Showing posts with label Steuart Pittman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steuart Pittman. Show all posts

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Time to VOTE!

On December 1, 2012, four horses (including one former Eclipse Champion) representing four Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred farms embarked on the Retired Racehorse Training Project’s (RRTP) 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge at Dodon Farm Training Center in Davidsonville, MD. Fans had the opportunity to see the horses in person at the Maryland Horse World Expo in January and can also see them at the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo the following month. At the end of their 100-day training period, the horses will be judged on conformation, movement, jumping ability, and trainability by guest riders, judges, and online fans. As the Thoroughbred Challenge unfolds, Sarah Andrew will chronicle the horses’ progress. Please enjoy part 7 of this series. 
Steuart Pittman and Declan's Moon at the Maryland Horse World Expo
The Pennsylvania Horse World Expo is underway. The RRTP horses shipped from their home base at Dodon Farm in Maryland and are now in Harrisburg, PA. On Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, you have opportunities to see the horses in person- you can view the schedule of events here: http://www.horseworldexpo.com/PAmain.shtml  

At the Expo, three judges will evaluate the horses and cast their votes for the horses with the most potential in a variety of disciplines. The judges are Nick Karazissis, Bev Strauss, and Donnan Jones. 

In addition to the judges' votes, the horses' scores will include public votes, which is where YOU come in... it's time to cast your vote. You can register and vote here: http://retiredracehorsetraining.org/

Before you do, please be sure to evaluate the videos for each of the horses. 

Declan's Moon:
Steuart Pittman and Declan's Moon at the Maryland Horse World Expo
Steuart Pittman and Declan's Moon at the Maryland Horse World Expo
The Pons Family of Country Life Farm/ Merryland at the Maryland Horse World Expo
The Pons Family at the Maryland Horse World Expo


Gunport

Gunport: Retired Racehorse Training Project
Gunport: Retired Racehorse Training Project

Suave Jazz
Suave Jazz and Katie Klenk at the Maryland Horse World Expo
Suave Jazz and Katie Klenk at the Maryland Horse World Expo
Suave Jazz and Katie Klenk at the Maryland Horse World Expo


Alluring Punch

Alluring Punch and Valerie Shepard at the Maryland Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch and Valerie Shepard at the Maryland Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch and Valerie Shepard at the Maryland Horse World Expo
 

Alluring Punch and Valerie Shepard at the Maryland Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch and Valerie Shepard at the Maryland Horse World Expo


I'll see you in Harrisburg!

- Sarah Andrew


Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: MD Horse World Expo- Day 1

