ECAHS
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Ask
the Experts
Editor’s Note:. If you have a question on any
horse/Arabian/Crabbet related topic, please send it to me at the address
earlier in this publication, and we will consult with one to three experts and
provide a response in a subsequent issue of the News. Questions may be
anonymous if desired.
This month’s question is from Brigid Lamb:
As a novice rider, how do I start to learn to be a dressage
rider and what tack and equipment do I need?
Brighid,
I started in dressage about 25 years ago.
I would tell you to find an instructor that works with beginners learning
dressage. Even though you may have ridden for years, this riding could be alot
more detailed than what you are use to. So therefore, I would suggest someone that
is willing to explain things in a way that you can understand.
Because Dressage is a balanced style of
riding, a forward seat saddle isn't the best place to start. But don't be
discouraged if that is the only saddle that you have. Western saddles are good
also because they sit you in a position where your legs fall directly beneath
you. The only bit that should be used is a snaffle. There are many different
kinds but the round ring is the best. It allows the bit to stay in position
regardless of how it is being used.
Also, go to the library or a bookstore and
start reading about dressage. There are many great books and a lot are written
for a beginner.
Best of luck,
Marie Taylor
RAFYK and Sir James Penn
Boucaut:
The Arabian Foundations in Australia
from The CMK Record VIII/4 Spring 1990
used by permission of Michael Bowling
RAFYK was a three-quarter brother to ROSE
DIAMOND, featured in Record VIII/2;
for information on RAFYK's and ROSE DIAMOND's wonderful sire AZREK see p. 20 of
that issue. RAFYK was the first major stallion produced by what was to become
the breed's most internationally influential female line. The difference
between the pedigrees of ROSE DIAMOND and RAFYK was the replacement of KARS
with HADBAN as maternal grandsire of the latter. HADBAN was a bay imported from
an Indian racing stable to Crabbet, partly with the idea that he should take
part in a highly promoted Arab race. The race was not a notable success and the
Arab cause was further embarrassed when its winner was soundly trounced by a
moderate TB in a match race. Arab racing in England took a hundred years to
recover from its fumbled start, but the 1884 race can claim an important
contribution to breed history as it was the occasion for HADBAN's coming to
Crabbet.
HADBAN: the
quintessential broodmare sire
Lady Anne Blunt's manuscript stud book describes HADBAN as
"An imported bay horse, foaled
in 1878, a Hadban Enzeyhi, bred by Jakin Ibn Aghil, Sheykh of the Daafini tribe
of Oteybeh, from whom he was purchased by Ali Ibn Amr of Bussora and Bombay and
exported to Bombay in the autumn of 1883. Purchased of Ali Ibn Amr soon after
being landed at Bombay. Imported in 1884. A bright bay with three white feet,
hind feet and near fore feet (mutlak al yemin) and star. Splendid head with prominent forehead (jebha), small muzzle, neck a trifle short but
well placed, good shoulder, pasterns rather too long. Fine carriage of tail,
fine trotter in harness, grand mover gallopping[sic]. Hadban was the sire of Nefisa, Rose of Sharon and Bitumen [this
apparently written in 1885, before the arrival of the 1886 colt MAJID]."
He stood 14:2 and 1/2
and measured 7 and 3/4 inches below the knee, "rather over than under"- in other words measured just under 8
inches of bone.
"Hadban was sold in June
1885 to D. Mackay Esq(re) of New South Wales for 120 gs for exportation to
Australia. In view of the excellence of the mares by Hadban, it is to be
regretted there were so few of his stock."
Wilfrid Blunt, quoted
by Peter Upton, later made a stronger statement:
"Hadban is, next to Mesaoud,
the most important sire we imported, being numerously represented in the Stud
Book through Rose of Sharon and Nefisa, his two best daughters and our two most
valuable brood mares."
