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#1
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If a horse is going to be a really good horse it may not matter if it is born in Alaska. Good horses come from the strangest places and are sometimes by obscure breeding also. But the land, climate and quality of farms, clinics, and vets are very much superior in KY than in any other state. If I had a grade 1 winning mare in foal I would want her in KY. |
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#2
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there are quite a few reasons one might consider on where to foal their babies. Could be the farm where the stallion stands or where one's personal farm is or you want to be close to it, you know and trust, state bred programs or even the sales ring... a Kentucky bred is more likely to bring more than a Wisconsin bred. Remember this also.... a horse may be bred in one state, foaled in another and trained in yet another.... many factors many reasons... one person's preference....
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#3
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To potentially further complicate the issue.
I understand that a non NY bred mare could be sent to a Registered NY Stallion, foal in a state other than NY and the foal could still be considered eligible for races restricted to NY breds. If that is in fact true. How does it work, does the owner make a decision as to what state the foal is "bred" in? I guess theoretically a foal could meet requirements of more than one State. NY stallion as sire, but also meeting foaling requirements of another state. |
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#4
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I believe that a horse is considered "Delaware certified" if it spends 60 or 90 days as a yearling/2yo in a farm located in Delaware regardless of where it was foaled or where their sire stands.
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#6
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#7
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Chuck you are correct it is 90 days at a farm in Delaware to be Del Certified. Has to be done prior of March 31 of its 2yo year. Our 2yo filly is a registered Pa. Bred., Del Certified and Maryland Million Nominated so we cover most of the bases in the Mid-Atlantic. Del Certified owner and breeder will receive 15% bonus for each of the purse share if the horse finishes first, second or third in any race. So you get a 15% bonus of the winners share |
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#8
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I realize that this message board is made up of alot of handicappers/horse lovers but to the lot of us that own thoroughbreds it does make a difference where the horse is bred/born.
As CannonShell pointed out good horses can come from anywhere and without great pedigree but that is the exception rather than the rule. One of the biggest reasons would be purse structures. If you look at a condition book/program you will notice that on allowance races there is generally added purse money for state bred horses that comes from state thoroughbred associations (or slots). This is important to an owner with respect to their particular situation and their trainer. For example if you have a nice LA bred horse it would be of value for you to run the horse in Louisiana on occasion to make extra purse money. In that situation you might want your trainer to "winter" in Louisiana. However if your trainer winters in Arkansas or Florida it might not be the best financial situation for you. That is when you go to sales to purchase yearlings/two year olds you generally do look at where the horse was bred. This is where your trainer/owner relationship comes into play. You have to know where your trainer runs horses. All things equal at a sale I would take a KY/FL bred over a NY/LA/ILL bred horse (in general) because my horses run in KY and winter in FLA. That gives the trainer/owner the best opportunity to make the most money. Again, nice horses can come from anywhere but for owners/trainers it is not just as simple as "who cares" where they are born/bred. |