Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Handicapper's Edge and the Kentucky Handicappers sheets available now go
(01:08):
to Brest dot com or picked one up at the
Red Mile. The Scritch sheets also available at the Bred Mile.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Well the address Durdstein's Bowl liam Complexity and Cairol Prince
Side stakes winners over the holiday weekend linea lua aphilate
from the first crop by bowl Liam led all the
way to win one hundred and fifty thousand Texas Served
Association for Tuty. That race is open now, it's not
restricted to state brids. That was her second start. You're
(01:37):
in second by neck first time out. She's the third winner.
Fourth is the place in States from his first bow
Liam's first crop, so they're showing some run. Bow Liam
won his first three starts, two at Saratoga and his
third to Churchill. Then he ran second by neck in
the Grade three ACA in his fourth and final start.
(01:57):
Complexity Side winner of the one hundred WAITMU. This is
one hundred one million, two hundred thousand dollars, but I
don't think so. There're two hundred thousand dollars Clarks Stakes
Indiana or third consecutive win the first two at Ghost
Team see his Complexity's fifth twenty twenty five stakes winner,
(02:18):
all from his first COP Renny Side eight stakes winners
five more to place the stakes in his first cop.
The most recent graded station by is Moplex, winner of
the Grade three OI Derby plus four other stakes including
the Grade three cent for the Saratoga Cairol Princes. It's
all right, one one hundred and fifty thousand dollars Texas
(02:38):
third bid for twty at lone starters stay undefeated. It's
the rock solid ten percent of his foals wind stakes.
That's folds we're talking about now, not starters. Well, the
watch for yearlings bybo Liam Complexity and Cairo Prince at
the yearling sales and look first at the consignment from
Dritud for more information on the Erdrestians or the book
(02:59):
a mayor for twenty two oh shadow No Kyle at
eight five nine, eight seven, three seventy two seventy and
the website is here. We stood dot com from.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
The horse capital of the world. It's Horsetails with Ursul Ellis.
We'll talk about the horses, the people, and the history
of the thoroughbred industry. Wait and as secretary of that,
win's the fight. Two and a halfletes now line from
Kentucky's Bluegrass region. Here's Ursul.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Well, good morning, everybody, and we're here at the Thoroughbred
Center on the Parish Lexington Road. Perry Pikes Pike.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
I mean that's because it was a Turnpike and we
don't want to leave our history behind. It's you hush too.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
There a spot.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
I used to go to Sawburry Track when I was
They used to have an internet on the internet, you know,
Irving train and had one running into Nicholas Field too.
Really yeah, well.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
You know there's a train that runs the train bed
that runs one of those inner urbans that ran I
think from Georgetown to Frankfurt to Midway.
Speaker 6 (04:31):
That and the bed that's still there at Old Friends,
Is that right? That's neat ran right up to the
first part of the twentieth century.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
This one ran right up.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
You know who used to know a lot about that,
you know, Henry Alexander. He's really good at that kind
of stuff. He knew where all the things were left
that were just forgotten.
Speaker 6 (04:53):
I love that term. But you remember the you remember
the inner the train, the friend.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
I remember seeing one of the beds were, you know,
and I remember that. That's when we were living in Dixiana.
I grew up over going Dixiana. We had a night
watchmen in his right leg was cooking, and well everybody
always thought that he got drunk and went to step
(05:20):
off for any urban thing and hit.
Speaker 6 (05:22):
A telephone pool.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Well that happens. No, I got. I grew up on
Covert Run Pike and we were always corrected at a pike.
I mean there was he but they even had pictures
of when they had the thing.
Speaker 6 (05:44):
People pull up and they pike means that it was
s a turnpike means you had to pay.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 6 (05:51):
So it was an enterprise. Yeah, So I think Takes
Creek was a pike it one time, wasn't it.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
Ironworks was up.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
You know, iron Works was totally man made and one
of the first man maids man made roads.
Speaker 6 (06:06):
And if you look at it, it's straight.
Speaker 5 (06:09):
Yeah, and you get all confused when the new iron
Works it goes by the horse Park.
Speaker 6 (06:15):
And all that, Well, that's not the old Iron Works.
And if you go through crow Slides.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
It stays straight all the weight to where it hits Frankfort,
the road to Frankfort.
Speaker 6 (06:26):
And it was made because of.
Speaker 5 (06:29):
Its haul the iron to the Kentucky River.
Speaker 6 (06:33):
Yeah, where in.
Speaker 5 (06:35):
Eighteen twelve it floated down to actually eighteen fourteen, because.
Speaker 6 (06:40):
We know the song floated down to the Battle of
New Orleans.
Speaker 5 (06:44):
Oh that's and all the bullets and the cannons and
the camp well, it was probably the cannon balls and
the bullets and most of the people that fought in
that Battle of Kentucky and.
Speaker 6 (06:53):
So a lot of them.
Speaker 5 (06:55):
Yeah, and the bullets and the cannon balls came from
the iron works that we know.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
That's where the term hard boots came from. Really, all
the Kentuckians going down to the river in the New
Orleans and everything, and they would make of course they
get to make their boots out of deer skin, and
then they get up in the morning and all you
know how.
Speaker 6 (07:17):
It's always grass is always wet.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
In the morning, and their boots would get hard and
they would, you know, when the people down in New
Orleans nicknamed them all here comes some hard boots.
Speaker 7 (07:33):
That was great.
Speaker 5 (07:37):
I always get smarter when I'm here.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
If you can, if you can believe all those crap.
Speaker 6 (07:47):
We choose to believe, we choose, we choose to believe.
So we've had a big week at UH at all
the friends.
Speaker 5 (07:57):
It's all kinds of fun things have happened. I was
just looking out, you know. He said, what am I
going to tell Jackie and Ursul this morning? And I said,
what do I do this? Week, and then when you
go back you look at the week. Sometimes you do
more than you think.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
He did.
Speaker 6 (08:13):
And it started Monday morning, before the holiday.
Speaker 5 (08:17):
I got a call says that they're opening a new
First Watch restaurant on Lee'stown Road and that they they
like old friends and they'd like to give you a check.
Speaker 6 (08:29):
Well, I thought that's very nice. He said, can you
be there first thing Monday morning? I said sure. I
got there and it was lights, camera action.
Speaker 5 (08:39):
You know, there were people and ribbon cuttings and officials
and the owner, the man who Gary Holland, who owns
eighteen First Watches, owns a bunch of the Rosas pizzas.
Speaker 6 (08:54):
There was Redspans. That's a big deal. I think he
owns the American here in town and.
Speaker 5 (09:00):
I and it is and there's a third bread. He's
got mayors as mayors in Derby Dawn.
Speaker 6 (09:07):
So I made a new friend who I feel like
I should have known anyway.
Speaker 5 (09:11):
And I get there and it's a and it's a
big you know, pictures and everything, and they gave us
a nice check and we cut the ribbon. So what
a way to start the week.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
Is he from Cincinnati is Yeah, he's the North.
Speaker 6 (09:25):
He's the northern Kentucky guy. Originally.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
Oh I wonder where independence Yeah, yeah, Boone County.
Speaker 5 (09:32):
Yeah, port Wright's where I used to hang out with
my I had an aunt, and I go there and
stay there and go to go to Reds at Crosley Field,
then to Coney.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
Island, Cony.
Speaker 6 (09:44):
This is way before King's Island.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Did you go up the Cincinnati side or did you
go up to the Kentucky side and take the ferry,
Because the Kentucky side and take the ferry ferry Prince
and Princess, Yeah, yeah, and uh yeah.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
My grandfather was a h orphan street kid of Cincinnati
and uh he was a runner for an optometry company
when he was twelve thirteen fourteen. That was they give
him a nickel and go across the.
Speaker 6 (10:15):
Rubling Bridge there and to take roblin.
Speaker 5 (10:19):
Yeah, and that's it. And he would what he did
was save save the nickel and run across instead of
taking the sub not the subway but the trolley.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (10:30):
And he saved a bunch of money and was able
to go to school later.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
And good for you.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
We have made a nice, nice living. So but anyway,
that was a fun way to start start the week.
So everybody go to a first watch anywhere because Gary
owns them, owns all of them, I think so. And
they are good. Good breakfast, is good lunch. And that
was a great way to start the week. Then we
had a big cookout. We just decided to have a
(10:54):
cookout for all our volunteers. You know, we had about
forty or fifty volunteer and thirty or forty of them
are tour guides, and so in the middle of the summer,
let's just cook out.
Speaker 6 (11:06):
And so we got you know.
Speaker 5 (11:09):
That we have offices now in that house, not the
little yellow house, but the other We got another house
on the farm and a lot of our volunteers haven't
been there.
Speaker 6 (11:19):
And it's got a kitchen and a nice.
Speaker 5 (11:21):
Room where we have meetings and then employees can come
and have their lunch.
Speaker 6 (11:25):
It's where my office is.
Speaker 7 (11:27):
And is it brick.
Speaker 6 (11:29):
It's a red brick house.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
Okay. You know you have a sinking spring improvement on
that house next to it.
Speaker 6 (11:37):
I mean, I know there's a spring there.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Yeah, it should have a Yeah, that's it.
Speaker 6 (11:43):
Yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Yeah, that's a sinking spring improvement. Don't let anybody ever
bulldoze a thing, they're wonderful.
Speaker 6 (11:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (11:51):
So that's what like somebody one hundred years ago, two hundred, yeah,
two fifty.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
What they would do is like on the back of
our place, we've got a beautiful one. And they pioneers
that get here, and they had a creek, and they
had a spring that would come up, called a wet
weather spring comes up and the you know, in the spring,
but the rest of time it's gone. And you can't
depend on a creek. It's gonna get hot and dry
(12:19):
up in the summer and freeze in the winter.
Speaker 7 (12:21):
So they were so smart about this.
Speaker 8 (12:23):
They would take up the highest west patch in the spring,
you know, the wet weather spring, and they would start
digging and they would dig out three quarters of a rectangle.
Speaker 6 (12:39):
Three quarters of rectangle. That's what, Yes, that's what that is.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
They're all like that, and they dig down until ours
is about seventeen or nineteen feet and they would dig
out and that thing would stay and then there was
a place on the end where it could drain if
it needed to. But that kept water her all year round,
no matter what.
Speaker 6 (13:02):
Wood because it comes from underground.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Yeah, yeah, and that's brilliant. I mean it's so so yours.
Speaker 6 (13:10):
I think it's brick, that's right.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
I think they made their brick and did it with brick,
ours and stone.
Speaker 6 (13:16):
It's about thirty yards from the house.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
Yeah, so they go out there with a bucket.
Speaker 5 (13:22):
Yeah, get them brilliant. And there's another one at the
Hillcrest Farm.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Yeah, is that right? Good?
Speaker 7 (13:30):
You should tell the tourists.
Speaker 6 (13:31):
That that's it, you know, you make a good point.
Speaker 7 (13:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
I took a picture of hours and had it framed
it's beautiful and sent it to missus Benson so she
would understand what that was.
Speaker 7 (13:45):
Because if somebody comes in, we'll just.
Speaker 6 (13:48):
Fly that supper down, you know.
Speaker 7 (13:50):
And it's not And I think they're protected.
Speaker 6 (13:53):
But I'm not sure with out of it, shouldn't they.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Yeah, Well, if you go back to the old, if
you do research on land and ownership, it looks like
a staple laying on it playing there. It's a.
Speaker 7 (14:13):
Trawling really, it's just a.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
Line up, a line owner and a line down that
is a sinking spring improvement. That's how they marked them
in those days.
Speaker 6 (14:23):
Interesting.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
Yeah, now now you know that, don't let them, don't
let them tourt down.
Speaker 6 (14:27):
Rest We need to be taking notes. We were getting smarter.
Speaker 7 (14:30):
Oh, Rest, he's the one that tells me all this stuff,
we make liquor out of it?
Speaker 5 (14:36):
Yeah, I don't know if we could make liquor out
of it, chases, that's not it. Well anyway, at that
very spot, we had a wonderful night of we had
The beer was cold, the pop was cold, the burgers
were good, and everybody had a good time. They had
played cornhole and had some music. And I was so
(14:58):
pleased that a lot of our board members show up.
And then some special guests, our buddy Damon Thayer came,
who's you know, he's done so much for the industry.
And then Corey Johnson, who's on our board and he's uh,
he's kind of the founding father of Lone Star.
Speaker 6 (15:16):
He was the general manager at Remington Park and the.