HADBAN got just four
foals at Crabbet, MESAOUD had over 25 times as many; HADBAN must have been the
better sire even without considering the inextricable contribution of the
HADBAN daughters to the success of MESAOUD. Those incomparable matrons *ROSE OF
SHARON and NEFISA produced 34 foals between them and numbered some of the
breed's great progenitors among their offspring, so it is little wonder the name
of HADBAN is "numerously represented"
in modern pedigrees.
The hazards of travel
Lady Anne Blunt
described HADBAN in India as
"a splendid horse--magnificent head--has had an accident which caused near foreleg to swell and swelling went down but left lump on fetlock joint--doubts as to possibility of training so that price came within our reach. Horse not lame now--but might not stand gallopping[sic]. Defect stands slightly back [at knees] also bone lighter than some but quality of sinews appears wiry and shape and style show perfect blood. Mazbut in the tribe... we get him very cheap... hardly over £100." The next day the Blunts "Saw our own Hadban mounted. W.[ilfrid] also got on him but found his mouth very awkward, he wants teaching, seems to have had only a reshmeh [bitless Arab bridle], looks like Jerboa when trotting but would not settle, would play. The lump on fetlock better. He has a fine temper."
The Blunts purchased
three stallions in India; the other two were RATAPLAN and PROXIMO and they were
shipped to England along with two other entries for the Arab race.
"On Friday evening a queer
accident happened to Hadban, he got his near hind leg over the sling and also
tumbled down...[it developed that] the horse had a stoppage and was in violent
pain, it was frightful to see the agony. They got a syringe and so I went away,
but I heard that before they could do anything to relieve him he had in his
plunges got his forelegs out one in front of the other through the side bar of
the box and thus hanging on had purposely banged his head from side to side
against the iron hoop above as if trying to kill himself. When got out he
seemed to be dying and was indeed reported dead. However, they managed to
relieve him and he pulled through and was better on Sunday..."
The mind boggles at
the gap in the ranks of the modern breed which would have resulted had HADBAN
succumbed to the rigors of 19th century horse transport (as RATAPLAN and the
younger JEROBOAM were to do in 1887 on their way to Egypt). Incidentally,
RATAPLAN's purchase price in India had been £250; his slim contribution, to
Crabbet and the breed, has not justified the difference over HADBAN.
KARS and HADBAN
departed together for Australia in 1885; KARS commanded the higher price
(£250). He was the original Crabbet sire and had been for years a major figure
in Lady Anne's life, she not unsurprisingly noted his loss more than HADBAN's
in her journal:
"The central figure of the
stud has disappeared; the glory of it seems to be put out with Kars absence."
His companion received only the comment "Hadban going too."
Still Lady Anne came
greatly to regret the sale of HADBAN after just two seasons and four foals, as
reflected in later journal entries:
"This [Ashgar offered to
Count Potocki by Wilfrid for £150] would
be the third horse parted with in too great haste--Pharaoh, Hadban and now
Ashgar." "Perhaps Mahruss
[sold to J.Hamilton Leigh] will be more valued now he is out of reach. It was
so with Hadban and Merzuk, the losing of both of which--or rather the wanton
throwing away of them--was a great misfortune, judging from the produce, alas
too few, we did get of theirs."
[MERZUK and MAHRUSS
GSB each left one breeding foal at Crabbet--both proved influential beyond all
expectation and both were out of HADBAN's daughter *ROSE OF SHARON; we will
encounter RIDAA and RIJM in later chapters of her saga.]
The foundation of
Australian Arabian breeding
Australia proved an
important early market for the Blunts; unfortunately Australian purebred
breeding was not ready for such potential foundation animals--the Australian
Arabian registry was not founded until 1956, any horses which were registered
up to that time being recorded in England with the Arab Horse Society.
FRANCOLIN and PURPLE STOCK, KARS and HADBAN, NEJRAN (Azrek x Nefisa) and ROSE
OF JERICHO were among the Crabbet Arabs to leave no descent Down Under.