On December 1, 2012, four horses (including one former Eclipse Champion) representing four Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred farms embarked on the Retired Racehorse Training Project’s (RRTP) 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge at Dodon Farm Training Center in Davidsonville, MD. Fans will have the opportunity to see the horses in person at the Maryland Horse World Expo in January and the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo the following month. At the end of their 100-day training period, the horses will be judged on conformation, movement, jumping ability, and trainability by guest riders, judges, and online fans. As the Thoroughbred Challenge unfolds, Sarah Andrew will chronicle the horses’ progress. Please enjoy part 6 of this series. 
Suave Jazz and Ramon Dominguez before the 2008 True North H.
Suave Jazz and Ramon Dominguez at Belmont Park on June 7, 2008 before the GII True North H.
Attendance for the 2013 Maryland Horse World Expo was excellent. Spectators were treated to a dose of mild January weather, and horse lovers from near and far jammed the Timonium parking lot and perched in the bleachers in the Exhibition Hall Arena on Friday to catch their first glimpses of Alluring Punch, Declan's Moon, and Suave Jazz.
Alluring Punch at the MD Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch walks to the Exhibition Hall Arena
Gunport, the gunmetal-grey Mizzen Mast filly, missed all the fun and stayed on the farm for the weekend nursing a sore hock. According to the RRTP blog, it looked like she might have gotten kicked by a pasturemate, but it is healing nicely and she should return to work very soon. Sympathy pain must have been in the air, because Gunport's ace rider, Michelle Warro, also ended up on the sidelines for the weekend with three broken bones in her foot from an unfortunate furniture-moving incident. Warro was in attendance at the Expo, on crutches, gamely supporting the RRTP team.
Alluring Punch and Chiantel Beaumont
Chiantel Beaumont and Alluring Punch
Before the Friday session, I visited the horses in their stalls. The three RRTP geldings sported sleek new body clips, and they greeted the crowd from their stalls like the equine celebrities that they are. People peered through their stall bars and snapped iPhone photos, and they handled it like old pros. Suave Jazz watched the hustle and bustle with quiet interest. Declan's Moon took the longest to settle in to the new environment, and relaxed in a quieter stall before the first event. Alluring Punch, the youngest of the group, actually seemed to like the crowd the best, and curiously nosed adults and children alike. Any jitters he had were calmed by the RRTP team, including Chiantel Beaumont (pictured above). Wide-eyed, he scanned his surroundings as the horses made their way from the barn to the arena. 
Alluring Punch at the MD Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch curiously eyes the equine paparazzi
Past cars, trailers, and dozens of horses, a through a cavernous door, into a dark waiting area, the horses made their way to the exhibition arena. They were on their toes, but walked in a perfect line, like they once did in training sets in their former careers as racehorses heading out to the track in the morning.
Declan's Moon and the RRTP crew at the MD Horse World Expo
Declan's Moon and the RRTP crew head out of the barn to the Friday session
The Expo scene is a lot for a horse to process, but for horses off the track, they were specially schooled for moments just like these. Before their first start, many green racehorses are schooled in the paddock in the afternoon during a race day. They are walked around the paddock, and asked to stand quietly for saddling. Some walking rings are outdoors, some are sunken areas in front of the track, and some are indoors. The walking ring at the track features all the elements that these horses encountered at the Expo: vendors, PA systems with announcers, cheering/applauding crowds, hustle and bustle, bleachers, signs, flags, machinery, and so much more.
Suave Jazz before the 2008 True North H.
Suave Jazz at Belmont Park on June 7, 2008 before the GII True North H.
For a horse like Suave Jazz (pictured above), the Expo was a tiny fraction of what he saw on his biggest racing days. On June 7, 2008, he ran in the Grade 2 True North Handicap on the Belmont Stakes undercard. This was the year that Big Brown made his bid for Triple Crown glory, and there were almost 95,000 people in attendance on that hot, steamy day. Compared to the roar of an enthusiastic crowd of 95,000 racing fans, the polite clapping of the Horse World Expo audience was small potatoes. I took another look at Suave Jazz's past performances, and I've seen him race in person at least three times: twice at Belmont on two consecutive Belmont Stakes Days, and once at Monmouth Park during Haskell Week.
Declan's Moon at the MD Horse World Expo
Valerie Shepard jogs Declan's Moon for Steuart Pittman
Friday's Expo event was an hour-long session about conformation, movement, and jumping. Adding to the RRTP disabled list on Friday was Declan's Moon, who was a little sore from a slip during from the morning's trailer unloading. Pictured above, Valerie Shepard jogs Declan for RRTP President Steuart Pittman, who looks understandably concerned. By the next day, Declan was sound again, moving perfectly, and ready for under-saddle work.
Suave Jazz at the MD Horse World Expo
Suave Jazz is suave indeed
And then there were two. It was up to Suave Jazz and Alluring Punch to wow the crowd, and that they did. Suave Jazz, "The Professor," must have studied extra hours on Thursday night; he trotted, cantered, and jumped brightly and neatly, flagging his tail in high spirits. His back is tighter and his movement is not as extravagant as his RRTP schoolmates, but I already see nice improvement in his gaits as he transitions from a seven-year racing career to his life as a sporthorse.
Suave Jazz at the MD Horse World Expo
Suave Jazz
His free jumping style is quick and tidy, with less bascule and a little flatter of an arc. He handled the oxer, which was about 3' or 3'3", with ease. Steuart remarked that Suave Jazz could probably make a fine timber racer, with his careful and nimble style. 
Suave Jazz at the MD Horse World Expo
Suave Jazz
Next up was Alluring Punch, "The Kid." He greenly ogled the crowd as he was put through his paces, but impressed the heck out of me with his movement and jumping style. The arena was not very big, but he handled the free jumping chute with the greatest of ease.  The sky is the limit with this horse.
Alluring Punch at the MD Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch
Alluring Punch at the MD Horse World Expo
Alluring Punch
Stay tuned for part 2 of the Maryland Horse World Expo adventure!