Speaker 5 (15:23):
Not the founder, but the one who made Kentucky Downs
what it is today and which is now a big
deal him and he is now in charge of making
Maryland turned into the new racing format.
Speaker 6 (15:40):
It's going to be it's gonna like mimic Nyra and said,
you know, the Stronics owned.
Speaker 5 (15:45):
Everything in Maryland. Now Maryland is taking it over. Well,
Corey is kind of spearheading that, and he came to
it and he brought Mike Renfroe.
Speaker 6 (15:55):
And if you're an NFL football fan, you'll.
Speaker 5 (15:57):
Remember Mike Renfroe played for the Oilers then the Cowboys
in the seventies and eighties and was a.
Speaker 6 (16:05):
Great wide receiver. But his father, Ray Renfro, was a.
Speaker 5 (16:14):
Receiver for the Cleveland Browns in the fifties and was
All Pro. And they say they're the greatest father son
tandem in pro football except maybe Archie Manning and the.
Speaker 6 (16:25):
Mannic the Peyton and Eli. What a fun night we
had in that fun Yeah, what a fun, fun night.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
That's not a father son thing. The brothers.
Speaker 6 (16:37):
Yeah, but Archie they're dead.
Speaker 5 (16:39):
Yeah, our arch Archie the dad and then Peyton, So
that's a father son tandem.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Yeah, that's that's great. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (16:48):
So it's kind of fun that our volunteers got to
you know, and you know, meet each other and see
each other. Then let's see yesterday it's for our fest
term out.
Speaker 6 (16:58):
At the horse Park.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
Oh my god, isn't it.
Speaker 6 (17:01):
Oh thousands and thousands of people. So they asked me,
and they did this last year as well, to come
and do a TV interview, well, Briarfest TV.
Speaker 5 (17:14):
It's live streaming TV from Briarfest, and it goes to,
I don't know, tens of thousands of people watch this
thing and it's live streams. They said to over one
hundred countries that people love their Briarfest horses, you know,
and then they can tune in, you know, on their
(17:35):
phones or on their computers and watch Briarfest even if
you can't be here.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Oh my god.
Speaker 5 (17:42):
And it's the seventy fifth anniversary of the Model Horses,
so they had all the living horses that can.
Speaker 6 (17:50):
Make it, who have been the Model of the year
come back for a big reunion. And it was a
it was a it's a huge deal.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Well, you know, that's funny because I had just seen
something on I guess on my cell phone, which is
you know, you picked up little information and stuff like that,
and somebody had about fifteen or twenty Briar horses for
sale lined up twenty one.
Speaker 6 (18:23):
Oh yeah, yeah, it worn't money.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
I just woo.
Speaker 5 (18:28):
I had a collection of them and I put them
on the market in Midway and did nicely.
Speaker 6 (18:34):
You know, Uh, they are they are a big deal.
They're a big deal.
Speaker 7 (18:39):
I mean that's your that's your retirement of retirement.
Speaker 5 (18:48):
Yeah, well, you know they appreciate value, and you know,
it's another way to honor the horse. It may you know,
whether or not it is.
Speaker 6 (19:00):
Your particular cup of tea, it is a way to
honor the horse. So I'm all for it.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
Well, Betsy's got I guess her. Her best one is
man Ar.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
I think that was the first one they did, and that's.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Yeah, she's only Man of Wars. I look like Robert Redford.
Speaker 7 (19:22):
Yeah, that's funny.
Speaker 6 (19:25):
So it's been a yeah, been a big week.
Speaker 5 (19:29):
I's been a couple hours talking to Stacy Clark, who
is the head of the Third Bread after Care Lawrence
and I had a chance to do that, I think,
uh Thursday morning, and just got a good further education
on how after care is.
Speaker 6 (19:46):
Coming in this industry.
Speaker 5 (19:49):
She's been running that organization for over a decade now
and she's you know, she knows, you know, the whole
story when people kind of laughed at that whole thing
or didn't take it seriously, and we're made just great
progress has been made. Oh yeah, and it's it's a
serious subject now and people take it seriously.
Speaker 6 (20:11):
You I will, I will not embarrass the two of you.
But you're very kind to have to.
Speaker 5 (20:15):
Have made a contribution to Old Friends because you realize
that these horses, that our care for, these horses aren't free.
Speaker 6 (20:24):
Right, And that's the next step, is that.
Speaker 5 (20:26):
A lot of the big farms, they're all said, well,
we're we're for we're for aftercare. We'll give we'll give.
Speaker 6 (20:32):
Our horses to this group or that group. And now
we need to talk and we want to say thank
you for that, but let's also give you know, some
support for those horses. Yeah, because it's expensive.
Speaker 7 (20:43):
What did you.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
Say last year was a constant hay, that was phenomenal.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
We spend twenty thousand a month. Wow, twenty thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
A month, right, I think that was in your last.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
Yeah, we just gave you.
Speaker 5 (21:00):
Well it helps and if and if everyone had your spirits,
it would.
Speaker 6 (21:08):
Go along, it would go along.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Well, we figured what it used to cause us to
feed those two horses, well, they were every winter, and
what we had to come up with for Hey, they've
been doing that for how many years?
Speaker 6 (21:25):
You were doing it before? If before anybody knew.
Speaker 5 (21:29):
Old Friends and now by the recognition Old Friends gets
from around the.
Speaker 6 (21:36):
Great Yeah, so it gives us a chance to be
the mouthpiece after for after care and all.
Speaker 5 (21:43):
You know, the thousands of people would come for tours,
and that we can tell them, you know, we can
tell them the importance and if this industry is taking
care of its horses, well it's.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
The number one after care of the facility in the world.
Was you got, I don't think.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
There's I remember one Michael and came in with Bill
Vand and Duel Yeah, to be on the show. I
remember that. I don't remember what we said or anything,
but I can't remember.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
He and Bill were big.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Well Bill runs, but.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
He had a liquor store at that time. I'd made
him one of them.
Speaker 6 (22:21):
Yeah, it was clear the common ground where came together.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
That's the place I think he called that black Tulip.
Speaker 6 (22:30):
Yeah, and oh yeah, right there in midway.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Wonderful.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
They got Ursul out there and got in and you know,
you get a step or two in and you're invited
to donate in Ursula roota check for one hundred and
found out it was It was a birthday.
Speaker 6 (22:47):
Party for Ursul and he contributed to his own other.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
Yes, absolutely, I tried to get that check backward. They
wouldn't let me.
Speaker 6 (22:58):
Not for those two.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
I don't think that was a nice restaurant.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
The food was great. That was then the new son
that ran there.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Yeah, then he wound up running the place over in.
Speaker 2 (23:10):
Chivy Chase Chimmy Chase wondered what happened.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
I guess he's still in the restaurant is somewhere.
Speaker 6 (23:15):
Yeah, I don't know. I've seen Bill still runs our
farm over on Ironworks.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Yeah, yeah, I knew that. How many horses he had
little betweens, like twenty five and thirty Yeah, maybe forty.
Speaker 5 (23:27):
I'm getting confused with Ashton grow.
Speaker 6 (23:29):
He's got about forty over there.
Speaker 1 (23:31):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
Yeah, that's amazing.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
Nice guy. I liked him.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
He's fun. Yeah. Do you see him?
Speaker 6 (23:38):
I do.
Speaker 5 (23:39):
He's on you know, he's part of our staff and
h we had we have our Friday morning staff meetings
where everybody gathers for half an our forty five minutes
to talk about whatever problems we have. Bill is never
shy about talking about the things he believes about.
Speaker 6 (23:57):
All things high and low, and so we carve out.
Speaker 5 (24:00):
Some time to let build pontificate and uh, but yeah,
that farm, it's got some good horses over there, and
it's well, it's a well kept farm.
Speaker 1 (24:10):
Do you remember Flying Dutchman.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
Next time you see him, give him my bed. I
will have seen him in a long time.
Speaker 7 (24:18):
Years ago.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
He had a van service. He called it the Flying Dutchman.
I thought that was a good.
Speaker 6 (24:23):
Name because that's what he is. Yeah, Flying Dutchman.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
That's Flying Dutchman.
Speaker 7 (24:28):
Good for him.
Speaker 5 (24:29):
Yeah, yeah, one of the one of these days, drive
over there and uh, you know he's he'll be in
the office watching Mattlock on TV.
Speaker 6 (24:39):
Mattlock and so.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Now I'm god, it was a bad show forty years ago.
Speaker 6 (24:47):
Yeah, Bill, Bill's watches the reruns.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
Yeah, that's fun. Good for him.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
Let me catch up.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
It seemed to me like they lived down there above
that's liquor store across the.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Go ahead, all right, Well one happy Mama fella run
Happy shipped in from Churchill Downs in May and has
reeled off three straight winds, two of them States, most
recent one hundred thousand dollars Sailorville Stakes at Perimeters on
July fourth, and she's now earned two hundred and eighty
two thousand, four hundred and ninety nine dollars. She turned
(25:20):
on the run Happy stree to take a Sailorville six
pharloms and twenty two flat, a half and forty four
flat and no well in forty four and two. I
was cheating a little bit five eights and fifty six
and two and one oh nine flat. I knew there
was another flat in here somewhere. She's a typical run happy,
She's hard hitting, she's sam She's the kind of runner
(25:43):
that pays the bills. That's why many horsemen consider run
Happy to be the nation's leading leading bargainshire. There are
better reasons, of course, because run Happy is the sow
many so those reasons such as Grade one stakes. When
a new tellerfella, he's a multiple Graded Statesred millionaire, your
smile happy is the same. Following Sea a graded stakes
(26:04):
winn of eight hundred and fifty five thousand, Happy American,
a graded stakes winner of over seven hundred and twenty
four thousand, Happy As a choice win of seven hundred
and twenty four thousand plus. Rottenney has earned seven hundred
and forty two thousand Kinetic Sky over six hundred and
fifteen thousand. Royal Cadence brought home five hundred and seventy
one thousand, Rudden Classic five hundred and thirty two thousand,
(26:28):
Happy sold five hundred and twenty nine thousand, and believe me,
that's just scratching the surface. Run Happy one of the
Great one Breeders Cup frim Anti Eclipse Awarders Champion Frinter
was undefeated sprinting, ran medication free and retired sound. A
gift is passing on to his progeny. He can black
clip your marriage produce record had a reasonable fee and
(26:50):
you're invited to inspect him and the other science over
Claven Farm destined to be the home of mind Frame,
winner of the Great one one million dollars Seaon been
fostered a couple of weeks ago. He's earned over million,
eight hundred and forty four thousand dollars further, polish stables
and seen a lot of stables from all on the
stands over Cleveland. Just give a call to Jacob West
(27:13):
at eight five nine nine eight seven two three three
over the website Claverronfarm dot com. Of course, Clavern's over
in Paris in Bourbon County, and a couple of other
businesses over in Bourbon County are the Indian Creek Farm
and the clay Ward Agency. Of course they were one
(27:35):
in the same Clayward Agency and the Indian Creek Farm,
the Clayward Agent who was founded back in nineteen thirty one.
That was the day I was founded. And in the
year I was founded, I should say nineteen thirty one.
Twenty Grand's yere there you go, Yeah, twenty Grand went
to study was as Saro to a stero. But I
(27:59):
missed for some reason anyway, But it was founded in
Claywall Agency, very successful because of the great service that
they gave and their knowledge of the therbid business, and
those qualities occurred on today by the pros over there.
(28:23):
And if you're interested in horse insurance and the people
to call over there Shack Parish, Bruce Isaacs phone number
is eight five nine nine eighty seven eighteen sixty one,
officers of the liven O two Main Street in Paris, Kentucky.
And also you might ask about the Indian Creek while
(28:45):
you're there, because they're closely affiliated the same people. As
a matter of fact, Jack Parish good buddy of mine
and Jack the Indian Creek has raised, boarded and so
many of the world's find of serb D. They do
a great job of prepping horses for sales and for boarding,
and I recommend them highly. People wait to get in
(29:08):
best way I guess to get in touch with him
is the website, which is Indian creekky dot com. All
of the phone number over there is eight five nine
nine eighty seven seven four four three. That's the Indian
Creek and the Clayward Agency in Paris, Kentucky.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
Now back to the Thoroughbred Training Center and ursul Ellis.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
Okay, we'll start to interrupt you all.
Speaker 5 (29:43):
Oh yeah, yeah, we're right in the middle trying not
to do those commercials when we're trying to have a conversation.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
Did you see where the oldest thoroughbred died? No?
Speaker 6 (29:53):
I did not see.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
Yeah, here you go bottom right there we go.