Dwelling on might-have-beens is generally a waste of space; fortunately there
is a positive Australian breeding tradition from these early years to be
recorded. Sir James Penn Boucaut maintained a flourishing stud at Quambi
Springs, near Mt. Barker in South Australia, from 1891 to 1908 and publicized
the breed through his writings. When the Boucaut horses were dispersed two
successor programs took over, adding new Crabbet sires and bringing the
influences of RAFYK and other Quambi founders (save ROSE OF JERICHO) down to
the edge of modern times. Their names, in every possible permutation and
combination, are at the back of most modern Australian pedigrees.
The Quambi Springs
program was founded in 1891, when Sir James bought through his London agents
the yearling RAFYK and the broodmares DAHNA and ROSE OF JERICHO. Lady Anne
Blunt had noted, on returning from Egypt in 1891, her pleasure with AZREK's
sons, "the beautiful colt Ahmar who
exceeds my expectations. The Rose of Sharon one too. Rafyk has grown well."
The Boucaut sale was recognized as a particularly important one, and every
effort was made to present the best available prospects: "Rafyk...is really far the best...I still
much prefer Rafyk to represent the Stud."
Ten years later
Boucaut added another top young stallion, FARAOUN, a MESAOUD son who was to be
the only representative in modern pedigrees of the Ali Pasha Sherif mare
FULANA; and two mares perhaps of lesser distinction: NAMUSA and EL LAHR.
NARGHILEH's first foal NAMUSA by Ahmar, described by Lady Anne as "small but lovely mover," had been
less charitably used by Wilfrid to illustrate his thesis that first foals were
undesirable compared to a mare's later produce; Lady Anne thought this an unwarranted
generalization. Whatever NAMUSA's excuse was for standing just 13.3--and
perhaps she was less distinguished than such later NARGHILEH offspring as
*NASIK and *NUREDDIN II--she bred on in keeping with her brilliant pedigree.
Small size did not stop her from founding one of the most noted families in
Australia, which has achieved international recognition and still produces
"lovely movers."
EL LAHR was a
granddaughter of the earlier Boucaut purchased DAHNA and possessed a
complicated biography. DAHNA's Crabbet daughter DINARZADE by RATAPLAN had
changed hands several times in England, returning at last to Crabbet with this
filly by Miss Dillon's *IMAMZADA. DINARZADE was then sold to Russia, which was
to prove an even more effective sink for early Blunt breeding than Australia.
Lady Anne recorded in her stud book
"Note: Miss Dillon sent with the mare a filly
foal by her horse 'Imamzade'
[sic; this spelling has persisted in the Australian stud book. Lady
Anne seems to have had a mental block about the names of the Dillon horses,
referring to El Emir consistently as Amir and to Jamrood as Jamrud]
which foal I should much prefer
not to have had, as it will have to be got rid of whatever good qualities it
may possess, for these could not make up for its being half of a strain one
cannot vouch for; moreover, if sold from this Stud, it will be counted as of
our breeding, no matter what precautions be taken to contradict statements to
that effect. A.I.N.B."
As if to illustrate
the perversity of things in general, Lady Anne records in her journal a
"Discussion with W.S.B.
about blunder I find in the catalogue [of the 1901 sale] where 'Dinarzade filly' is described as by
Himyarite whereas Miss Dillon stated that the sire was her horse Imamzada.
[In 1895 JERUD had been repurchased from Miss Dillon in foal to HIMYARITE,
perhaps this had caused the confusion.] I
wish the filly was not in the actual list at all but might be lead in at the
end of sale (as was Barakat last year) but as it is W.S.B. now thinks our best
-- indeed only -- course is to draw a red pen stroke through 'Himyarite' and
write above it 'Imamzada'."
EL LAHR overcame her early vicissitudes to fund a major line in Australia--indeed traditional Australian breeding is unique in the world Arabian community for its preponderance of the Dahman strain, owed to the DAHNA family, which includes extensive EL LAHR descent.
