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CHOOSING A SIRE:
Advice Echoed From 50 Years Past
Still Rings True for the Quarter Horse


CHOOSING A SIRE

by Ralph E. Morrison
Originally published  in "The Cattleman"   September, 1947

Much has been written about the selection of the sire of your next year’s colt crop. However, most of the information has dealt with generalities and nothing specific to help the novice breeder or breeder who finds it impractical to maintain his own stud. It is to this group of breeders that I would like to point out the importance of pedigree breeding – line breeding.

In all breeds of livestock there are found to be dominant individuals who advance the breed by their ability to reproduce get with a high degree of balance. Each such individual helps to perpetuate a "family trait" to such an extent that this trait soon becomes associated with a certain family of the breed. For instance, some stallions are known for producing get of high speed, popular color, heavy muscle, good temperament, endurance, cow sense or a combination of any of these traits.

It is through the span of years, with the aid of these dominant individuals, that the different "families" become known for these abilities or traits. It has happened in all breeds of livestock where selective breeding is practiced.

The future of any livestock breed lies on the owner of the good mares. They are literally the breeders; they are the ones who must decide to what stallion they will breed their mares. The breeder who truly analyzes the pedigree of his mares is the one who will always be improving his band. It takes good mares along with a good stallion to perpetuate the breed and to constantly improve it. The stallion alone cannot do it. There is a difference between registered stock and improved registered stock. Registered stock that is not improved with each generation soon becomes grade stock.

To the man with a small band of select mares, or the man with only one or a few mares, I would first advise him to determine into what family his mares can be catalogued. This can be done by determining what individual appears most frequently in the first few generations. After having placed your mare into one of the recognized families of the breed, then the breeder should decide what he is breeding for. Keep the ideal well in mind. Expose yourself to good horses other than your own. You can not be a successful breeder and stay in your own back yard. Plan only to improve one fault at a time, keeping all other conformation equal to or better than the herd average. You cannot do wonders in only one generation, and this brings up the thought of starting with the best mares your money will buy. Life is far too short to grade up.

In the selection of a stallion to the above, I would advise line breeding. Many people will shy away when this word is mentioned. Some, because of ignorance and others because they have been misinformed. The thing to do is to have someone explain the linebreeding theory in such a way that it will be clarified in your mind. It is very interesting once you understand its principles.

Every real breeder knows the true value in a sire is in its producing ability and not its visual qualities. A stallion that is linebred will do more to improve your band in a much shorter time than one that is not. He will produce colts more true to type in a shorter time than one that is of a hit and miss breeding. Breed a good mare of a recognized family to the most prepotent sire of the same family and success is inevitable. Keep the sire of your colts closely related to the best animals of the present and the past. Let the relationship to the poor animals be diluted by the natural halving effect of the process of inheritance. Biologically, an individual gets half of it's inheritance from each parent.  But,  if one parent is dominant is dominant and linebred, it will lean toward that individual.

Linebreeding intensifies the good characteristics as well as the undesirable characteristics, but the law of averages will give linebreeding the advantage. If we breed two totally unrelated specimens of the same breed, we can rightly expect more variation in the get than if we breed two rather closely related individuals or two from the same family. We would certainly disregard the breeding of specimens totally unrelated since the ancestry would be somewhat of a crazy quilt and it would be next to impossible to foretell with any degree of accuracy just what to expect. A good stallion, one that is linebred, is more apt to give you a better colt than a stallion that has a mixed or mediocre pedigree. Blood will always prove out in the long run.

Many will argue that a pedigree means nothing. Some say that it is only as true as the man who signs his name below it. It does mean something though when you find a good individual. A pedigree never made a poor horse better, but it surely does make a good horse better. A good horse with a good pedigree does have a value and that value as a breeder comes only in the first and second generations. Golton’s Law of Ancestral Inheritances shows a grandparent contributes one sixteenth to the offspring. Remember, there are three other grandparents and each of these have two parents. Hence, the possibility of dilution of blood. Do not be mislead that an individual is line bred if a certain individual appears only a few times in the remote generations. His possibility of having any influence is very, very negligible.

Much thought is being given to the linebred theory of breeding and upon investigation you will find that it is becoming more and more prominent each year. In linebreeding we think of breeding cousins to cousins, and second cousins to second cousins, and granddaughter back to grandfather, or some such combination. Anything closer will be classified as inbreeding. It is only after the "good old sires or dams" have passed on that we realize their merit and influence on the breed and if we have not retained some of their blood through linebreeding or inbreeding while they are alive, we will have lost their influence forever. The proof of the pudding is in the eating, an old proverb, but just look what other breeds have accomplished.

Breeding is like running a business, you must be on the alert or someone else will produce better individuals. Don’t use your neighbor’s stallion just because it is convenient of because the fee is nominal. Stay with a linebred sire that is producing colts of a high degree of balance and not just an occasional "flyer." Select the best you can find and use him.


Related Articles:
Inbreeding -- by Larry Thornton,  from his book,  Pedigrees N Bloodlines
M. L. McGehee -- Breeder of Legends,  an example of close inbreeding from the forties that produced such great racehorses as Top Ladybug,  Lady Bug's Moon,  Barnes Ladybug, etc.  This is also the female line of today's first ranked Leading Race Sire,  First Down Dash.

Copyright ©2003  by Andrea Laycock Mattson. All rights reserved. Note: If you would like to reprint this article on your web site or in a printed magazine or horse-related newspaper, please contact the webmaster for permission.


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