Speaker 6 (30:00):
It's that today thirty nine.
Speaker 1 (30:03):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
You know you mentioned America in the other day and
Mary lived to be about thirty nine. Who Merrick? I mean?
Or I see, yeah, good old resource.
Speaker 6 (30:14):
Good old where the Americans from that?
Speaker 2 (30:17):
Yeah, okay, it was that's where that that land that
where the American is built. There's two Americans now, I think.
Speaker 1 (30:28):
But anyway, Okay, they have a picture of America out
there seems to me like they do, but.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
I wouldn't see there. They've got a picture of fair
Play hanging on the wall, you know that picture we've
got out. That's the only other place I've ever seen
that picture is.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
That right at the Americans.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
Was at the American hanging on the wall. And we
have I've had one, yeah, because dad had it. Yeah,
you know, and to kind of where he grew up. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
Think about racehorses, you can't lie about how old they are.
Speaker 7 (31:11):
Because they gun's had too.
Speaker 5 (31:14):
Well, not third brads, now you can't. Now the sport
horse world, that was a whole different story. That's for
another day, some of the things the Shenanigans went on there.
But now you know third breds are as they are
as old as they are, yes, but that's encouraging that
this horse lived to be thirty thirty nine.
Speaker 6 (31:34):
Of course, we've got R two and Silver Charm and Touch.
Speaker 5 (31:37):
Gold or thirty one, yeah, and both hanging in there,
you know, hanging in there.
Speaker 6 (31:42):
They're getting old, but hanging in there.
Speaker 1 (31:44):
We had a son Secretariat, what was his name? We
took him for the Exceller Fund. She's a friend that
runs the Exceller Fund. Nice girl, okay, and she sent him.
I don't remember how we wound up with him. Remember
that paddock right outside the barn on.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
Yeah. The only reason we took him because he was
about secretary than anybody. He'd been down in Tennessee. Oh yeah,
and he'd been confined in a stall for like ten years.
Oh my goodness. And I said, no horse, that should
not happen to any horse. No, And so we had
(32:25):
some room and yeah, and we took him, gave the.
Speaker 6 (32:29):
Horse and mice. He didn't live with us.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
Didn't even live quite a year, did.
Speaker 7 (32:35):
He, right, correct, just got one day we founding.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
The betsy came in and said whatever we called him,
was having trouble kind of walking and stuff.
Speaker 6 (32:47):
So he gave him my years, my year any anyway, Yeah, with.
Speaker 5 (32:53):
Us and the little silver charm out there, Michael's best buddy.
Speaker 6 (32:59):
Only the Lord was hell that that little that.
Speaker 5 (33:01):
Little Welsh pony is he's at least thirty eight.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Yeah, ponies live a long time there. Yeah, yeah, not fed.
Speaker 6 (33:12):
Well, you know what he had what he had this
week was acupuncture, did he Oh you would have to
ask me that it's from the Ruden Redtle, the vet
from Ruten Redtle who specializes in that.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
Yeah, we've had that before.
Speaker 6 (33:30):
Yeah, your horses are you all.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
Horses too? Remember we had a little hors named fifty Ways. Yeah,
we're having problems with his back.
Speaker 1 (33:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
We named him after the song.
Speaker 6 (33:47):
Oh yeah, Paul Simon's on fifty Ways to Leave your lover.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
Yeah. Well these were the fifty ways to lose your money. Yeah,
but he didn't, he know, he ended up. We're doing
real good and we love that little horse. Matter of fact,
he won his first start with Forrest down at Turfway Parker.
(34:11):
He know, he was the five thousand dollars horses what
he was, and he ended ended up getting claim from us.
Speaker 6 (34:18):
And we watched him.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
And uh, we had a friend down at River Dams
and says, you keep an eye on him and if
you see him going wrong or anything, let us know.
And he called us up and says, uh, he didn't
make he called him to him. Jackie said he threw
you know. So Jackie called the guy that owned him
down there, who happened to train him. He claimed him
(34:42):
too there and uh, Jackie says, we want to give
that horse home, you know him. Most guy says, oh,
he's got one more race in him and Jackie Son
he does now. He said, we don't even want his papers.
We just want to give him home. He says, come get.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
Yeah, and he said he charged us. I think he.
Speaker 7 (35:04):
Charges his killer price.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
Yeah, I'm a heck of a horse turner. I give
five thousand farms selling him for five.
Speaker 2 (35:12):
Yeah, five hundred, five hundred. Yeah, we got home.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
Remember that time there was this big sickness went around.
Nobody knew who it was, and it turned out to
be the worms from the trairie tree.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
Yep.
Speaker 7 (35:25):
I remember that got him.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
I got him, that got.
Speaker 6 (35:29):
I got got the horse.
Speaker 7 (35:31):
Yeah, he was laying there.
Speaker 2 (35:33):
Yeah he lived to be that seventeen Yeah. Oh yeah,
oh yeah, he was a puppy dog. Yeah, that got him.
Every time we needed a little walking around money or
something like that, he get his check. I love that horse. Yeah.
He was the nice that one of the nicest little
(35:54):
horses around. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
Yeah. And he the guy that was doing the actual
puncture back then. I can't remember his name, but he
was going around doing it, doing a good job. And
he decided to go out west because they really cut
the horses and those run around barrels.
Speaker 6 (36:16):
And yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
They're known for back trouble, so he went out there on.
Speaker 7 (36:23):
Whatever happened to him.
Speaker 5 (36:24):
But all those ranch horses going this way and that
way was the livestock.
Speaker 6 (36:29):
Yeah, I could see.
Speaker 1 (36:30):
That it was. It was. And we said, well, he
came in and treated him and he just sort of
stood up like he felt fine.
Speaker 7 (36:39):
And we said, well, should we keep him up or
he said.
Speaker 1 (36:43):
No, turn him out, you know, so moving around it
would be fine. He was fine.
Speaker 5 (36:49):
Well, little Silver Charm got his acupuncture, and so did
Silver Charm and Touch Gold. Oh good, yes, and they
both You could just see the improvement.
Speaker 1 (36:58):
You watch them relaxed. Yeah, Rocky stood there and that
Stohn just one among.
Speaker 6 (37:03):
Touch Felt took a nap right in the middle of it.
Speaker 5 (37:06):
Yeah, good friends.
Speaker 6 (37:09):
Yeah, what's he coming about?
Speaker 2 (37:12):
We better catch up on a commercial. Okay, yeah, we'll
get fired. But July sixth at Ella's Park, one hundred
and fifty thousand dollars Pea Patch Steaks. I love. That
was one by Maytown, a three year old Phillypy motown
rated at the rear early and no better than seventh
of the eighth pole. Maytown closed with a spectacular run
(37:33):
the wind going away about three parts of the length,
getting the five and a half fairlongs in the new
record time of one on one and one. Maytown went
into the peak patch off a pair of impressive winds
at Churchill Downs. We're very likely to be hearing a
whole lot more about Maytown than in the near future.
If so, Succums, no surprise. Motown has already sided a
(37:54):
champions printer in Canada, a graded stakes winner and millionaire.
Two grated stakes winners are King and he's by the
late great uncle Moe Motown one graded stakes as a
two year old in New York and Grade one stakes
at three. He's been standing for a fee of five
thousand dollars life fold over at Ashwood stud But at
the rate he's signed stakes winners there, I don't know
(38:16):
about next year. And did you see Deep Satin win
one hundred and thirty five thousand dollars did a rosso
stakes at Saratoga on Thursday. He is also one of
the Virginia Oaks at colonew Downs and seized by triple
crown winner American Pharaoh, And that same day at Newmarket
the group three Bahrain States went to Scandinavia. A three
ycod by Ashwood Stud's triple other Triple crown winner Thirsty
(38:40):
five Gandonavia, was bred by Uprondale Chelton and winning folded
Ashwood Stud. They have a great roster of stads over
at Ashrad stud. In fact, six of the top twenty
leading sires of twenty twenty five are based at ash
Ford stud Just called the Farm eight five nine, eight seven,
three seventy eight and the website Koumo.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
All right Quillan Leather and tax Quality Service Leather because
since nineteen eighty two it's the nation's largest custom hawker shop,
twenty thousand plus halters a year ship worldwide sewing dot
com Paris. It's the local number eight five nine ninety.
Speaker 7 (39:18):
Eighty seven O two one five.
Speaker 1 (39:22):
Now they don't.
Speaker 9 (39:24):
Make paper catalogs anymore because things change. They have a
website that's really really nice. There the it's English bridal leather.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
It's beautiful weather. No matter what you buy, it's all
gorgeous and they last forever. I found in the barn
a whole bunch of halters from turnout halters from clolland
I think I'm gonna take you know, know, a pony club,
(40:02):
and I think I'll take.
Speaker 5 (40:03):
It over there.
Speaker 6 (40:04):
Oh that's a idea.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
Yeah, and let those kids clean them up and use
them because otherwise they you know, they're and don't give
them away, that's for sure, right, Yeah, so they do
the really good job leather halters sale and turn out halters.
I'm on the web page quality leather horses. Yeah, let's
(40:29):
see there's the well and turnout leather track halter. Those
are really good looking. They really are nice in the
bourbon turn down. Old friends are any old friends? Line
that the nos in a testable chin really good looking
(40:51):
halters about seventy five books. And that's a good price
for a good halter. That and that's not bad. So anyway,
e and uh go online quilling dot com k U
I L l I in dot com. Andy'st even got
a picture online of his new store downtown Paris seven sixteenth. Well,
(41:13):
you can't miss it. You go down main street, it
pass Littles on the left and then there's Clillings on
the right. So Quilling k U I L l I
n dot com in Paris nine eighty seven oh two
one five.
Speaker 6 (41:27):
It's like a tourist attraction.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Now you can go in and watch them, right, yeah,
you can watch them make them.
Speaker 2 (41:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (41:33):
Yeah, it's a two parter. You walk in the front
party and it's the store, and then you look through.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
They'll probably let you walk back in there. Ye sure.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
And they open up at nine o'clock. It's twenty two
in there, open till noon on Saturday.
Speaker 6 (41:48):
And it smells nice.
Speaker 1 (41:49):
It's just doesn't it. Yes, it does. And you know,
if you've got young people you want to buy, or
you know, anybody buy a gift for, that's a good
place pick up something, nice, belts and stuff.
Speaker 5 (42:01):
I've got a nameplate on my desk that my brother
gave me, a christ nice wife gave me that.
Speaker 6 (42:07):
It's a quilling, yes so much.
Speaker 1 (42:09):
Yeah, everything they got's really super. But where else can
you find a breath nameplate like that? Nowhere? But I
never where, No good Old Ralph and I Ralph.
Speaker 7 (42:21):
It's real.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
Cognizant of how the buildings look and everything in Paris.
And if you've been to Paris lately, you look, I mean,
everybody's perked up and the buildings looked wonderful, don't they.
We went around the courthouse and downtown.
Speaker 2 (42:41):
We were down there yesterday, Yeah, yesterday, weed little.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
Well we went to Lil's. You like tomato pie, sure,
oh ya, the best tomato pie you ever putting him
out really live, yes, and it'll go through tomato season
and then you have to just cry.
Speaker 2 (43:00):
And not only that, their chocolate pies of.
Speaker 6 (43:05):
What's your? Is that your? Is that your go to
when you get chocolate pie? When you're there? What's your?
What's your favorite at Little's?
Speaker 2 (43:13):
Well, the pan the b l t is is great
because the bacon in there is so good. The food
is really good, and yeah, you know, and you can
eat cheap. But yesterday I ordered a small garden salad
and chocolate pie. That's the best damn chocolate pie you
ever tasted in your life. Thinking about that.
Speaker 1 (43:37):
To get over there and check out that pie, you know,
I went. We were walking out.
Speaker 2 (43:45):
They're just open and in the morning and noon.
Speaker 6 (43:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:49):
Yeah, Lara was standing there and I said, Laara, that's
the best best man pie ever. Two or three people around,
there's a gas Yes, I mean, you know what I'm saying,
cheering section.
Speaker 6 (44:02):
I don't know where else you gets to Bata pie anymore.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
No, I don't know either, And that's it's outstanding. She
fixes it herself.
Speaker 6 (44:10):
Well, that's the secret.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
Well, I said yesterday about a week ago, I said,
that's the best ever, And she said, truthfully, if it's
the best ever, it's the best tomatoes the sheer we've had.
You know, they're real juicy and stuff.
Speaker 2 (44:25):
So now we've given them a commercial food.