Quambi Springs: an eyewitness account
The balance of this
RAFYK feature is based largely upon information generously supplied by Coralie
Gordon. In July 1903, "The Critic," in The Advertiser, an Adelaide, South Australia newspaper, wrote:
"At Quambi Springs, near Mt.
Barker, is located the famous stud of Arabian horses belonging to His Honor Sir
J.P. Boucaut. In former years there were importations of Arab stallions into
Australia, but these all came from India with at least a shadow of suspicion as
to their purity of origin. So enthusiastic was Sir J.P. Boucaut's admiration of
the Arabian horse that importation of Arab stallions for grade raising purposes
did not by any means satisfy his ambition, and he determined to establish the
pure breed in Australia. For this purpose he took the greatest precautions to
secure none but animals of the purest race, and his importations were from the
world known stud of Mr. Wilfred [sic] Blunt, of Crabbet Park, England [see Lady
Anne's prophetic comments above about EL LAHR's identification with Crabbet]."
"The
Critic" quoted some colorful and fairly imaginative difficulties
associated with the importation of purebred Arabians from the desert: of
greater interest are his wonderful photo of RAFYK and the circumstantial
commentary on the Quambi Springs horses as individuals.
"The handsome Rafyk"
was "a beautiful blood-red bay, he
stands 14 3/4 hands high, girths 5 ft. 9 in., measures 8 1/2 in. below the
knee, 20 in. on forearm, and 21 in. from pin to pin across his loin."
FARAOUN was "dark brown and a
different type to Rafyk. His beautiful wither could not be excelled by the best
English Thoroughbred. Height 14 3/4 hands, girth 5 ft. 7 in., forearm 19 in.,
bone below knee 8 in., and 21 in. loin pin to pin. He is a magnificent horse."
"With him were imported the
two handsome mares, Elzaba [sic] and Namusa. The dimensions of the latter are
13 3/4 hands high, 52 in. girth, 14 1/2 in. forearm, 6 1/2 in. below the knee,
and 18 in. loin. Both are handsome bays and are now heavy in foal. Great
interest is centered around the two matrons, Rose of Jericho and Dahna. The
former, a rich blood bay...shows quality combined with substance to a marked
degree...Dahna is a beautiful brown...Both are admirable specimens of brood
mares. The other noteworthy Australian mares are Sherifa, Keheilet, Labadah and
Sadde [sic]. Sherifa is a beautiful
molded mare by Rafyk from Dahna. Twice she has been to Mr. Austin's imported
stallions, Maboab [sic], and also to
his latest import, Magistrate. The progeny of the latter mating is now a
beautiful [mare in] foal to Faraoum [sic].
Owing to the mares being heavy in foal and in a condition more in keeping with
good sense than show yard purposes, The Critic refrains for the present from
presenting its readers with the photos of the female portion of the stud. When
surroundings are calculated to establish and maintain constitution the
beneficial course does not show out stock that run all winter with the
sleekness of stable-fed animals."
Another observer, the cattle-dealer A.H. Morris, wrote in a 1904 letter that "the Purebred Arab mares are a nice lot, but Rose of Jericho is quality all over."
RAFYK in pedigrees
Plainly,
"Elzaba" was EL LAHR and "Faraoum," FARAOUN; no doubt
"Sadde" and "Maboab" were the SAADE (Magistrate x Sherifa)
and MAHBOUB (imp. India) listed as foundation animals in the Australian stud
book. SAADE was bred to her grandsire RAFYK to produce MECCA; she did not leave
a female line but MECCA's son KHAMASIN and grandson ZARAFA made important
contributions. KEHEILET was one of ROSE OF JERICHO's lost daughters, but
LABADAH (Mahboub x Sherifa) founded an extensively branched Australian line
through her granddaughter DERYABAR, responsible for SENABRA, MINIFER, MUTRIF,
TOU-FAIL and ELECTRIMEL, to name just a few branch founders. (Coralie Gordon
writes "I am currently doing a story
on a mare named DERYABAR, a great-great-granddaughter of Dahna and a very
influential Australian mare, for the Australian Arabian Yearbook. The computer printout of her progeny is an
inch thick!" EL LAHR and NAMUSA from the second importation also bred
on with distinction through the nick with RAFYK; AL CASWA (Rafyk x El Lahr) had
two fillies by KHAMASIN and both founded most extensively branched lines. This
is the family of the classically-named New South Wales Department of
Agriculture horses including CALISTO, CALLIOPE, MEDEA, PROMETHEUS and PSYCHE.