- Sarah Andrew



IN OTHER NEWS
Horses and Hope 2013 Calendar
With the help of Gina Keesling of HoofPrints, my 2012 debut calendar raised over $40,000 for One Horse At A Time, helping hundreds of horses in need directly, and untold others indirectly through increased public awareness. Thanks to your generous purchases, the 2013 calendar has already raised over $50,000! We are down to our very last box of calendars- order now before they are all sold out. 100% of the proceeds are donated.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Suave Jazz

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Suave Jazz
On December 1, 2012, four horses (including one former Eclipse Champion) representing four Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred farms embarked on the Retired Racehorse Training Project’s (RRTP) 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge at Dodon Farm Training Center in Davidsonville, MD. Fans will have the opportunity to see the horses in person at the Maryland Horse World Expo in January and the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo the following month. At the end of their 100-day training period, the horses will be judged on conformation, movement, jumping ability, and trainability by guest riders, judges, and online fans. As the Thoroughbred Challenge unfolds, Sarah Andrew will chronicle the horses’ progress. Please enjoy part 5 of this series.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Suave Jazz

Suave Jazz 
Representing: Walnut Green Farm 
“The Professor”
Suave Prospect – Cavite Starlet, by Jazzing Around
$24,000 RNA HRA 2005 OBSAPR
70-17-16-12
$651,062
Breeder: Farnsworth Farms (FL)
Owner: New England Stallion Station
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Suave Jazz
It's almost here! On Friday, all four RRTP 100 Day Challenge horses will head to Timonium for the Maryland Horse World Expo. You can click here for directions, schedules, and more information about the Expo, and click here to find out when you can see the RRTP horses.  

Last but certainly not least in my horse profiles is Suave Jazz. In his 70 lifetime starts, Suave Jazz saw a lot. He placed in multiple graded stakes, overcame traffic (click here for video of his win in the Fire Plug S. almost exactly four years ago), and professionally outgamed the field (click here for his last win at Calder) many times. Based on his clean legs and long career, he carries some great genes.

When he arrived at Dodon Farm for training, he was easily the horse with the most experience under saddle. In addition to all the tracks he visited and all the races he ran, think of how many miles he put in during training hours in the morning and how many riders he carried. This is why Steuart was able to take him out with the Marlborough Hunt Club within the first month of training (click here for Week 2's training blog). In addition to his natural intelligence, good nature, and trainability, all the time on the track exposed Suave Jazz to quite a bit, so he handles strange surroundings quite well. The Professor is wise beyond his years.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Suave Jazz
Both in the video (click here) and Training Blog (click here) for his first day of training, it is apparent that the goal for a horse like Suave Jazz is to loosen his topline and help him learn to use different muscle groups from his racing muscles. By Week 2 (video), he is already getting the hang of bending exercises and is learning how to balance himself as a riding horse instead of a racehorse. It will take many hours of stretching and suppling to loosen his back and help him find his "new" trot and canter, but he is well on his way. By Day 30 (video), there is more improvement in his gaits, and his work over little fences is off to a nice start.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Suave Jazz
Over fences, Suave Jazz is willing, clever, and handy. His jump is flatter and not quite as extravagant as the jumps of his classmates Declan's Moon and Alluring Punch, but he has a tidy front end and loads of power in the hind end, indicating that his athletic potential is great. The quality flatwork schooling that he is receiving from Steuart and Michelle will not only improve his way of going on the flat, but will also encourage him to round and bascule over jumps.

One of my favorite things about the selection of horses in this year's challenge is how varied the horses' careers were at the track. The horses all had different campaigns, as well as varying amounts of time off the track. For people who (like myself) who own Thoroughbreds, they can probably see a little of their own horses in each of the 100 Day Challenge horses.

I'm looking forward to seeing the whole gang again at the Expo: The Natural, The Overachiever, The Kid, and The Professor.  