Speaker 5 (44:30):
Oh that's okay.
Speaker 2 (44:31):
How much I'm gonna point that out? Yeah, maybe we can.
Speaker 5 (44:36):
Which reminds me that Michael and I are heading towards Saratoga.
Speaker 6 (44:40):
Here pretty soon.
Speaker 5 (44:42):
For the Whitney. The Whitney which is that week is
the Hall of Fame induction for the you know, National
Racing Museum. That's a big deal. The Jockey Club has
its round table where they discuss all the all the
delicate issues of the industry. Then our friends at Cabin Creek,
(45:03):
our old friends at Cabin Creek, they have their fundraiser
up there, and then the sales happened on the following Monday.
So we're and we will be at the birthplace of
old friends, An's Washington Inn.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
Hallelujah. I thought I was at church.
Speaker 5 (45:22):
Well, it is church for us, Yes, amen, I wanted
to speaking of free commercials, I wanted to point that out.
Speaker 1 (45:29):
Yeah, Now when are you are you going to be
here next Saturday.
Speaker 6 (45:32):
Michael will be here next Saturday, and then Saturday after that.
We'll have to we'll have to do a.
Speaker 5 (45:39):
We'll be on the famous ports where Old Friends was conceived,
and we'll.
Speaker 6 (45:44):
We'll we'll be on the phone.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Sounds wonderful, all right.
Speaker 2 (45:50):
I've got to do at it. Catch up. He's spend
through us. The spendthrift stay inside the winters of four
states of the holiday weekend in the midst if this
is the sire of Coppola one of July four, the
one hundred thousand dollars William Garrett Stakes in the missip
is the nation's leading sire of about twenty twenty trying
(46:12):
to spit it out bout twenty twenty five states winners
with fourteen stake sources, with forty three graded states winners
with nine Grade one states wunners three and by money
one with a lead of more than six million dollars
over the second rank sire on July fourd Saratoga King
Savar by Omaha Beach one one hundred and fifty thousand
(46:33):
dollars Scyleville, States. Omaha Beach is a sire of nine
twenty twenty five States winners twelve stake sources. She is
the nation's number one ranked third crop sire. Also on
July four, the one hundred thousand dollars Hour was Sprint
at Prairie Metters was won by Glengarry by Maxwell Mischief,
the son of in the Mischief. Maxwell Mischief is a
(46:53):
sire of eight twenty twenty eight States winners and ranked
second only to Omaha Beach among all third crop sars.
In fact, the nation's leading third cop sires Omaha Beach,
Maximum of Mischief, Vina, Russell, and Motoli, All four stand
at Spendthrift Farm. Soldo's Yell Pond the nation's leading freshman
SAR with Rocky Old World, who also stands at spend
(47:15):
fifth ranked third, and the number one ranked second cop
SAR is for Cooma with Authentic ranked third, both based
at spend Thrift Farm the Breeders Farm. On July five,
at Woodbine, the Grade three Henry Stakes was won by
Creed's Gold of Philly by Jimmy Creed, one of Spencer's
value sires, Jimmy Creed one Grade one states he's approven
(47:37):
Grade one sire. He's by the started humor from more
on the stallions, a spendthrift farm, the breeders farm called
dais Brian Marcot Daniel eight five nine two nine four
zero zero thirty and the website is spendthrift farm dot com.
Speaker 1 (47:52):
Ryan talk about Hell Parker and his wife Reagan. They
are really super people and it's very interesting. Hill's an
interesting guy. He's a I graduated from UK business and
he's got all those business degrees and stuff. He knows
(48:12):
his stuff, and he's a license realtor, which means he
knows all about zoning and rags and state and local, this,
that and the other, which is a pain in the neck.
I mean to just get into that. It's it's terrible,
but he's good at it. At the other half of
Hill is he's for instance, he's a licensed horse trainer
(48:36):
in eleven states. He's trained thoroughbreds. In fact, he bought
a I think sixteen twenty acres back behind here so
he can train here. Well, he's got his own place
back there. It's really nice. He went all the way
through pony Club and you say pony club babevo ooh,
(48:56):
but it's not like that. It's like a profession organization.
I mean all the Olympic riders are a pony clubbers,
every one of them. It's just an amazing.
Speaker 6 (49:09):
They treat they teach true horsemanship, true horseman.
Speaker 5 (49:13):
Just to love the pony club events at the horse park,
because all those kids.
Speaker 6 (49:17):
Would leave a barn spotless, yeah.
Speaker 5 (49:21):
And proper and and it's I even I remember I
wrote a letter.
Speaker 6 (49:26):
To the Chronicle of the Horse that we ought to appreciate.
Speaker 5 (49:28):
The pony clubs they're producing the horse people.
Speaker 1 (49:31):
Yeah, Betsy was a pony clubber and they always showed
at a barn. Ah, so we are there.
Speaker 2 (49:40):
They producers. A whole lot of Olympic riders over there.
Graduates to the pony absolutely.
Speaker 5 (49:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (49:49):
And so Hill Parker's pony clubber.
Speaker 1 (49:51):
Yeah, a pony club you know.
Speaker 2 (49:54):
And he's yeah, I mean he can really ride now, he.
Speaker 1 (49:58):
Can really ride. He used to come out horsemen with
a two horse trailer and back them out out there
behind the clockers stand in that back them out a
practically ground time, and we're so well trained. He'd hook
them up to his trailer, tack up one blot working himself.
He'd go by and he'd clicked his watch on his
(50:21):
arm while he hit that finish line that, Yeah, that's
a trick too, Yeah, and all kinds of stuff that's a.
Speaker 2 (50:30):
Little crazy little bit.
Speaker 6 (50:34):
Yeah that's Parker. But many of them have a bit.
Speaker 1 (50:40):
Of a screw along. What's all there with all their
screws and all their broken bones? Who they scare me
to death? Anyway? He knows. So when I was talking
about yeah, he's a real estate agent. Had specializes in
horse farms where you come in and you buy an
(51:03):
old cattle farm and picks it up. Are you come
in and buy an old horse farm and picks it up?
He knows the questions to ask and have to lay
it out and what to do, like, for instance, are
you going to train? Are you gonna breed? Are you
gonna sell? What are you gonna do? Because the answers
to all those things determine the kind of space and
(51:26):
facilities you need. You know, like if you're going to
have mayors folding, you have to have folding stalls. Hello,
and you've got a place for a teaser. You don't
want to walk a mayor right and a fold turn
out right.
Speaker 4 (51:41):
Past the old teaser?
Speaker 1 (51:43):
Who get upset?
Speaker 6 (51:43):
I don't want to do that.
Speaker 1 (51:45):
Don't want to do that. So there's all kind of
in things that you need to know, and Hill's got it.
Speaker 2 (51:51):
He's just here and his wife, I'm Reagan to work
together and they're just they're great, a couple of great people.
I recommend him highly, trust him with my last daughter,
and the best way to get into touch with him
he would go to their website, which is lex Horse
(52:13):
Farms dot com. Well, let me give you Hill's sale number.
It's an eight five nine number, six zero eight eighty
thirty nine. That's Hill and Riggan Parker.
Speaker 3 (52:26):
Now back to Horsetails with ursul ellis.
Speaker 2 (52:31):
There. That's too where we are.
Speaker 1 (52:36):
Trip, we did that.
Speaker 2 (52:38):
I hope James Scully comes in coming up.
Speaker 1 (52:41):
But nine o'clock.
Speaker 6 (52:43):
Yeah, we got to get our winners. Yeah yeah, what
what what? Yeah? We got some grated we got some
great ext just too.
Speaker 2 (52:50):
Oh just took Yeah.
Speaker 6 (52:52):
Well, I guess, well, wait.
Speaker 2 (52:54):
The Carnation Cup at Saratoga and they call it the
Don't Die and the Stakes, it's just a din. I
don't know what the Dunkin's all about. Well, it's Dunkin Donuts,
you put it.
Speaker 6 (53:10):
Well, I guess it's the law. Before we get into
heavy Saratoga steaks.
Speaker 5 (53:16):
Yeah, and with all this all that's coming up.
Speaker 7 (53:18):
With that, I'll take it.
Speaker 2 (53:20):
Wins are that steaks? Yeah, I've looked it up.
Speaker 1 (53:24):
Oh really yeah, well I think they ought not to
have steaks on Thursday night because we have the radio
show ons urday. Weren't getting you trying to weave in
the sticks Winters.
Speaker 2 (53:37):
The Coronation Cup was yesterday tomorrow. Today is just the
dying on Grade one where it's Saratoga Oh yeah, okay,
and the Bull and Green Grade two. And those are
the only two graded steaks that they're running this weekend,
going today today.
Speaker 1 (53:56):
Boy, they are doing a lot of social stuff up
at Saratoga.
Speaker 6 (54:00):
Well it's always been pretty social.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
Yeah, I've never been there. You know, I must have
lost my invitation.
Speaker 6 (54:07):
You know.
Speaker 5 (54:08):
My two brothers were very involved in the industry for
many years and it.
Speaker 6 (54:13):
Was just the right. They would be.
Speaker 5 (54:15):
At Saratoga for Saratoga for Saratoga for a month and
I could never go because that's the height of horse
show season at the horse park.
Speaker 6 (54:26):
And when I.
Speaker 5 (54:27):
Would go to Saratoga, it would be with my friend
Bill Cook, who ran the museum at the horse park,
and we would go up in the off season to
visit with the National Racing Museum because we had an
affiliation with him and we shared stuff, so I would
get to go to Saratoga, but not during when everybody
was having fun. And I must say that this has been.
Speaker 6 (54:49):
A fun perk of the old friend's.
Speaker 5 (54:52):
Job here, it's going to Saratoga. And this past two
years having the Belmont at Saratoga. Oh, I'll bet you
and go into that, which is history. You know that
that will never happen again.
Speaker 1 (55:06):
So yeah, well I was looking at something. I got
a note from Lisa Malloy. You know her. She was
she's had a run. Yeah, I know, I know her,
and I used to do a job as she does.
I used to do stuff with that when they were here.
Speaker 5 (55:23):
Uh huh and uh.
Speaker 1 (55:24):
Then of course New York just said come on. So
she's up there in New York and there she is
in a gorgeous dress at Saratoga, looking like wonderful. You know, Yeah,
she looks wonderful, Yes she does. She looks great if
you see Lisa. Okay, tell her, I said, hello, I
used to still help, but as she's been up there longer,
(55:50):
she needs a lawyer in New York. Yeah, rather than
me and uh, you know, well you.
Speaker 6 (55:56):
Could get your license up there again.
Speaker 1 (55:59):
No, I don't want to.
Speaker 6 (56:00):
I don't want to go up and pass the bar here.
Speaker 1 (56:02):
Is that what I learned. If you have a charitable organization,
what you do, say I was on the board, not chest.
What you do is you get somebody to run it
that you have one hundred and ten percent confidence then
and leave them alone.
Speaker 7 (56:24):
Period. There have been a junk coming. I'm on the board.
Speaker 1 (56:30):
I want the tax returns on the Blacksmith. You know
they want to interfere.
Speaker 2 (56:37):
Is that the organization that at that time what you're
talking about, that whoever was in charge of supposed to
be in charge of there was taking some money under
the table, and you come, you.
Speaker 1 (56:54):
That's that's something else, okay, And but she's you know,
you can trust her. And every so often should get
somebody in the war to come in and want to
run it. Yeah, and then I'd have to get on
the phone and.
Speaker 5 (57:08):
Well, you know, being a board member is that is
is different than running the organization. You have a responsibility
for oversight. But there's a difference between oversight and interference. Yes,
you know, yes you should see the financials and yes,
it's okay, to ask questions at the media. You know,
(57:29):
all those things are important, but you're also there to
to help if.
Speaker 1 (57:35):
You're asked, yes, right to yeah, you know.
Speaker 6 (57:39):
To help exactly, to not be an obstructionist, but to.
Speaker 1 (57:43):
Be a Yeah.
Speaker 5 (57:44):
We're really working on the Old Friends board of directors
and we've got some We're getting some good people who
start with the attitude how can I help, how can
I help the organization?
Speaker 6 (57:55):
And then we brought you know, a couple of people with.
Speaker 5 (57:57):
Some strong financial backgrounds that we've asked us, you know,
we want you to look into this to help us,
you know, just to be more efficient and that our report,
that our reporting is easier to understand and all these things.
Speaker 6 (58:13):
But I know exactly what you mean.