NAMUSA's daughters were AYESHA, RABI and SEKH; the first produced the important
early sire RAISULI and the other two founded major families to which belong
such mares as BARADA II, HAMMAMET, MOTALGA, TARNEY, ATALANTA, YENBO, RUHEYM,
YUSUF and TAFILEH, not to mention any of the distinguished sires that might be
named here.
SAMPLE PEDIGREE -- DERYABAR, a major line foundress of the DAHNA family, typifying Boucaut sources from the Winter Cooke program in Victoria
Rijm: MahrussII x *Rose of Sharon by Hadban
Fakreddin:
Feluka: Mesaoud x Ferida
Khamasin:
Rafyk: Azrek x *Rose of Sharon by Hadban
Mecca:
Sadde: Magistrate x Sherifa by Rafyk
DERYABAR
Mesaoud: Aziz x Yemameh by Zobeyni
Faraoun :
Fulana: Ibn Nura x Bint Fereyha by Aziz
Khadijad:
Mahboub:
Labadah:
Sherifa: Rafyk x Dahna
Back to The Critic:
"Sir J.P. Boucaut is justly
termed the high priest of the Arabian cult. So far he has been the only one who
has made a practical attempt to establish the breed of the Arab horse in
Australia. That they are becoming exceedingly valuable to the Australian horse
breeders is shown by the fact that in the two years of its existence the Quambi
stud has made a name for itself for which it ought to be as justly proud as it
is conspicuously famous. In producing
the photographs, The Critic has departed from the stiff strained attitude
generally depicted in illustrations, and adopted the free, easy, ordinary pose
that is always more appreciated by true lovers of the Arab horse [emphasis
added]. As a reward for his labors, Sir
J.P. Boucaut will have the good wishes of every horse lover and every horse
breeder throughout Australia."
RAFYK had already
left England when the question of selling AZREK arose; Lady Anne summarized the
state of the AZREK sire line and had a good word for RAFYK's grey brother who
was to be named RASHAM:
"I am sorry to lose Azrek
(if we do lose him) before next year, still as Shah will represent him
well--having greatly improved and having quite equal style to Azrek--I do not
object to selling him now. There are several colts, the Bozra one and the
Dinarzade are the best at present and besides them there are the bay Nefisa
colt and the Rose of Sharon and Sherifa ones, not to mention the one of last year, Ahmar--so that of Azrek we
have Shah, Ahmar, and two first rate of this year besides three others and
probably some colts will appear in 1892."
Still, Lady Anne
recorded in her stud book when AZREK went to Cecil Rhodes in Africa.
"it is impossible not to feel a pang of
regret at the departure of a horse such as Azrek, whose stock are so
satisfactory, while the Stud remains with yet untried sires. There should be a
good many worthy sires to represent him, but they are still young, the oldest a
two year old."
In fact the AZREK
male line was to vanish from Crabbet and from the breed; AZREK has only four
sons (AHMAR, RAFYK, BEN AZREK and NEJRAN) in modern pedigrees and they bred
only through daughters.
