15 North America Third-Crop sire
I'm so happy for Country Life that Fire is proving to be at least a leading regional sire, and happy for Indy that his line continues through several sons and grandsons.
#1 Maryland sire
#2 MidAtlantic sire
#15 North America Third-Crop sire
I'm so happy for Country Life that Fire is proving to be at least a leading regional sire, and happy for Indy that his line continues through several sons and grandsons.
-
- Posts: 639
- Joined: Sun Sep 29, 2013 8:44 pm
Friesan Fire covered 14 mares in 2017. I hope he gets more for 2018.Ridan_Remembered wrote:Speaking of Indy, his son, Friesan Fire, is the 2017 Leading Sire in Maryland. For 2017 he was:
#1 Maryland sire
#2 MidAtlantic sire
#15 North America Third-Crop sire
I'm so happy for Country Life that Fire is proving to be at least a leading regional sire, and happy for Indy that his line continues through several sons and grandsons.
- Ridan_Remembered
- Posts: 1854
- Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2013 2:15 pm
#15 North American Third-Crop sire might help attract some mares. Fire has actually done really good considering his limited opportunities.MTO wrote:Friesan Fire covered 14 mares in 2017. I hope he gets more for 2018.Ridan_Remembered wrote:Speaking of Indy, his son, Friesan Fire, is the 2017 Leading Sire in Maryland. For 2017 he was:
#1 Maryland sire
#2 MidAtlantic sire
#15 North America Third-Crop sire
I'm so happy for Country Life that Fire is proving to be at least a leading regional sire, and happy for Indy that his line continues through several sons and grandsons.
- Katewerk
- Posts: 1338
- Joined: Tue Sep 17, 2013 11:30 pm
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
Does no one chart data on return on investment by sire?Ridan_Remembered wrote: #15 North American Third-Crop sire might help attract some mares. Fire has actually done really good considering his limited opportunities.
- Miss Woodford
- Posts: 2162
- Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2013 3:34 pm
A lot harder to do that since you'd have to exclude homebreds and mare owners who got a discount (which can be quite a significant number).Katewerk wrote:Does no one chart data on return on investment by sire?Ridan_Remembered wrote: #15 North American Third-Crop sire might help attract some mares. Fire has actually done really good considering his limited opportunities.
- Starine
- Posts: 8267
- Joined: Thu Jan 09, 2014 12:39 am
- Location: South Carolina
Hovdey: Arrogate preparing for new challenge
http://www.drf.com/news/hovdey-arrogate ... -challenge
http://www.drf.com/news/hovdey-arrogate ... -challenge
- Katewerk
- Posts: 1338
- Joined: Tue Sep 17, 2013 11:30 pm
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
A lot harder to do that since you'd have to exclude homebreds and mare owners who got a discount (which can be quite a significant number).[/quote]Miss Woodford wrote:
Does no one chart data on return on investment by sire?
I think that would be one of the lesser difficulties -- the announced stud fee could still be assigned to each foal as though it had been paid.
The data wouldn't tell you much about young sires, but for established stallions it should be fairly straightforward -- what are the average lifetime earnings of a Tapit vs an Afleet Alex on the track, (not the sales shed) in relation to their fee -- as in which is really the better value? Kind of surprised that some version of data of this type hasn't been considered in an industry that throws significant money at auction buys and stud services.
- Katewerk
- Posts: 1338
- Joined: Tue Sep 17, 2013 11:30 pm
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
I think that would be one of the lesser difficulties -- the announced stud fee could still be assigned to each foal as though it had been paid.Miss Woodford wrote:
A lot harder to do that since you'd have to exclude homebreds and mare owners who got a discount (which can be quite a significant number).
The data wouldn't tell you much about young sires, but for established stallions it should be fairly straightforward -- what are the average lifetime earnings of a Tapit vs an Afleet Alex on the track, (not the sales shed) in relation to their fee -- as in which is really the better value? Kind of surprised that some version of data of this type hasn't been considered in an industry that throws significant money at auction buys and stud services.