Speaker 1 (58:14):
Yeah, I did that for Pony Club, and some guy
came in there and he wanted to fix everything, get
rid of him. And then that, oh I used to
be on Boardable Friends, and my lawyer's insurance saw that
and they were going to double it or something like
oh really, oh yeah, yeah, it's a for a lawyer,
(58:37):
it can be a liability, you know.
Speaker 2 (58:39):
You they wanted to up my fourteen years ago, I
was thinking about this fourteen years ago, old friends had
my eightieth birthday. Yeah over there, nice crowd, and I've
(58:59):
got to pick a Leasha may An Amilia fool Yard. Yeah,
two blonde like it, both of them gorgeous. Yeah, I
love that picture.
Speaker 1 (59:10):
Now you have to you have to trust who you
put in and let him do it. You can not
but that that's a liability for lawyers, so you have
to pay.
Speaker 6 (59:21):
And that's the thing, you know. But a board wants
to have a lawyer on for what you know, usually
that means some free legal advices and also that you know,
you got to do legal stuff.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
Yeah, of course.
Speaker 6 (59:35):
Yeah, and so we you know, we've got Carrie Confidence
on our board. And Carrie has a lot of degree.
He doesn't practice law because he's a horseman.
Speaker 1 (59:46):
See that's the thing.
Speaker 7 (59:48):
He doesn't have to buy liability insurance.
Speaker 1 (59:50):
For legal liability.
Speaker 2 (59:52):
I think James that.
Speaker 1 (59:56):
He doesn't.
Speaker 7 (59:56):
He won't have any liability.
Speaker 1 (59:58):
He just gives if you give free advice or not. Okay, James,
thank you for coming in.
Speaker 7 (01:00:08):
If that's James, Yeah, it's good.
Speaker 5 (01:00:10):
He's just I'm gonna get right in the car, turn
on the radio so I can hear James winners.
Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
For the day. You got a vencil, Yeah, I got
I got it.
Speaker 6 (01:00:18):
Already in the car, and I'll be I'll be putting
my bets down.
Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
Are you coming next week?
Speaker 5 (01:00:23):
Michael will be next week and then the following week
will be.
Speaker 6 (01:00:26):
On the porch if I've got my calendar right, And
well you've got our number, so you got to pick
it up.
Speaker 1 (01:00:33):
We've got to keep up with everybody.
Speaker 6 (01:00:35):
Oh, I know, we're international travelers.
Speaker 7 (01:00:37):
We want to see it. We want to see it
for three weeks.
Speaker 6 (01:00:40):
Well lay eyes on me for a for a while.
But uh, but everybody take care in the meantime. And
now we're getting some brains in the room here with
I don't know about that.
Speaker 7 (01:00:54):
Oh no, something else.
Speaker 2 (01:00:57):
Well they are stood staying bo Liam Come Accidently and
Cairo Prince. Side stakes winners over the week holiday weekend.
Alana Lua Philly from the first cop By Bowl lim
lied all the way to one one hundred and fifty
thousand dollar Texas third at Association Petruity. That race is
not restricted, race's open. That was her second start. She
(01:01:19):
finished second by neck and her first time abb She's
the third winner. Four others have placed two yu os
from Liam's first cop so they're coming out running bow
Liam of course when his first three starts two at Saratoga,
the third at Churchill, then the second by Neck and
what turned out to be his final start, the Grade
(01:01:40):
three AKAK at Churchill. Complexity side Luna Lushka, winner of
the one million, two hundred down dollar Clarksville Stakes at Indiana,
her third consecutive win, the first two at Ghost Team.
She has complexed his fifth twenty twenty five stakes winner,
all from his first COP, and he's hired eight stakes
(01:02:01):
winners plus five others. The placing station in his first cop,
his most recent graded stakes winner Moplex win of the
grade through Ohio Derby, but four others among them. He
also wanted Sandford. Let me say that's Grade three old,
which says Saratoga. Carol Princes, it's all right. One one
hundred and fifty thous dollars Texas thirdd for Truity Loom Star.
(01:02:23):
She's undefeated. He is the fifth twenty twenty five stakes
winner by Cairol Prince are forty two states winners of
rocks Ouard ten percent of his foes Wind Stakes. That's
his folds I'm talking about now, not his starter to
watch for unions by Bold Liam Complex Team Cairol Prince
at the Earlion Sales and the first place to look
(01:02:43):
is in the consignment from erdri stud For more information
on Erdridge on the Erdrich diand or the book America
twenty twenty six called Shannon Racial Leave five nine, eight seven,
three seventy two seventy the website on erdred Studd dot com. Now,
my good friend James Scully just walked in. I bet
she is with Bloodstock Search Information Services. He's gonna say
(01:03:07):
something nice about him.
Speaker 1 (01:03:08):
He's gonna say, I, Betsy, aren't you sure?
Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
I Betsy, Hello, Bets.
Speaker 4 (01:03:15):
Yes, Bloodstock Research Information Services, bristnet dot com. It's the
Handicapper's Edge source of any thurbd racing information. We definitely
have the handicapping reports for all North American tracks, tip sheets, analysis,
computerized picks and more, as well as our past performances.
(01:03:37):
We love our past performances, speed ratings, pace numbers, class numbers,
trainer stats and more. We also have pedigree information. We
have subscription plans or data files and handicapping reports for meats.
So go to britnet dot com The Handicapper's.
Speaker 2 (01:03:56):
Edge alright, James, I'm kind of surprised you showed up today.
We just got a couple of greater steaks.
Speaker 6 (01:04:05):
Thank you, Oh, thank you.
Speaker 4 (01:04:07):
Yeah, you're very welcome. I know it's the weekend before
weekend after July fourth, and then next Saturday's Haskeol weekend,
so that will be a big day at MoMA, and
they'll have some stakes at Saratoga. But the big race
this weekend is the Grade one Diana. It it's been
(01:04:28):
moved to the from the inner turf, I believe, to
the Melon because they got a rainstorm this morning. And
uh so a bunch of the supporting races are off
the turf, I believe the Diana and maybe the Bowling Green,
which is race eight and it's a Grade two turf
Steaks as well. They are I think both on. But
(01:04:51):
all the other turf races today are off the turf.
At Saratoga, the same thing yesterday where they got a
shower and and it was really nice during the afternoon.
The track was fast and then we called the turf good.
But they took all the turf races off with the
Coronation Cup, the Grade three Turf Sprint for Phillies and uh, yeah,
(01:05:13):
the Philly to bed in the Grade one Diana is
she feels pretty really impressive runner for Shrida Vau. Shrida
Vau yesterday sent out doctor Agne, who was responsible for
caring for Lady Eli, who got real sick and almost
(01:05:35):
died and almost Yeah she founded, Yeah she stepped she
she got sick, I believe, and uh and then she
would to complicate matters. I think she stepped on a
nail and yeah, so you have really uh a long recovery.
But she meant it all the way back, you know,
one grade one races after nearly dying. And so her
(01:06:00):
third foal was a two year old and it was
entered yesterday and it won at first asking and named
for the doctor. Yeah, named after the vet and the
foot doctor. No, he's a vet, I.
Speaker 7 (01:06:16):
Mean yeah, I mean him vet special.
Speaker 4 (01:06:20):
I don't know about that, Jackie. I just know that
he's responsible for treating lady Eli, and I mean he's
he's a vet. So I don't know what exactly his
specialty is, but he definitely, Uh, it was cool that
they honored him and I get his first. Her first
two poles were bought and went overseas and they really
(01:06:41):
didn't haven't done much. One of them won, the other
one didn't. But but this one looked real promising, really
a good sized cult, and I thought started out really
well in the stretch, you know, really had some work
to do turning for home and power to the front
and drew off, you know, one by battle length from
a Pletcher Colt. It's funny because she this Colt was
(01:07:03):
out of I think it was a cult. Yeah, Colt
was out of Lady Eli. And then the horse that
she beat, the Pletcher runner, was a full brother to
a Dare Manner. Oh yeah, multiple Grade one winning millionaire
and that race was scheduled for the turf, but like
(01:07:24):
they moved it off the turf to the dirt. So yeah,
she feels pretty is the horse to be today. She's
won four consecutive races. You know, last fall Keenla, she
was awesome in the Queen Elizabeth, but then she went
on one the American Oaks and Santa Anita. The Modesty
was her comeback this year at Churchill on Derby weekend,
and then she just won the Grade one New York
(01:07:46):
on the Belmont weekend last month at Saratoga. So she
faces a really good field Chap Brown, who's won like
I think like six of the last seven runnings of
this race. I mean he's this is one of these
steak races, big stakes that he's really owned over the
last decade. He's got three runners in there. I think
(01:08:10):
Excellent Truth as his main contender.
Speaker 5 (01:08:12):
She was a.
Speaker 4 (01:08:15):
Group one runner up in France and then her first
start just got beat in the Grade one Jenny Wiley,
and then she comes off a close second in the
Grade one just the Game Phillio beat her. Dynamic pricings.
They're stable made. She's in with the chance and or
I guess Chef Brown just has too I'm sorry. And
then you have be or Best, who's coming off a
(01:08:36):
big win in the Game Lea where she led wire
to wire. She's going to be the speed got one
long shot Lady Claypool ran second in the Game Lead
and Schwazia who won the Grave one Jenny Wilie is
in the is in there.
Speaker 2 (01:08:51):
With a chance as well.
Speaker 6 (01:08:53):
So it's a good field.
Speaker 4 (01:08:54):
I do like she fields pretty. I think that she's
got the tactical ability to get a decent trip. That
rail post is no favor, but she could get the
right trip. And then I'll give everybody a horse. I
like on the undercard race number seven, it's a mile
and eighth allowance optional claimer. It's got a Chad Brown
(01:09:16):
entry that's nine to five, but they're drawn. One of
them digital digital ops is in post twelve and the
other one I'm a little bit dubious. I like number
four Drake's Passage, it's four to one on the morning line,
and RaSE seven Kendrick Carmouche. I'll also use a film
star in there, ten to one to six. So I
like four to six and rate seven and try to
(01:09:39):
maybe hit a pick three or something.
Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
With those horses.
Speaker 4 (01:09:41):
So otherwise, yeah, we got some listed stakes going on
at I think at Els has a stake tomorrow, and
we've got some other events going on. There's a State
grades at Colonial Downs, and yeah Colonial opened on Wednesday,
but and it's I've been watching. I've been our Thursday.
(01:10:04):
I've been following that really big field. It's really good racing.
There was a Philly I think it was a filure
of maybe a cold Air Recruits, I think with Air
recruit for Arnold Dela Cour had run since the twenty
twenty three Breeders Cup juvenile turf and yeah Colt and
(01:10:25):
actually he's a gelding. Now I forgot about it, but
he made his comeback first rate since twenty twenty three,
he had won the Laurel for Churity two back on
the turf, and he came back yesterday in the feature
or the co feature at Colonial, looked really good winning.
So let me just say Dela cour has been on fire.
I think he's won like three of his first four
(01:10:47):
starts at Colonial, and he had a winner last week
at Saratoga, so he might watch out for his horses.
And yeah, next week we'll have some good racing gonna.
I think the Haskell, you know, Journalism joined the mix
last week, so he's shipping to New Jersey this week.
And that was the race where you know, it's a
(01:11:10):
great one, and then Jim Dandy the following week is
greade too, so that has a little more appeal and
it's worth more money. It's a million and the other
aces like six hundred or seven hundred thousand.
Speaker 6 (01:11:22):
But the.
Speaker 4 (01:11:24):
It was also a thing where sovereignty's running. Sovereignty worked
this morning, looked really good on the is Brieze and
did it really fast, and so if you have all
these three year olds out there, like Burnham Square, all
these three year olds, they're all aiming to the the Pascal.
I think they're gonna get a big field in there,
(01:11:44):
because your other option is to go run against sovereignty.
Who's the best three year old right now in the
Jim Dandy. But it'll be fun to see these three
year olds get back in action. Like I said, we're
gonna see I would think we're gonna see both them.
And then we also have the same Diego coming up
at Delmar. Del Mar's getting ready to open, and I'll
be excited to see Nicos stretch the two turns in there.
(01:12:09):
Nicos for Bafford, he came back, he ran dead heated
for second in the Grade one to mind frame. You
know who won the Stephen Fosster. He dead heated for
second in that grade one some furlong race, and then
he came back and won the triple bend at Santa
Anito or impressively. So now he's going to stretch the
two turns. Use that mile of sixteen San Diego as
(01:12:33):
a prep to the mile and a quarter Classic Pacific Classic.