SAMPLE PEDIGREE--BARADA II, a key mare of the NAMUSA family, illustrating Boucaut influence through the Brown program in New South Wales
Sotamm: *Astraled x Selma by Ahmar
Rief
Ridaa: Merzuk x *Rose of Sharon by Hadban
Raisuli
Rafyk: Azrek x *Rose of Sharon by Hadban
Ayesha
Namusa: Ahmar x Narghileh by Mesaoud
BARADA II
Berk: Seyal x Bukra by Ahmar
Harir
Hamasa: Mesaoud x Bint Helwa by Aziz
Gadara
Faraoun: Mesaoud x Fulana by Ibn Nura
Zarif
Rabi: Rafyk x Namusa by Ahmar
MINARET: unsolved
mystery
The absence of a male
line of course does not imply the absence of genetic influence, particularly
when you note the degree of AZREK linebreeding in some of the foundation
Australian pedigrees. RAFYK did have distinguished male representatives, among
them the handsome BADAWEEN, whose stud card (again thanks to Coralie Gordon)
denotes him
"Grand Champion of the
Commonwealth of Australia 1913-4-6-7" and further notes that he was
"described by the Hon. Sir Jas. P.
Boucaut, K.C.M.G, as 'one of the best horses I ever bred.'" BADAWEEN
was "a very handsome horse, just in
his prime, 14.3 hands, bright golden bay, standing on a magnificent set of
legs, with good flat bone of exceptional quality, and is possessed of a
massive, well-coupled frame. In movement, he displays his Arabian origin by
that well-known carriage of head and tail, so peculiar to the breed, and, in
his build, gives abundant evidence of quality, speed and endurance. His temper
is all which could be desired; and, whilst he is full of life and activity, is
remarkably gentle and docile."
One might-have-been
which I can't resist noting involves the mystery horse MINARET, a double RAFYK
grandson listed in the 1924 Crabbet Stud Catalogue with a photo, 1916 foaling
date and pedigree but no breeder or other provenance. Plainly, Lady Wentworth
hoped at this transitional period to reintroduce the AZREK male line at
Crabbet, but there seems to be no record of what happened to the horse. Coralie
Gordon writes in two letters:
"Now, MINARET. We've all sat
and pondered on this one from time to time. Now, luckily Sir James Boucaut was
a prolific writer who produced all kinds of printed matter on his Stud. I am
photocopying for you a page from his 1903 Stud Brochure which quotes an unknown
buyer of [MINARET's sire] the
stallion Zubier (Rafyk/Rose of Jericho) a full-brother to the well-known
Badaween, quoted in The Authentic Arabian as being 'Champion of Australia.'
I believe this 'horse-breeder of Northern Australia' was probably Mr. A.E. Morrow who returned to Sir James' Stud in 1908
for the dispersal auction and bought the mares Sherifa, Labadah, Keheilet,
Kaaba and Abdul. Abdul (Rafyk/Dahna) was the dam of Minaret, so Minaret was
probably bred by Mr. Morrow, if he was indeed bred in 1916. Mr. Morrow appears
not ot have registered any horses, though I haven't the time to pursue this at
the moment. So how did he get to England, if he did get there? The reports of
Sir James' 1908 Sale give Mr. Morrow's address as "Wyanda,' Tolga, New
South Wales -- but the only Tolga I can find is in Far North Queensland, which
is very tropical. This fits with the 'Northern Australia' vague address given
for the buyer of Zubeir. In the 1924 Crabbet Catalogue, the landscape in the
background of the photo is not like anything you'd find in North Queensland. It
does look like England, or perhaps something you'd find in Central New South
Wales or Victoria. Many early horses were lost because their buyers did not
register any progeny in England. In Minaret's case, there must have been a
correspondence between Morrow and Crabbet. He wouldn't have just suddenly
'appeared' in the 1924 Catalogue. I doubt if I've helped much, but perhaps I've
managed to fill in a little of the background." "Since I wrote to you I had reason to be
looking through my copy of Sir James Boucaut's book, "The Arab Horse
of the Future, published in 1905, and
find that it was not Mr. Morrow who purchased Zubeir. At least not originally,
anyway. The relevant passage occurs on p. 245 of the book and reads as follows
-- 'Mr. Warburton, a horse-breeder in Northern Australia, who purchased Zubeir,
writes:
"Will you allow me to
congratulate you on being the owner of such a horse as Rafyk? I can only say
that words fail me to express my admiration for him. I could have spent hours
looking at him. There is not such another horse in Australia; he is perfect in
every way." Again in May 1904:
"Zubeir is growing very like Rafyk, and is in good trim. He has not
had an ounce of stable feed since he has been up here. He is doing good work,
and it would take a big cheque to buy him."