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch
On December 1, 2012, four horses (including one former Eclipse Champion) representing four Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred farms embarked on the Retired Racehorse Training Project’s (RRTP) 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge at Dodon Farm Training Center in Davidsonville, MD. Fans will have the opportunity to see the horses in person at the Maryland Horse World Expo in January and the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo the following month. At the end of their 100-day training period, the horses will be judged on conformation, movement, jumping ability, and trainability by guest riders, judges, and online fans. As the Thoroughbred Challenge unfolds, Sarah Andrew will chronicle the horses’ progress. Please enjoy part 4 of this series.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch
Alluring Punch 
Representing: Northview Stallion Station
RRTP's 100 Day TB Challenge Participant
“The Kid”
Two Punch – Alluring Elixir, by Cure The Blues
10-1-2-0
$12,290
Breeder: Barbara Ryan (MD)


Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch
He's "The Kid." Although Alluring Punch and his RRTP classmate Gunport both officially turned four years old on January 1, 2013, he acts his age more frequently than she does. If you look at his conformation photo above, he has all the ingredients to be an elite athlete, from his powerful hind end to his deep chest and lovely shoulder.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch
Under saddle, Alluring Punch is alluring indeed and shows great potential for collection with the ability to coil his loins and step under himself. His canter is powerful, and his trot is fluid. He inherited some of his legendary sire's playful nature, and he appears to have a bit of a sense of humor. He will need some time and skilled schooling while his mind matures and catches up with his body. In the training videos, RRTP President Steuart Pittman compares the first few minutes under saddle on Alluring Punch to "riding a pinball." You can get a good sense of this by watching his win at Charles Town in May 2012 (click here to watch his race video). He wins the race by open lengths, after taking the overland route and going quite wide on the turn to order the proverbial hot dog.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch
From Training Report 1 (video for Day 1) and Training Report 2 (video for Week 2), Alluring Punch is carefully coached to maintain balanced, rhythmic gaits. Less time is spent on suppling exercises and more time is spent on pace and balance. In the third week (video here), the chestnut hits a mental stumbling block, and Steuart is faced with the challenge of moving forward with his talented pupil. He explains his process in Training Report 3:   
 "We want to establish boundaries and consistency with these horses but we must be careful with the mouth and the attitude of a horse like this. For the first few weeks, we sent him forward and matched his strength with leg and rein to keep him on the track of our choosing at the pace and balance that we thought he could handle. That was tough on him in some ways. It was hard work and I don't think he got much pleasure from it. The warning came when I started to feel that he was not connecting well to the bit. He was sucking back slightly and curling to avoid the contact.
This is a common problem with the horses who pull hard. The harder we have to work the less tactful we become, and it doesn't feel any better to the bars of their mouths and neck muscles than it does to our arms and shoulders. All of a sudden they feel light in the bridle and take smaller steps and we think we have made great progress... I had felt poor Punchy sulking a bit, then surging into the bridle, then sulking again. My job then was to look for and find a rhythm and a direction that would make him happy again, and restore his trust in the contact. We found that yesterday in the canter. In that gait he is most rhythmic, straight, and balanced. He becomes happy. It is almost like a mental break for him, after which he does better at the walk and trot."
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Alluring Punch
The reward for thoughtfully schooling a talented, scopey horse like Alluring Punch through the lower levels will reveal itself as he reaches the upper levels of training. You can get a glimpse of his bright future when you watch his free jumping video below. If he is this talented at four, imagine where he will be in a year or two:

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Steuart Pittman

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Steuart Pittman
Pittman and Alluring Punch
   As a horse owner, a TDN staffer, and an advocate for horses in need, I follow the story of America’s Thoroughbreds in all disciplines with great interest. With all of the debate and negative media that we face each day, it is a delight to meet people who have original ideas and are out there making a positive difference in the horse world; Retired Racehorse Training Project (RRTP) President Steuart Pittman is one of those people. From his tireless promotion of the retired Thoroughbred racehorse as a sporthorse, to the hours he spends in the saddle expertly putting a foundation on greenies, to the positive impact he’s making on the racing world, Pittman walks the walk.