Excuse me, And.
Speaker 6 (01:12:39):
Yeah, that's about it.
Speaker 2 (01:12:41):
That's a lot. That's a whole lot.
Speaker 1 (01:12:44):
We found out how to get Fox Sports too. You
pay for it.
Speaker 7 (01:12:52):
We've got direct TV. I called him up, but.
Speaker 1 (01:12:56):
More a month or something.
Speaker 2 (01:12:58):
I said, do Fox that way?
Speaker 4 (01:13:01):
What well on on Fridays because they've got like some
kind of contract with like some kind of motor racing.
And this happened last Friday where they didn't show a
bunch of races on Fox. They put the last couple
on regular Fox, but they didn't they had to go off.
(01:13:21):
They preempted like at two thirty in the afternoon. And
so they they they're allowing fan Duel TVG, which didn't
have Saratoga to do Friday, and they're going to do
the whole card every Friday of the meet. So they signed,
they agreed to that, and so they tell advised those
races yesterday, but it will be back on Fox Sports
(01:13:43):
today and the other four days of the week because
Saratoga ran four days a week these first two weeks.
But next week they go to Wednesday, Sunday.
Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
How long their.
Speaker 6 (01:13:54):
Forty days through Labor Day Day.
Speaker 7 (01:13:58):
You go to YouTube Americans Day.
Speaker 6 (01:14:00):
As the races they have.
Speaker 1 (01:14:01):
All the YouTube Americans stay at the very don't have
to try that.
Speaker 6 (01:14:06):
You go on YouTube to watch all the Sarah all
the New.
Speaker 7 (01:14:08):
York stuff for free, and that's on uh television, you do.
Speaker 6 (01:14:12):
Uh, just get the app on the smart smart TV.
Speaker 1 (01:14:15):
I think we got it.
Speaker 4 (01:14:16):
I just never knew how to use it YouTube and
you could what you're watching it on your phone?
Speaker 1 (01:14:23):
My phone too little?
Speaker 6 (01:14:25):
Mm?
Speaker 4 (01:14:25):
Well not on.
Speaker 2 (01:14:28):
Yeah, I was getting.
Speaker 4 (01:14:34):
Alrighty, well, y'all take care, stay cool.
Speaker 2 (01:14:37):
Well, thanks for stopping by. Alrighty, we do appreciate.
Speaker 4 (01:14:40):
You, alrighty bye bye bye, alright, well one, I.
Speaker 1 (01:14:45):
Don't believe take out, don't have to stop.
Speaker 2 (01:14:49):
Yeah, those are the biggest.
Speaker 6 (01:14:54):
I'll try one.
Speaker 1 (01:14:55):
Uh look at the size of those.
Speaker 2 (01:14:58):
Dude, Uh, I know? Yeah. How about I about founded online?
Speaker 9 (01:15:03):
Huh?
Speaker 2 (01:15:04):
The doughnuts? I just wonder what kind of donuts?
Speaker 6 (01:15:06):
The long job, long job already think y'all.
Speaker 2 (01:15:11):
No, I see later. Good luck one happy mama I
feeling about run Happy shipped in from Churchill Downs in
May and has reared all three straight wins, two of
them stakes, the most recent the one hundred thousand dollars
Sailorville Stakes at Perimeters on July fourth, that boosted her
earnings to over two hundred and eighty two thousand dollars.
(01:15:32):
She turned on that fame and run Happy speed to
take the Sailorveill twenty six furlongs and twenty two flat,
forty four and two five age and fifty sixty two
and three quarters of one on nine flat. She's a
typical run happy, hard hitting sound. She pays the bills.
That's why many horsemen consider run Happy to be the
(01:15:53):
nation's leading bargain sick. There are better reasons, of course,
and run Happy is furnished some of those better reasons,
for instance, such a side grade one States win, a
new Telefella multiple, Greatest Stakes Place and millionaire Smile Happy.
And then there's following sea of Greatest States winn of
over eight hundred and fifty five thousand, Happy American. There
(01:16:16):
is the greatest stakes winn of over seven hundred and
twenty four thousand. Then there's Happy as a Choice went
of over seven hundred and twenty four thousand, and Rockney
went over seven hundred and forty two thousand. Kinetic Sky.
Kinetic Sky won a six hundred and five thousand doorfe
ol Cadence brought home five hundred and seventy one thousand,
(01:16:37):
Run Classic five hundred and thirty two thousand, Happy Soul
five hundred and twenty nine thousand, But believe me, that's
just scratching the surface. Run happiest of course. He we
all know he won the Great one Breaders Cup Friend
and he was a Champions Sprinting one, the Eclipse Award
that he was undefeated sprinted Wren, He ran medication fee
(01:17:01):
and retired Sam. He is a gift he's passing on
to his progeny. He can black type your marriage products
record at a reasonable price, and you're invited to inspect
him and the other stallions out of Clavern Farm, destined
to be the home of mind Frame. I went on
the Grade one one million dollar Stephen Fosse up at
Churchill and here his most recent start. He's earned over
(01:17:22):
me at eight hundred and forty four thousand for a
police stables and Saint Elian stables. For more on the
staonds over Claburn, why don't you call Jacob West Jacob
Summer's eight five nine nine h seven two three three
oh on the website is Clavernfarm dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
Thank you. I'll say a few words here about Hope
well insurance agency. And I said agency. They are not
a tied up to some big corporate monster where you're
not even a number. I mean, this is an insurance agency.
What they've done if stayed independent. How they do that
(01:18:03):
is they use a carefully selected group of financially sound,
reputable companies.
Speaker 2 (01:18:10):
I know one of the companies they.
Speaker 1 (01:18:12):
Use for us has been in business for a hundred
and god knows what, and I think I worked for
them in high school. I mean that's how they are. Anyway,
They're great. They've been in business forever. You can't stink
and stay in business.
Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
You have to be good.
Speaker 1 (01:18:31):
So this independence means that they can provide you with
a no cost, no obligation review comparison of your insurance.
It's a Hope Well company in Paris. It's been in business.
Speaking of been in business since nineteen fifty five. Once again,
if you've been in business that long, you're doing it
(01:18:52):
right now. It's a full service insurance agency. Give them
a call that it's a local ninety eighty seven call.
That means it's Paris two three four seven, So you
remember two three four seven. Better yet to stop by
the office A twenty and Main Street in Paris. They're
on the right side going in.
Speaker 5 (01:19:14):
They aren't really super people.
Speaker 4 (01:19:16):
They'll do a great job for you.
Speaker 2 (01:19:20):
W w TFA M Georgetown Lex WTF those little everywhere
with the iHeartRadio app now number one for podcasting.
Speaker 3 (01:19:29):
Now back to Horsetails with Ursua Ellis.
Speaker 2 (01:19:34):
Alrighty, and we've got doctor Brian Walridge on the phone
from down to Mississippi State, who should be very happy
today because he's got a You're in Motown, and Motown's maytown,
one of graded states over the weekend. And I think
you knew about those that didn't You didn't you, bron.
Speaker 10 (01:19:56):
You You told me about that. I had seen it,
but you told me more about it. So I really
really happy for that horse, especially to win in the
on the.
Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
Pea patch, Yeah, the pea patch to the Ellis Park
one hundred and fifty thound dollar park. You got to
run your butt off, went down to the Alice parking one.
Whoever thought Jackie, when we were hauling horses down to
Ellis Park to run that they would have steaks out
worth one hundred and fifty.
Speaker 1 (01:20:23):
Thousand dollars, Yes, exactly, I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:20:28):
We were up there. I think the allowance race was
about one hundred and fifty thousand, I mean one hundred
and fifty dollars exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:20:34):
Yeah, yeah, none winners two for a buck and a half.
Speaker 10 (01:20:40):
Yeah, you get you get too complimentary cokes at the
confession stare.
Speaker 6 (01:20:46):
When you win.
Speaker 2 (01:20:48):
Yeah. But what's going on down in Mississippi State? Anything newsworthy?
Speaker 10 (01:20:54):
We've had just had a lot of pneumonias.
Speaker 6 (01:20:57):
We had a mayor that had a.
Speaker 10 (01:21:01):
Chest infection fluidemmonia fluid in their chest and she's been.
Speaker 6 (01:21:04):
Here about months.
Speaker 10 (01:21:05):
She's going to finally get to go home.
Speaker 2 (01:21:07):
Today.
Speaker 10 (01:21:07):
We took a chest to about. We have a really
bad phon pneumonia. But it's it's been a lot of work,
but finally we've gotten that whole straightened out. So we've
been pneumonia's and I had a mystery mule of it
for I don't know what he did to himself, but
his hind and end as rectorum was hugely swollen and
(01:21:28):
he's done all right, so he's going home. So we've
had a weird combination of things down here this week.
But I was the one to talk about. People may
have seen it on the news, was the screw was
about the screw worms. People had seen that without some
of the horse sights.
Speaker 6 (01:21:46):
But the reason you got to worry.
Speaker 10 (01:21:49):
About those screwworms is that, you know, a fly that
produces maggots. But the thing about screwworms is the maggots
for the screw worm feed on healthy tissue or the
normal the normal maggots we have, at least in the
United States, normal flies. You know, they'll only feed on
(01:22:09):
dead tissue because we can use those, you know, therapeutically
with medical maggots. And one of my veterinarian friends, he
actually raises medical maggots, and you know there's a lot
to it to try to keep raise them sterile and
raise them clean, and you know, he sells them all
over the country for people to use and you know,
(01:22:30):
old chronic wounds and things like that, because you put
those maggots in there and they'll clean up the dead
tissue and sometimes they don't like certain infections where they
don't grow as well. And one of the things that
you have to be a little careful about us with
the bandage, you have to make sure they get a
little oxygen, because they don't have oxygen, they'll die. But
(01:22:51):
these screworm rveie. When that one lays its eggs, it's
it's maggots will eat healthy tissues. So that's why we
don't want those things in this country because you know,
they're not like your traditions. You know, the usual maggots
were used to. We've got some old nasty wound.
Speaker 6 (01:23:08):
You know.
Speaker 10 (01:23:08):
These things they'll you know, doesn't matter whether they lay
their eggs, they can start to feed on han the
tissue and there and I remember being taught this at
Scroll and they may show some of these pictures if
you read those things. Is when you look at the
maggot for a screwworm fly, it has two little breathing
tubes on time and end. The end that you see
(01:23:31):
there's like two little dots. Think you look at really close,
you see it's like their little breathing tubes. There's two
like little black streaks on its time and end. And
the really interesting way that they're controlled. And I don't
know how, I need to go back and read the
history of this, but the way that they figured out
to control those those screw worms, and this is the
(01:23:53):
United States that we did this is they'll raise them up,
you know, take the mails and expose them to radiation
and that sterilizes them. So they may go out and
breed with the female flies, but they'll go the sterile
so they've been had a radiation. Then the female flies
can't lay eggs. I guess they lay eggs.
Speaker 6 (01:24:14):
I don't know.
Speaker 10 (01:24:14):
I guess they lay eggs, but they're just sterile and
they can't hatch and become a screwer of larvae, the maggots.
And that's how we control them. Because you may have
seen they're going to drop some of those flies from
airplanes around the southern border. I think the last I
saw when they're reading about this them yesterday, I think
(01:24:34):
it's about four hundred miles south of the US borders
as far as they've advanced, but at the start of
this it was seven hundred some mile so they have
spread north. But that's why we're putting out those irradiated
sterile male flies, if you see that in the news,
because they'll breathe the females, and females can't produce live offspring.
Speaker 2 (01:25:01):
Okay, much west West time. Okay, we're going to let
you go. When are you coming up by the.
Speaker 10 (01:25:10):
Way, September, you're doing the sale? Are we have a
little bit different schedule here that the students are back.
The first and second year students are back in school
because they come back early and then at Thanksgiving break.
They started doing this in Tovid, but they decided they
liked it so much they kept it going a Thanksgiving break,
(01:25:31):
they'll go home and they'll be done. They won't come
back after thanks Getting. So I've gotta finally go off
clients come Monday for a while, and I've gotta get
with the students to see what the test schedule is.
But sometime during September we'll be up there and we'll
(01:25:52):
come be on the show and get the old friend's
horses done and.
Speaker 6 (01:25:56):
Go see the tale.
Speaker 2 (01:25:59):
Good looking forward to it? All right, Well wait, thank you, wait,
we'll see you next week. All right, thanks man, all right.