The more I look at
MINARET's photo the more its background looks like England, if not Crabbet. I
wonder whether MINARET was not taken to England more or less incidently by a
returning traveler and found by Lady Wentworth--as were SKOWRONEK and *MIRAGE
at the same period--but for one reason or another never go registered. Perhaps
it was as difficult then as now to figure out who bred him, in the absence of
an Australian Arabian stud book.
The little more which
is known of the Quambi Stud is summarized in the following quote from Colin
Pearson.
"Shortly before his death in
1908, Boucaut sold his entire stud except for two mares. He was then aged 77
and unable to cope any longer with the management. 'I miss dear old Rafyk
very much.' he wrote to Blunt, 'he
was more kindly in his nature and much more sensible than many Christians.' Boucaut had not been wholly successful in
upgrading local stock with his Arabian blood. 'You may more satisfactorily
preach to a horse box than a farmer.' he
wrote--although some of Rafyk's get were making people think, 'or rather I
should say, beginning to think.' Rafyk's
influence on the pure Arabian stock in Australia has been considerable...but it
has been somewhat overshadowed by the importance of the Boucaut mares Dahna and
Namusa [at least in terms of reading charted descent tables; in fact RAFYK
has six offspring in pedigrees while DAHNA has two and NAMUSA three] ... Among the buyers at the Quambi sale
were the Hon. Samuel Winter Cooke of Murndal, Victoria and Mr. C. Leonard Brown
of Gurlargambone, N.S.W. In 1911 Cooke imported from Crabbet the Rijm son
Fakreddin [ex Feluka] and two years later Brown bought Berk's son Harir [ex
Hamasa}. Another Crabbet importation of this period was the stallion Rief
[Sotamm x Ridaa]."
The Boucaut influence
The Boucaut mares
with those three Crabbet sires provided the basis for an active tradition which
lasted into the 1920's and provided one important element of modern Australian
breeding. The Tehama Stud of A.J.Macdonald and sons played an important role in
maintaining these lines.
The next phase came
in 1925 when the 25% Crabbet stallion SHAHZADA (Mootrub x Ruth Kesia by Ben
Azrak), with the mares NEJDMIEH DB, her en
utero daughter NEJD SHERIFA (48% Crabbet by NURI SHERIF, another BEN AZREK
grandson) and the straight Crabbet MIRIAM (Nadir x Ranya by *Nasik), were
imported to New South Wales by A.E. Grace. These horses were bred among
themselves and blended with the Winter Cooke, Brown and Tehama breeding to
produce what came to be known as the Colonial Australian or Crabbet-Colonial
Arabians. They will be the subject of a future Australian Record treatment, and then the background will be in place for the
story of "The Lady Wentworth of Australia," the late Mrs. A.D.D.
