Racehorses as foals

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Katewerk
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Tue Dec 03, 2013 3:34 pm

TBird wrote:
Katewerk wrote:Having seen a baby pic of a well known, recently retired stallion with legs as crooked as a crow - one would think that broodmare owners would ask for foal photos as part of the decision making process.
The majority of foals are born crooked--there's a lot of leg on a foal to cram into a very small space. Many, if not most, straighten and self-correct as they grow and mature. Sometimes minimal intervention is used (hoof trimming, confinement to a paddock, etc) and obviously sometimes surgery is done. But one of the biggest knocks against surgical intervention is that it's often unnecessary since so many foals grow into better legs on their own. So in most cases, looking at foal pictures isn't going to show you anything beyond "cute".
Thanks for the perspective - makes some sense. If memory serves, in the photo I referenced the foal was wearing casts.
TBird
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Tue Dec 03, 2013 8:20 pm

Katewerk wrote:
TBird wrote:
Katewerk wrote:Having seen a baby pic of a well known, recently retired stallion with legs as crooked as a crow - one would think that broodmare owners would ask for foal photos as part of the decision making process.
The majority of foals are born crooked--there's a lot of leg on a foal to cram into a very small space. Many, if not most, straighten and self-correct as they grow and mature. Sometimes minimal intervention is used (hoof trimming, confinement to a paddock, etc) and obviously sometimes surgery is done. But one of the biggest knocks against surgical intervention is that it's often unnecessary since so many foals grow into better legs on their own. So in most cases, looking at foal pictures isn't going to show you anything beyond "cute".
Thanks for the perspective - makes some sense. If memory serves, in the photo I referenced the foal was wearing casts.
The cast you saw was most likely a splint. They're not used for crookedness, they're put on foals who have a joint (usually fetlock) that's contracted when they're born. The splint stretches the tendon that's too tight so that the foot will rest on the ground like it supposed to. Was it something like this? http://www.dynasplint.com/divisions/veterinary/equine/
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serenassong
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Tue Dec 03, 2013 8:48 pm

I was just going to mention that, sometimes it takes them a bit to get straight from being in the womb, especially if it's a large foal. Ribs can sometimes get broken during the birth process as well.
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serenassong
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Tue Dec 03, 2013 8:51 pm

I remember years ago seeing a picture of Schramsberg when he was first born- his legs looked awful- it was because he was contracted. You would swear by looking at that he would never make a racehorse, but was a stakes winner, and now a sire in Canada. His first foals were born this year, and they look fine. They grow out of a lot of things.
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Katewerk
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Wed Dec 04, 2013 12:11 am

Thanks for the responses!
BaroqueAgain1
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Wed Dec 04, 2013 2:21 am

Love that photo of Secretariat...even at just three months old, he had 'that look' about him. I wonder if he ever went through an awkward stage?
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Ridan_Remembered
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Wed Dec 04, 2013 11:04 am

BaroqueAgain1 wrote:Love that photo of Secretariat...even at just three months old, he had 'that look' about him. I wonder if he ever went through an awkward stage?
From everything written about him, I don't believe Secretariat ever did go through an awkward stage. The first time I personally saw him was when he broke his maiden at Aqueduct in 1972. He was already a stunningly beautiful colt then.

As mentioned elsewhere in this forum, I've always been partial to bright red chestnuts. Nine years before Secretariat came along, there was another beautiful chestnut two-year-old who burst on the scene. I don't think he ever went through an awkward stage either. He set or equaled three track records in only four starts before bowing a tendon whereupon he was retired from racing. His name was Raise a Native. I looked for a foal picture of him to post here, but couldn't find one.
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Private Thoughts
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Fri Dec 06, 2013 2:29 pm

A flashy chestnut I always was partial to was Majestic Prince. He was a record priced yearling but I have never seen a picture of him as a foal or yearling.
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Life At Zen
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Fri Dec 06, 2013 2:35 pm

Ridan_Remembered wrote:
BaroqueAgain1 wrote:Love that photo of Secretariat...even at just three months old, he had 'that look' about him. I wonder if he ever went through an awkward stage?
From everything written about him, I don't believe Secretariat ever did go through an awkward stage. The first time I personally saw him was when he broke his maiden at Aqueduct in 1972. He was already a stunningly beautiful colt then.

As mentioned elsewhere in this forum, I've always been partial to bright red chestnuts. Nine years before Secretariat came along, there was another beautiful chestnut two-year-old who burst on the scene. I don't think he ever went through an awkward stage either. He set or equaled three track records in only four starts before bowing a tendon whereupon he was retired from racing. His name was Raise a Native. I looked for a foal picture of him to post here, but couldn't find one.
My paint gelding has Raise A Native on his dam's side. By his son Raise Your Glass.
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But only once. ~Joe Hirsch
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Ridan_Remembered
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Fri Dec 06, 2013 10:59 pm

Private Thoughts wrote:A flashy chestnut I always was partial to was Majestic Prince. He was a record priced yearling but I have never seen a picture of him as a foal or yearling.
Majestic Prince, of course, was from Raise a Native's second foal crop, and the Prince's dam was from a really excellent female family. I was 22 and still living at home in the NYC metro area at the time, so I went to see the Prince run in the Belmont Stakes. I was right up against the fence just past the finish line and saw Arts and Letters give the Prince his only defeat, much to my disappointment. Two things that have stuck in my mind all these years is first, the Prince was really sore and should never have run, and second, Arts and Letters seemed so thin to me at the time. His ribs were showing and, particularly in comparison to the Prince, A&L's chestnut coat seemed dull.

In retrospect, I realize A&L was one of those late-developing colts who didn't really start to put it together until the spring of 1969. He racked up quite a string of victories starting with the Belmont and wound up Champion 3-yr-old and Horse of the Year.

The next year, 1970, saw the birth of another beautiful chestnut colt who would be given the name Secretariat.
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Ridan_Remembered
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Fri Dec 06, 2013 11:03 pm

Life At Zen wrote:My paint gelding has Raise A Native on his dam's side. By his son Raise Your Glass.
Raise Your Glass was certainly beautiful.
Stormin Wife
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Sun Dec 08, 2013 1:13 pm

Ridan_Remembered wrote:
Three-month-old Secretariat.
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Hubba hubba! :shock: Outstanding looking!
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Northport
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Sun Dec 15, 2013 9:02 pm

Dullahan and Mining My Own

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weeeeeeeee
tachyon
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Tue Jan 07, 2014 11:53 am

Lord Kanaloa(JPN)

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BaroqueAgain1
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Tue Jan 07, 2014 4:41 pm

I'd say that Lord Kanaloa showed early on that he was meant to be a sprinter. Look at the butt on that baby!
GreenasGrass
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Tue Jan 07, 2014 6:39 pm

Goldikova looks like she expected to be great.
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baitandswitch
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Thu Jan 09, 2014 10:21 am

I can play! Goldencents as a foal. We had him and his connections for Preakness this year (husband is an official driver for Preakness, i'm in horsemans relations)

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April 9th, 3 years before his Santa Anita Derby win!

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With momma Golden Works at 3 weeks

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baitandswitch
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Thu Jan 09, 2014 10:28 am

Creative Cause who we also had for Preakness :D

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ThreeMustangs
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Thu Jan 09, 2014 10:44 am

baitandswitch wrote:Creative Cause who we also had for Preakness :D

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Awww. He sure took after his mama, didn't he?
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Ridan_Remembered
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Thu Jan 09, 2014 11:08 am

Great baby photos, BaitandSwitch. Thanks for posting them.
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