The Grade one Winter Blazing sevens, Gupho and Serol Spight
each had a successful first season that stud this year,
Thank you breeders, We're looking forward to twenty twenty six
(01:26:22):
won their first Darby Dan Poles ride. The Darby Dan
Stads with Runners of Racing Age also had books of
quality marriage this year. For instance, diali In received his
usual book of marriage breeders know that he serves precocious
two year old, he was the leading freshman star of
his year, and that he can sell. You're a Grade
one winner. He's a save defunded and multiple Grade one
(01:26:45):
win of over a million seven hundred thousand Superstock, a
Grade one win of a million, two hundred and seventy
nine thousand, her number one one Grade one stakes over
eight hundred and five thousand, Gunnavera won a place in
ten grade at stakes six Grade one, he earned five million,
five hundred and sixty one thousand, eight hundred dollars, and
(01:27:05):
mister Marylands won a pair of graded six placing seven
more staixs five Graded two Grade one earned to me
in a d eighty two thousand. That's a lot of run,
all told down a sire seventy eight stakes horses, and
he's still going strong. Another Grade one Winter millionaire and
Grade one sire at Darby dann is Tale of Acottie.
(01:27:27):
He won the Grade two forturity at two in New York,
won three graded states at three two Grade one, and
earned over me in a nerdy two thousand. He's a
sire Grade one winner of one hundred and sixty twenty
four thousand and Grade one sire Gervin and of three champions.
We're running out of time, but I must mention flame
(01:27:47):
Away sire of fourteen States winners, thirty two the winter
places States in his first two cops, thirteen percent of
his foolds eighteen percent of his runners. I urned black type.
He can threw a black cape you Ameriage product working
for you the greatest stakes, winning over nine hundred and
eleven thousand flame A waiters by the late Great Scat Daddy.
(01:28:08):
So I also justified. Why don't you call Stuart Fitzgibbon
eight five nine two five four four two four. Take
a look at a website which is Darby dan Well
Horses raised on when Califee has won seven stakes over
the holiday weekend plus another on Thursday. Starting on July three,
(01:28:30):
at Saratoga, one hundred and fifty down out of a
wild applot, States was one by Classic Q, a three
old Philly bred by winning bludstock and raised on Winchester Farm.
On July four, at Saratoga one hundred and fifty down
out of Skyttleville went to King's Sapper, two old phillybred
by George Gregorian and raised on Starwood Farm. Also on
(01:28:52):
the fourth one hundred and fifty down out of Dade
Park Dash at Ellis Park was won by Troubleshooting bread
and On but out of Our Farm. One hundred thousand
dollar Clarksville Handicap at Horseshoe in Annapolis was won by
Lunda Lushka led by Ashview Farm. One hundred and fourty
thousand dollars graded at the Quenlan September Sales, She's won
three in a row. The Feature of Woodbine. The Grade
(01:29:16):
five Excuse Me Feature of Woodbine on July five was
the Grade three Hendry Stakes. They was run by Chris
Gold bred by Linda Griggs. Kreed Gold is placed in
another states at Woodbine and earned two hundred and fifty
six thousand, six hundred eighty eight dollars. Quick picked one
of the two hundred and twenty five thousand Ioway Oaks.
(01:29:37):
Iowa Oaks at Perimeters on July five was bred by Gainsway,
Thirddge and Whisper Hill Farm. She's earned five hundred and
sixty thousand and placed in the Grade one ounced by
A Knan and the Great one breeders Capturre in New
Phillies and one hundred thousand dollars. Mary Hullman George Memorial
States Horseshoe in Annapolis went to Alpine. Princess she is
(01:30:00):
on three States two hundred and four thousand dollars. Was
bred by Bill Betts, DJ Stables, Peter Lamanche and the
Empire Syndicate and raised on the Betts farm. The Thursday winner,
Let's see where am I at? The Thursday winner was Scandinavia,
winner of the Group three Baherre and Trophy Stakes at Newmarket.
(01:30:22):
He was bred by Oppendale Chelston and wanting folded ashwood
study congostulations saw and said, join the winning team. Just
called doctor John Lewis, Amy Parker or Jenny Morris eight
five nine eight seven three thirty three thirty three. See
the website at McCauley feeds dot com or stopped by
the officers that want to live in Broadway in for
sales McCauley feed's It's all about the horse.
Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
Now back to the Thoroughbred Training Center and ursul Ellis.
Speaker 2 (01:30:54):
And there I think you've got something on Stabby over
there that go to the.
Speaker 5 (01:30:59):
Runner right right right.
Speaker 1 (01:31:02):
Steimy's book Okay, Kenland Library Lecture Series presents Andy Plattner's
book Steimy. This is this Wednesday, the sixteenth, sixth thirty
to eight thirty at PM. Of course, like Keenland Library,
(01:31:24):
a novel in stories. So this is twenty dollars a
ticket forty dollars if you want a book at the
same time. So what you can do is call Keenland
two pay four three four one two doors open at
(01:31:45):
six o'clock.
Speaker 2 (01:31:47):
Stimy. In case people don't remember him, it was. It
was a Texas bread uh based back in the forty
and he was uh I one time. He was in
the duel on several times he led them side the
(01:32:10):
list of leading money winners of all time, is that right? Yeah?
It started out running for claiming races, yeah, and then
just started getting the older he got, the better he got.
But anyway, he was an interesting horse, right, running against
horses like assault and good. But anyway, and Joe Palmer wrote.
Speaker 1 (01:32:32):
A column about him and wonderful.
Speaker 2 (01:32:34):
So this this is what Joe had to stay about
some Stimy. On the cold, blustery afternoon of January twenty eight,
nineteen twenty one, several hundred persons huddle in the wind
swept stands at the old Kentucky Association Track at Lehington
(01:32:55):
to see one horse gallop past them. Down he came
a great red Testant with a copper man and a
high head, flying the black and yellow silks of Samuel D. Riddle.
This was man of war leaving the racetracks forever. Fourteen
years passed before Lexington considered another horse worth a turnout. Then,
(01:33:15):
onmar to eleventh, nineteen thirty five, some five hundred citizens
assembled on a foul wet afternoon to see Echapois take
his last public gallop. This was at the private track
of the CV Whitney Farm, because it was in that
unbelievable two year period when Lexington had no public racetrack.
(01:33:37):
The next performance, as far as I know, the last
one came on August eighth, nineteen forty three, when Cayamet
celebrated World Away Day. By this time the Chamber of
Commerce had got into the act, and there was a
remarkable spate of Congressman, Southern oratory, news campers, and radio announcers.
This is not a complete list liked him, though you
(01:34:01):
can never tell about a Chamber of Commerce that there
would be any such doings Over Stymy when he arrives
to enter the study at doctor Charles Haggard's Green Ridge
Farm on Paris, Elections and Roads. It isn't that the
other three were Kentuckians coming home and a Steymy' is
an outliner from outlander from Texas. It was thoroughly appropriate
(01:34:23):
that Stymy should have his final public appearance at Jamaica,
because he's a Jamaica kind of horse. Although I have
no doubt he would do well at stud his kinship
is with the racetrack, not the breeding farm. Man of War,
Equipois and Whorldway all were equine royalty from the day
they were full. Steymy were common folks. It is true
(01:34:47):
that he carries the blood of both Equipois and Man
of War, but all pedigrees are purple if you go
back a little. He was the son of a horse
that had won two common races out of a mayor
that couldn't win any Nobody ever thought the first three
were anything but good. Steimy began as a fifteen hundred
dollars plater that couldn't get out of his own lane.
(01:35:08):
Stimy wasn't, of course, as good as any of the three,
but it was a measurably tougher. Could he have got
to the races one more time, he would have started
as many times as all three of the others together.
If you want to play your mine with a perfectly
useless bit of information. Man and War made his reputation
by blazing nineteen miles and five furlongs eck, of course,
(01:35:31):
stopping now and then to go a new hoof rent.
It's a trifle over fifty miles. In competition, whirl Away
lasted a little longer and lacked half a furlong of
running sixty six miles. But Steimy's journey to leadership among
the world's leading money winners took him one hundred and
forty two miles plus half a furlong and sixty yards,
(01:35:52):
and that's more than the other three together. Man War
and Ecropois and whorlway Age won the first time out
a short odds, as they were expected to do. Stimy
was thirty one to one in the twenty five hundred
dollars claiming race, and he ran as he was expected
to do. He finished seventh. He was out fourteen times
(01:36:14):
before he could win, and that it was as a
three thousand, three hundred dollars. Claimer, you are not to
imagine that Stimy was accidentally and mistakenly dropped into a
claiming race before anyone appreciated his quality. He ran twelve
times in claiming races and got beaten eleven of them.
He was until the fall of his two year old
(01:36:34):
season right where he belonged. Then from this beginning he
went on to win nine hundred and eighteen four hundred
and eighty five dollars. This, as you see, basically the
story of the ugly duckling of Cinderella, among the ashes
of Dick Whittingham and his cat. And of all the
world's stories, none has ever been preferred to that which
(01:36:56):
leads to the public and very glorious trump triumph of
the oppressed and the down trodden. Jamaica's horse players are,
to some extent of press and downtrodden, and perhaps in
STiMi they foind of a carrier's success. The horse envisioned
by a breeder in Kentucky elsewhere is the service the
(01:37:18):
son of a Derby winner out of an Oaks Mera,
which can sweep the fratuities to two and the classics
at three, and then come back to the stud and
send other great razors to the wars. These are roughly
the specifications which fit such horses as citation count flee
more admirable and alight. But to raise trackers, I think
save most of their affection for the exterminators and the
(01:37:41):
stymis and the sea biscuits, who will do it the
hard way, and the handicaps, pounding at mile after bitter mile,
giving weight and taking their tracks whear dry running for
any jockey trying to win with what they've got, even
when they haven't got enough. And that's why Stimy fitted
a farewell to Jamae bigger more than a welcome in Kentucky.
(01:38:03):
He's a curious horse, this obscurely bred Texas product. This
tourist leaned on Jack Skinner's back fence at Middleburg one
December for maybe half an hour, just studying Simy, which
did not return the compliment, but went on picking up
the scanny, windy grass except for the crooked blaze which
(01:38:23):
gives him a devil ma care expression. He's the most
average horse you ever saw. Not tall, not short, not long,
not close couple, good bone, good muscle, good chest, nothing outstanding,
nothing poor. As a result of course, he is almost
perfectly balanced, and maybe this is what makes him tick. However,
(01:38:45):
there is another matter. When Simy comes to the peak
of condition, he exudes vitality, so you expect to hear
it crackle. He comes to a hard, lean fitness that
you seldom see in domestic animals, unless in a honey
dog that is working steadily, or perhaps a hunter, and
it has been having him ten miles a day over
the fields. This is when, as hirst Jacob says, he
(01:39:09):
gets rough. It isn't temper a meanis he gets so
full of himself that he wants things to happen. The
faster he goes, the higher he carries his head, which
is wrong, but according to the book, but is characteristic
of the tribe of man of war to which he
is in bed. This tourist, who doesn't scare easily in print,
(01:39:30):
will long remember the way Steimy came around the turn
in the Pemical Cup Handicap, with his copper man flying
in the wind, making pretty good horses look as if
they had just remembered the pressing engagement with a quarter pole.
He is not a great horse in the sense of
man of war, and they could poison with grieve. He
isn't versatile. There are dozens of horses around that can
(01:39:52):
beat him at a mile, and even at a mile
and a quarter he would have trouble with armed or
a lucky draw, just as he had with devil Knabber.