Maclean of the Fenwick Stud in Victoria--this seems the best way to organize
the series though in fact her first Crabbet imports had come on the scene a year
before the Grace horses. Fenwick breeding pervades the Australian Crabbet
tradition, and Fenwick is still active in the hands of the Maclean family. A
fourth Australian chapter will summarize the influence of non-Fenwick later
imports which were of Crabbet breeding in whole or in major part. ***
Sources:
Notes from Lady Anne Blunt's manuscript stud book
Lady Anne Blunt Journals and Correspondence edited by Archer and Fleming
The Crabbet Arabian Stud its History and Influence by Archer, Pearson and Covey
The Arab Horse by Peter Upton
Letters and photocopied material from Coralie Gordon
The Arabian Horse in Australian published by the Arab Horse Society of Australia
The Australasian Arabian Horse Stud Book
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Descent Table: RAFYK
Sources in Pedigrees
It may seem strange conceptually but this charts tail-female descent from RAFYK daughters (names in bold); colts as they appear in the female line are in ALL CAPS
Sherifa (Dahna)
Labadah (Mahboub)
Khadijad (Faraoun)
Alcouza (Khamasin)
Deryabar(Khamasin)
Saade (Magistrate)
Mecca (Rafyk)
KHAMASIN (Fakreddin)
Zem Zem (Fakreddin)
ZARAFA (Indian Light)
Al Caswa (El Lahr)
Kufara (Khamasin)
WALAD (Raseel)
Melika (Ishmael)
DIOMEDES (Prometheus)
FEISAL (Sirdar)
Aphrodite (Sala)
Iris (Sala)
Mira (Kataf)
Tarfa II (Sirdar)
Venus (Sala)
Hebe (Sala)
THESSALY (Razaz)
Sir Aatika (Sirdar)
ALADDIN (Kataf)
Rufeiya II (Kataf)
DEISHA (Kataf)
ATLAS (Sala)
Juno (Sala)
Hera (Sala)
Iona (Sala)
Mishal (Sirdar)
CASABLANCA (Razaz)
Aurora (Sala)
Nemesis (Sala)
Mecca II (Khamasin)
SIR AKID (Sirdar)
Caswa (Sirdar)
GHEYZUL (Sirdar)
Semna (Kataf)
Kassie (Kataf)
Darani (Darinth)
Cazada (Sirdar)
CENTAUR (Genghis Khan)
ARGUS (Sala)
Fuewasa (Kataf)
Alada (Aladdin)
BERRY JERRY ZENDI (Aladdin)
Sibyl (Genghis Khan)
Hemera (Sala)
Salome (Ishmael)
Gypsy Maid (Sirdar)
Buraida (Sirdar)
Fara (Kataf)
Ayesha (Namusa)
RAISULI (Rief)
Rabi (Namusa)
Zarif (Faraoun)
Gadara (Harir)
Barada II (Raisuli)
MAMALUKE (Raisuli)
Dhofar (Prince Nejd)
Sabiya (Prince Nejd)
Sekh (Namusa)
ANCHOR (Harir)
Sa-id (Harir)
Arabette (Raisuli)
ANOUK (Rakib)
Tatima (Shahzada)
Zazouri (Mameluke)
Motalga (Indian Light)
ZATIM (Zarafa)
Tazar(Zarafa)
Tarney (Zarney)
Hilwa (Prince Nejd)
Salaam (Harir)
Ruala (Raisuli)
Shaniya (Prince Nejd)
Rashidiya (Prince Nejd)
Ruheym (Rakib)
Ralla (Rakib)
INDIAN MOONLIGHT (*SMoonlight)
Salama (Raisuli)
JEDRAN (Prince Nejd)
Sayif (Prince Nejd)
ZADLAM (Zadaran)
SALARAN (Zadaran)
ZADOLPHIN (Zadaran)
Atalanta (Zadaran)
SARACEN (Zadaran)
Yenbo (Raisuli)
Lohaya(Prince Nejd)
Yenbo II (Prince Nejd)
ZADARAN (Prince Nejd)
Jeddah (Prince Nejd)
Zuweida (Prince Nejd)
Yussef (Raisuli)
Neyussef (Prince Nejd)
Tafileh (Yazid) (Rakib)
YARAL (Rakib)
Yusuf (Rakib)
The chart shows descent from six RAFYK daughters. LABADAH and SAADE are out of SHERIFA; MECCA had a son KHAMASIN and a daughter ZEM ZEM. KUFARA and MECCA II are out of AL CASWA; RAISULI is a son of AYESHA; RABI has one daughter, ZARIF. SEKH has a son ANCHOR and two daughters, SA-ID and SALAAM.