   The mission of the RRTP is to increase demand for retired Thoroughbred racehorses as pleasure and sporthorses through public events, clinics, training publications, videos and internet tools. On December 1, 2012, four horses (including one former Eclipse Champion) representing four Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred farms embarked on the Retired Racehorse Training Project’s (RRTP) 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge at Dodon Farm Training Center in Davidsonville, MD. At the end of their 100-day training period, the horses will be judged by guest riders, judges, and online fans. Please enjoy part 2 of my series about the 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge, an interview with Steuart Pittman.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Steuart Pittman
Pittman (left) aboard Alluring Punch and assistant trainer Michelle Warro (right) aboard Suave Jazz
TDN: You had a very busy 2012. What are some of the things that RRTP has done since last year's Trainer Challenge?
   Pittman: We had a Thoroughbreds For All Kentucky event in collaboration with New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program during the Rolex CCI**** in April. Bruce Davidson and Chris McCarron were the top attractions. We also held the Thoroughbreds For All event at Fair Hill, combining a marketplace of horses with education in collaboration with trainers, vets, exercise riders at Fair Hill Training Center and New Bolton Center. We received our first grants from Thoroughbred Charities of America and Maryland Horse Breeders Foundation. Our website had 310,000 page views, our YouTube Channel had 125,000 views, and we have close to 6,000 Facebook fans. Online databases of Trainers, Sources for Horses, Horse Listings, and Bloodline Brag are growing every month. We’ve been covered some 50 times in racing and equestrian media, as well as TV and print mainstream media.

TDN: What are your goals for the RRTP 100-Day Challenge?
   Pittman: To demonstrate to the public that the Thoroughbred racing industry continues to create outstanding riding horses, and to give equestrians a realistic picture of what it looks like to train and ride Thoroughbreds off the track. We want to continue increasing demand for these horses but also give people the tools that they need to succeed with them.

TDN: How is it different from the 2012 RRTP Trainer Challenge?
   Pittman: The Trainer Challenge focused on the methods used by the trainers. The 100 Day Challenge puts the spotlight on the characteristics and trainability of the horses. It was important for us to have each horse represent a major MD or PA Thoroughbred farm. We want the public to associate these great horses with the farms that produced them. Each of these horses has an amazing background that tells a story about an industry that is incredibly valuable to our states.
   The other difference is that all four horses are in one location being trained by the same staff. That allows the public to see just how unique each horse is, even when given the same opportunities. People stereotype ex-racehorses, but the four in this Challenge remind us how each horse is an individual.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Steuart Pittman
RRTP's newest stars- from left: Suave Jazz, Gunport, Alluring Punch
TDN: What kind of feedback have you received from the racing world and from the sporthorse world about RRTP?
   Pittman: RRTP does not tell racing people what they should do about their retiring horses. It tells equestrians that they should get over the obsession with warmbloods and rediscover Thoroughbreds who have raced. That is a message that has to come from sporthorse trainers, but it has been fantastic that the racing industry is starting to recognize the value of this strategy. We have presented our programs as models at national conferences hosted by NTRA, The Jockey Club, and the University of Arizona's Global Symposium on Racing and Gaming. The Maryland racing industry has very generously supported our work and helped launch this organization.
   Within the sporthorse world, we get excellent media coverage and have obviously attracted huge numbers of people who are passionate about Thoroughbreds. These people have lacked an organization to rally around and the enthusiasm has amazed me.

TDN: What can racehorse owners do to help their horses successfully transition into a second career?
   Pittman: I know enough people struggling to make it on the backsides of Maryland tracks that I would never preach to them about what they should do. At the same time, it is pretty obvious that if a horse can be sold directly into a second career for at least a few thousand dollars, the pressure to keep running them when they've lost the desire or the soundness to win is less. Owners and trainers need better access to buyers outside of racing so that they can be rewarded financially for retiring their horses sound.
   In some cases, I believe that investing in some second career training is a wise move for owners. A couple thousand dollars of training often translates into a sale price of $5,000 to $10,000 more than for a horse straight off the track. It's hard to stomach investing money in a horse who has already broken your bank, but if the horse is sound and sane, the payback is often there. Make sure that it's a good trainer. Try the RRTP Trainer Directory.
   The best of the nonprofit placement organizations are excellent. You can donate the horse for a tax write-off and some of them have access to trainers who can give the horse the help it needs. To some degree these organizations have stepped in where "horse dealers" walked away from Thoroughbreds. There are, however, still thousands of people who buy, train, and sell horses off the track effectively who are independent of any organization. Accessing them is the problem.
Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Steuart Pittman
Pittman at the PA Horse World Expo in 2012
TDN:  What can we expect in 2013 from RRTP?
   Pittman: We expect to bring our Thoroughbreds For All events to some racetracks. They combine education with a marketplace of retiring horses in a way that can benefit horsemen and create goodwill for the tracks. We also expect to announce a new version of the Trainer Challenge that allows for a much larger number of horses and trainers to participate. And finally, we expect to appear at more of the major horse expos in 2013, starting with the Delaware Horse Expo April 6 and 7.