He can't make his own pace, and he can't win
slow races. He needs something up ahead to draw the
speed from the field, to soft it up for his
long creeping rush. At the end. We'd give him a
(01:40:12):
field with speed in him at a mile and a
half or more, and horses better get out of his way,
even whirl away anyway. Another find, an ardent and satisfactory
story of the turf was brought to a clothes at
jamake him, and it was happy to note that for
all his long campaign there was no batter than limping
warrior was left us. Simy never looked better with his
(01:40:34):
bronze coats in great bloom, and the high head carried
as proudly as ever as he stood for the last
time before the stands. People around the Winter's pre enclosure
would shout at the groom, bring him in here just
one more time. The new groom didn't obey, when probably
he was right. Simon never got in a winter circle
(01:40:55):
without working, for there was no time to begin with stimy. Yes,
I remember him well. He didn't do very well. It's
third by the way over here doctor Charlie's place. Yeah,
I Haggard Farm on Parish Lixton Road. But anyway, okay, Well,
Spencer of Staying side of the winners of four stakes
(01:41:17):
over the holiday, including in the Mischief, and he's the
sire of Cupola one of July fourth, one hundred thousand
dollars William Garrett Stakes in the Mischief is the nation's
leading shire of twenty twenty five stakes winners with fourteen
stakes horses with forty three graded States Unders with nine
Grade one, Station Route with three, and by Money one
(01:41:38):
with the leaders of more than six million dollars over
the second ranked sire on July four at Saratona Kingsharburg
by Omaha Beach one a hundred and fifty nine dollars
scout of Ville State. Omaha Beach is the sire of
nine twenty twenty five stakes winners twelve steaks horses. He's
the nation's number one ranked third drop sar. Also on
(01:41:59):
July fourth, the one hundred thown dollars a hour sprint
at Praimetters was won by Glengarry by Maximum Mischief a
center of inter Missief. Maxim Mischief is the sire of
eight twenty twenty eight Stake twentys Excuse me eight twenty
twenty fourth Stake twenty eight twenty twenty five stake turners
and ranked second only to Omhar Beach among all third
(01:42:21):
crop side. In fact, the nations leads third crop sire
Omaha Beach, macrom Mischiff, Mino, Russell and Matolia all stand
at Spendthript Farm. So does yelp On the nation's leading
freshman sire, with Rock Your World, who also stands at
Spenfurth ranked third and the number one ranks. Second crop
(01:42:42):
sire is for Coma, with Authentic ranked third, both based
at Spencery Farm, the Breeders Farm, and on July five
at Woodbine. The Grade three Henry Stakes was won by
Creed's Gold a Feel by Jimmy Creed, one of Spendthrifts
Value Side. Jimmy Creed won Grade one stakes He's proven
Grade one sire uh He's about distorted humor. For more
(01:43:02):
on the stands of Spencery Farm, the breeders from those
days are Brown and mar or Daniel E's E nine
two nine four years of thirty and the website is
Spencer farm dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:43:14):
Yeah, M say a few nice words about Sally Van. There,
Sally Van Service, Sally Horseman Service, any business for footbo
over sixty years. And once again, people that have been
in business that long what tattoos is they're doing it right,
(01:43:35):
otherwise they would be in business that long. So during
that time, any of the greatest runners ever to step
on a racetrack have been entrusted to their care. And
I remember seeing the picture of Justify getting off of
Sally Van. I I don't know where it was cause
it just had the van. I think it was Churchill.
(01:43:56):
But anyway, single most they're real product too, is a
safety factor. Is the ability and experience of the person
behind the wheel. That really crowded their drivers because not
only their experienced drivers, but they are experienced horsemen. They
don't even talk to them in the first place if you.
Speaker 5 (01:44:18):
Don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:44:20):
What's going on with horses and you can't fake it.
So that's a winning combination experienced drivers experienced horsemen. So
think about that next time you ship across the county
of the country. Think about old justified shipping in a
sally Van good enough for justify for crying out, well,
(01:44:44):
think about that when you ship your horse loading too
a sally Van you can depend on the fact person
behind the wheels one of the best in the business.
Folks at Sally Horse Vans wouldn't have it any other way.
And that's why for more than half a century Sally
Vance two five five ninety four oh six. That's two
(01:45:06):
five five nine four o six safest way to the
winner circle.
Speaker 3 (01:45:14):
Now back to horsetails with ursul ellis.
Speaker 2 (01:45:18):
Okay, let's look at some steaks winners from last week.
Speaker 10 (01:45:22):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:45:23):
The Grade one five hundred foun out of Belmont Invitational
at Saratoga was one by Fion by Twirling Candy read
by Dixanna Farm Home Hometown. The Grade two Henry Steaks
at Woodbine went to Creed's Gold by Jimmy Creed read
by Linda Griggs read Jimmy Creed over at Spencery Farm.
(01:45:43):
Lynda Griggs is doctor John Wiggs Johnny Griggs widow. The
Grade two Great Lady m Steaks at the Los Alameidos
I went to Sweet ass Tica by Sharp Ass Ticap
and by family c z Bar. The Grade three Bahrain
(01:46:04):
Trophy Stakes at Newmarket Kandinavia one had Scandinavia but Justify
bred by Michael Tabor Derreck Smith and Missus John mag
Deer bred by Arpindale Chelsea and wanted and raised over
at Ashford stood. Let's see the Grade three Kelso at
(01:46:27):
Saratoga think Big but Twirling Candy bread by good Often.
The Grade three Indiana Oaks at Fresno in the Annapolis
went to Peco cook by the Quality Road bred by
Donald Alberto Corporation. The Grade three one hundred three hundred
thousand dollars Indiana Derby winner was tipped up Thomas Balatam
(01:46:52):
bread by Wednesday Farm, donah Moore and Jim Richardson. The
Grade three Private Menders Handy Prairie Metters handyk app I
went to cornishman By Curling bred by good Offen. The
if I pigures one up, god, I got a lot
of these things. The Grade three Coron Ocean Cup Yesterday
(01:47:15):
Italian Swaree won that by Uncle Moe bred by Ripoli Stables.
One hundred thown dollars William Garrett Stake's the Horseshoe in
Annapolis Cupola by in the Mischiefs with about fifth Avenue Bloodstock.
The one hundred and thirty five thousand dollars Daily Roads
on Thursday went to Deep Satin by American fare Oh
bred by euro West Bloodstock Services. The Clarksville Handicap at
(01:47:42):
Horseshoe and Annapolis went to Luna Lushka by Complexity over
bred by ash Few Farm. The one hundred and fifty
town dollars Skylar Hill in Saratoga went to Kingsapa by
Omaha Beach bred by George Crekorion. The Dade Park Dash
at Ellis Park Troubleshooting one that read by Donna Meyer Farm.
(01:48:06):
The p Pat Stakes at Ellis Park winner Maytown by
Motown read by cave Brook Farm. The Wild Appause Stakes
at Saratoga went to Classic Q is a Q Yeah
it is Classic Q by Classic Empire bread by Winning Bloodstock.
(01:48:26):
The iour Oaks two hundred and twenty five thousand dollars
Park was won by Mackenzie No Excuse Me by Quick
Kick read by Gainsway, Third Birdge and Whisper Hill Park
one hundred thousand dollars Mary Hullman Memorial in Horseshoe in Annapolis.
Alpine Princess one that read by Bill Betts, DJ Stables,
(01:48:51):
the Lamatia Classic Empire Syndicate, the Saylorville Stakes at Parrameds
one Happy Mama, I've run Happy Uh bred by Kenneth M. White.
The one hundred and fifty down dollar of Texas THERDBAD
Association Forturity lone Star went to Lula Lua by bo
(01:49:13):
Liam Bredbock, Scott Pearce and Equine Futures one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars Texas Therdbread Association for Turity at lone Star.
It's all right one that for Cairo Prince bred by
Massar Corporation. The seventy five thousand dollars Smile Sprints Steaks
(01:49:33):
had to go seem improvement implementation by constitution bred by
the Sheikh Abdullah l Madah, Kentucky by hundred found out
of Indiana General Assembly handicap at Horseshoe in Annapolis. Then
it's beauty one that, but not this time bread by
John levickas the Michael G. Shaeffer Memorial at Horseshoe in Annapolis.
(01:49:59):
Wallace d Looking at Lucky read by bow Lane who
in Bourbon County, the hundred thousand dollars Jonathan B. Shoster
Memorial at Horseshoe in Annapolis, and Sino won that by Nyquist,
read back with by Godolphin the hour Derby two hundred
and fifty down Dollar Park Magnitude, but not this time
(01:50:19):
reread by Ron Stoley, The John Henry Stakes and Evangeline Downs,
and just John Henry did run it the Vangeline Downs
during his career. This one was run by gun Runner.
It's uh, the point proven I've read by three Chimneys farm,
so those are the I think it's the end of 'em.
(01:50:39):
Nothing other them was alright, Well, we've got a few
minutes here left to talk about what's going on here
at the Thurburn Center. There's always a lot going on
at the Third Urge.
Speaker 7 (01:50:53):
Another this morning we come in at seven and a A.
I don't think every funny had already.
Speaker 1 (01:51:00):
Been in a track was a very shape that you
could tell they got out early so they could get back,
turn on a fan and open the windows in these bums.
Speaker 2 (01:51:11):
Well, it's not it, yeah, it's it's uh, it's not
one of our hottest stays today or I don't think,
but we see, we'll see about that as the doing
of the day. But what you supposed to go up
to today? You know? He he no lane, Oh god,
now is it gonn Is it supposed to rain it
(01:51:33):
all the day?
Speaker 8 (01:51:34):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:51:34):
Not really? Oh they not really and.
Speaker 7 (01:51:39):
It's eye palls in but it says not really.
Speaker 10 (01:51:43):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:51:43):
I wanna say something that I wanna thank the Burnt Horse.
I got my new stallion registered, by the way, and
we we were fussing about it not coming for when
it took a while, well maybe about three weeks, so
something like that. I know the mail is bad, but god,
it's not that bad.
Speaker 6 (01:52:05):
But I was.
Speaker 2 (01:52:06):
I was so glad the one that my original copy
that I got with my subscription. I've I've been, you know.
I went to work in the Blood Horse and what
you was that, I think in nineteen sixty and I've been,
you know, I subscribing to it still too. And it's
(01:52:28):
part of the sign register is put out by the
Blood Horse, and it's a guy that must weigh three
pounds has got all, you know, register the STALLI ins
all over the United States and stand still with details
about each horse. It's a great book. Can't do that. Yeah,
(01:52:51):
And but the one that sent me this year, I
don't know what happened to it, but the damn thing
just fell apart, you know. It was it was I
don't know what happened, but anyway, I had big sections
missing out of it and everything. But anyway, I was
so happy last Saturday morning when we stopped by the
(01:53:13):
mail in Paris. There it was the new Salion Register yep.
And I've been slobbering over it ever since. So thank
you Blood Horse Magazine for sending me that. Yeah, you
don't know how much I appreciate it. And I really
enjoyed throwing that old scrappy one away that I've been
trying to ye trying to use, putting it in the trash.
(01:53:37):
It was fun to do it. Well, once again we're
here at the Thurbird Center, and once again it's a
great place to do business here at the Thurberd Center.
I've got some notes about it here somewhere.
Speaker 1 (01:53:49):
And they used to have horse sales out here.
Speaker 2 (01:53:53):
Oh yeah, that was back when doctor passing and h
right and Rex. That was worth that wonder they built it,
you know?
Speaker 1 (01:54:01):
Yeah? Is that the main building down here?
Speaker 2 (01:54:04):
Still no it's the one that tore down.
Speaker 1 (01:54:06):
Oh okay, because I was trying to think where they
would put that amphitheater.
Speaker 2 (01:54:10):
Well, the amphitheater is still there, is it. Other barns,
the barns with those old covered barns, you know that.
Speaker 1 (01:54:19):
Yeah, I remember, Yeah, I sold a couple.
Speaker 2 (01:54:25):
Of horses over there for a matter of as a
matter of fact, yeah, yeah, neither one of them.
Speaker 1 (01:54:30):
I remember we had a partner and they had a favorite.
Speaker 2 (01:54:35):
Horse, great Son, and go ahead, and we were sitting
there and we.
Speaker 1 (01:54:43):
Had this great son for sale, and everso started this all.
It's the last of the great sons, oh, the last
of the great sons. And finally he bit on it.
Speaker 2 (01:54:56):
He got it to he got it too. And great
son was a Bolooroo, son of bow Rule, who stood
right up the track up here, yeah, right up toad
Pam on the right.
Speaker 8 (01:55:09):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:55:09):
He was founded, but a very very good shore u uh. Anyway,
it was painful to watch him in the breedings yere
and they f finally had to put him down. But
h this was one of the one of his lascens.
The horse went on and went a few races. I
think he went up to thistle down the window. He
(01:55:30):
w he was no hail who were well rid of
him anyway. But the training center here, uh, they've got
great uh facilities here. If you're looking for a couple
of stalls or board of horses or something, give him
a call. Uh eight five nine, two nine three, eighteen
fifty three is the number. Of course you all know
(01:55:51):
this right here or the parish Lexton Road, just a
short drive from the country club. And they got the
mile track. Guh he can bring a early that here
and start them and anyway they've got a mile track
or five ace mile track. Start and get official clocker
grass gallops, everything you need to get your horse to
the races. Great place, great management. And it's a service
(01:56:16):
center on the Paris Lehington Road. And then it's time
to go. So thanks everybody, and we'll talk to you
next week.