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  #1  
Old 10-17-2006, 05:03 PM
Blue Eyes
 
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Hey Kyrosesinmay, my friend said he'll check to see if anyone has a exercise saddle for sale at the track.
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  #2  
Old 10-17-2006, 05:16 PM
BellamyRd.
 
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I whored myself! and all it got me was a job hotwalking
at least in Hollywood I'd have a line on Law & Order
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  #3  
Old 10-17-2006, 05:56 PM
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ddthetide ddthetide is offline
Arlington Park
 
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like so many others, my grandfather would sometimes take me to the track in the mornings, hagerstown fairgrounds. eventually closed but was used for a training facility and stables. horses would then ship to the OLD charles town
or the 3 baltimore tracks.
i would then follow the triple crown races but to me thats all there was to racing until i was much older.
after the internet got big i began to follow it again.
three years ago i spent opening fall weekend at keeneland and the following spring i went to CD for the kentucky oaks. that hooked me. even hooked my wife and she had NEVER been to a track.
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  #4  
Old 10-17-2006, 06:16 PM
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Sightseek Sightseek is offline
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So I think the solution to the lack of interest in racing is for all of us to have lots and lots of grandkids!
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  #5  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:01 PM
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kentuckyrosesinmay kentuckyrosesinmay is offline
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Location: UNC-CH will always miss Eve Carson. RIP.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Blue Eyes
Hey Kyrosesinmay, my friend said he'll check to see if anyone has a exercise saddle for sale at the track.
Thanks, I appreciate it...
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  #6  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:10 PM
sumitas sumitas is offline
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i loved watching the races on tv as a kid. and reading about them in the paper...kids really identify with the horses as only kids can. but the feeling always stayed with me...Carry Back was my hero.

Last edited by sumitas : 10-17-2006 at 07:16 PM.
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  #7  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:20 PM
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paisjpq paisjpq is offline
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I have been thinking about this since I saw this thread few days ago, I was amazed at myself because I couldn't remember how I got in to racing...sumitas just jogged my memory...
My very first exposure to racing was reading all of the walter farley books when I was in grade school...no one in my family had or has any interest in horse or racing...but I was bitten early.
My first trip to the track came @ age 11 (saratoga). First time sitting on a TB @ 13 (my best friend had one off the track named Buster Brown).
And it all went down hill from there, my mother is still trying to figure out where she went wrong. I told her it was that we had to drive past a horse farm on the way to my piano lessons when i was 5...
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Last edited by paisjpq : 10-17-2006 at 07:23 PM.
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  #8  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:34 PM
Downthestretch55 Downthestretch55 is offline
Hialeah Park
 
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I've been around horses since I was a kid.
My first time at a track was back in the '80s..Meadowlands trotters.
Then Toga with my sons many times.
When my mother had a teminal illness in her old age, I tended to her needs.
To pass the time, I'd put her telivision on to the Derby preps, then the TC races. Talk about a "red boarder"!!! I'd pick one before the race. After they crossed the line, she'd say, "that was the one I liked in the post parade!"
Bless her heart. Those races gave her something to forget the pain for a little while.
After she passed on, I got a call from a friend. I had gone to the Belmont with her and her husband, the Real Quiet /Victory Gallop one. My friend had an in with the Jim Jerkens barn, and they ran the 3rd place finisher, Thomas John. Anyway, she asked me if I was interested in buying a race horse.
Seems the gentleman that owned him had gotten very far behind in his "barn bill". So, to make a long story short, I bought the colt and his dam with some money that my mother left to me. That was eight horses ago.
Still love them, still a thrill.
Race on!
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  #9  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:38 PM
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31lengths 31lengths is offline
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Funny Cide.
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  #10  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:46 PM
repent repent is offline
Monmouth Park
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 31lengths
Funny Cide.

you know,
Ive never been a fan of Funny Cide.
but there is one very interesting aspect to the Funny Cide story.
if he had NOT been gelded and they retired him after the Belmont Stakes,
he would be viewed on equal terms with smarty jones from a historical perspective.

everyone wants to think of Funny Cide as a bad KY Derby and Preakness winner, but the truth is that he was just a good 3YO who peaked at the right time and then got old real quick.
nothing at all to be ashamed of.
same thing would have happened to smarty jones if they had not saved his as* and retired him.



Repent
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  #11  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:40 PM
GPK GPK is offline
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My very first experience with horses cam through my uncle. He is known throughout the States as a famous trainer of Tennessee Walking Horses. Traveled with him a few different times, the biggest one being "Celebration" in Tennessee. I used to marvel at the size of some of those horses. His wife had one of her own...never will forget him...biggest freaking horse I ever laid eyes one. His name was MASTER MINDER and he was jet black. What a beautiful specimen he was.
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  #12  
Old 10-17-2006, 07:47 PM
GPK GPK is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GPK
My very first experience with horses cam through my uncle. He is known throughout the States as a famous trainer of Tennessee Walking Horses. Traveled with him a few different times, the biggest one being "Celebration" in Tennessee. I used to marvel at the size of some of those horses. His wife had one of her own...never will forget him...biggest freaking horse I ever laid eyes one. His name was MASTER MINDER and he was jet black. What a beautiful specimen he was.

My actual first experience with racing came when I was dating a girl that lived in Lexington and when I went to visit her one time, she said..."Let's go to Keeneland!!" Of course I had zero clue as to what the place was or the history behind it, etc... So, she takes me to Keenland and boy was it beautiful, but it was not during the spring or fall meet. I asked her where everyone was and how in the world could someone sit around all day, watching horses run on a tv and betting on them. I told her those people had to be some kind of bored with no life whatsoever....

NOW....I don't know how I COULD NOT sit around and watch horses race on TV and bet on them. Horse racing has simply become my passion. 2 Years ago, if someone had placed a DRF in front of me and asked me to handicap a race....I would have just laughed. I had ZERO idea how to read a form. Some will still say that I have no idea how to read a form....but I think I do okay
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  #13  
Old 10-17-2006, 08:30 PM
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Sightseek Sightseek is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Downthestretch55
I've been around horses since I was a kid.
My first time at a track was back in the '80s..Meadowlands trotters.
Then Toga with my sons many times.
When my mother had a teminal illness in her old age, I tended to her needs.
To pass the time, I'd put her telivision on to the Derby preps, then the TC races. Talk about a "red boarder"!!! I'd pick one before the race. After they crossed the line, she'd say, "that was the one I liked in the post parade!"
Bless her heart. Those races gave her something to forget the pain for a little while.
After she passed on, I got a call from a friend. I had gone to the Belmont with her and her husband, the Real Quiet /Victory Gallop one. My friend had an in with the Jim Jerkens barn, and they ran the 3rd place finisher, Thomas John. Anyway, she asked me if I was interested in buying a race horse.
Seems the gentleman that owned him had gotten very far behind in his "barn bill". So, to make a long story short, I bought the colt and his dam with some money that my mother left to me. That was eight horses ago.
Still love them, still a thrill.
Race on!
What a sad and nice story.
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