TDN: Have you noticed any recent trends in Thoroughbred sporthorse pedigrees/breeding?
   Pittman: I used to believe that the industry was breeding fewer big-moving, sound sporthorse types than in the past. I thought that the decline in distances and the pressure to breed two year old winners was shifting the product to smaller, quicker horses who would be less successful for jumping and dressage. I have changed my mind. I keep seeing horses coming off the tracks that I wish I could say I bred for sport. Declan's Moon proves the point. He was the champion of his time and if I were looking for a sporthorse sire to replace my Salutely son, I would clone him.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Retired Racehorse Training Project’s 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge: Declan's Moon

Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge
On December 1, 2012, four horses (including one former Eclipse Champion) representing four Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred farms embarked on the Retired Racehorse Training Project’s (RRTP) 100 Day Thoroughbred Challenge at Dodon Farm Training Center in Davidsonville, MD. Fans will have the opportunity to see the horses in person at the Maryland Horse World Expo in January and the Pennsylvania Horse World Expo the following month. At the end of their 100-day training period, the horses will be judged on conformation, movement, jumping ability, and trainability by guest riders, judges, and online fans. As the Thoroughbred Challenge unfolds, Sarah Andrew will chronicle the horses’ progress. Please enjoy part 1 of this series.
Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge

Declan’s Moon
RRTP’s 100 Day TB Challenge participant
"The Natural"
2002 gelding
Malibu Moon - Vee Vee Star, by Norquestor
$125,000 yrl ’03 FTMSEP
Breeder: Brice Ridgely (MD)
18-6-2-2
$705,647
2004 Champion Two-Year-Old-Colt
Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge
Following an undefeated two-year-old season in 2004, including his GI Hollywood Futurity win over future 2005 Kentucky winner Giacomo, Declan’s Moon was crowned Champion Two-Year-Old-Colt. After a victory in the GII Santa Catalina S. in his only start at three, injury took him off the Triple Crown trail. He returned to the track at four and started 13 more times before owner Samantha Siegel of Jay Em Ess Stable retired him to the Pons family’s Country Life Farm in Maryland. Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge
After four and a half years of turnout with two other Malibu Moon champions, Josh Pons approached Ms. Siegel about entering Declan in the challenge. "Declan wouldn't let us catch him when Josh and I went out to his field for a visit," said RRTP President Steuart Pittman, "but he trotted circles around us like a dancer and then galloped to the top of the hill and struck a pose. I could hardly sleep until Josh got word back that Ms. Siegel was enthusiastically on board."

After saying goodbye to his fans at the Country Life/Merryland stallion show, Declan began his training at Dodon Farm. Click here to view his first training session video, and click here to read his Day 1 training report.

Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge

As he crosses the wire and when he returns to the winner’s circle in his last career win at Betfair Hollywood Park on July 5, 2007 (click here for video), you can see that he is a spectacular mover for any discipline; he’s a natural, and he moves better than many show horses. He has good-sized feet with nice heels, his back is a little long, and he has an elegant neck that is set perfectly on his shoulders. In addition to his elastic, swingy gaits, Steuart said that he is an extremely comfortable horse.
Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge

Declan’s Moon requires a rider to sit deeply in the saddle and put more leg on him than is typical for a Thoroughbred off the track. He willingly accepts contact from his rider’s hands, which Steuart attributes in part to the skilled exercise riders who rode him on the track. The time that Declan spent in his pasture at Country Life allowed his muscles to loosen and he exercised himself in his pasture, so he is not as tightly-muscled as many horses off the track.
Declan's Moon: Retired Racehorse Training Project 100-Day Thoroughbred Challenge
Declan’s big personality matches his good looks, and he was gelded young to help make him more manageable. Now, at age eleven, after a few years of racing and a few years as the king of the farm at Country Life, he is quite a confident horse. During their training sessions, Steuart does a masterful job of teaching this strong-minded horse about the importance of reliably responding to leg and hand without unnecessarily nagging him or interfering with the horse’s natural rhythm. Click here to read Declan’s 30-day training update and click here to view his 30-day training video. Stay tuned for more updates on this exciting project.

- Sarah Andrew