Visit the Summerhill Stud Website

Solskjaer Stallion

facebooktwitteryoutuberssalexa

Hartford House Special Offer

Summerhill Stallion Film

summerhill stud website link

Click here to visit our website
www.summerhill.co.za

Entries in Sir Tristram (12)

Tuesday
Feb262013

REDOUTE'S CHOICE NOTCHES UP 100TH STAKES WINNER

Redoute's ChoiceRedoute’s Choice
(Photo : Aga Khan Studs)

REDOUTE’S CHOICE
Danehill (USA) - Shanthas Choice (AUS)

Elite Australian sire Redoute’s Choice, who is standing the Northern Hemisphere season for the first time this year in France, reached his 100th individual stakes winner on 23 February when She’s Clean won the Triscay Stakes (Listed) at Warwick Farm in Sydney.

Australia’s leading sire in 2006 and 2010, Redoute’s Choice is based at John Messara’s Arrowfield Stud in Austalia. The 16-year-old son of Danehill began a new career as a shuttler to Europe this season and recently began serving his first mares at the Aga Khan’s Haras de Bonneval in France, where he stands for a €70,000 fee.

“This is a wonderful milestone to celebrate, but the future for Redoute’s Choice is even more exciting as he enters a new phase of his career, standing his first season in Europe,” Messara said.

Redoute’s Choice joins sire Danehill and father-son pair Sir Tristram and Zabeel as the only stallions to sire 100 or more worldwide stakes winners from Australasian-conceived foals.

The milestone marks a lifetime sire record of 11.4% stakes winners from starters. Redoute’s Choice has 21 Group 1 winners, including Australian champions Miss Finland, Fashions Afield, and Samantha Miss, New Zealand champion King’s Rose, and South African champion Musir, and 10 classic winners. His sire record also includes stakes winners in the United Kingdom, Germany, Dubai, Turkey, Hong Kong, and Japan, all of whom were conceived in Australasia.

Redoute’s Choice began his stud career at Arrowfield in the Segenhoe Valley in the Upper Hunter Valley of New South Wales and was Australia’s leading first-crop sire in 2004 and leading juvenile sire in 2005 and 2006.

Overall, Redoute’s Choice has progeny earnings of more than $89million. His offspring are in high demand at auction as evidenced by a yearling sale average of more than $440,000.

Redoute’s Choice has already established himself as a sire of sires, with Stratum and Snitzel the sires of Group 1 winners and ranking as Champion Sires. Four other sons have sired Group 1 winners, including Not a Single Doubt, whose undefeated 2-year-old daughter Miracles of Life won the $1million Blue Diamond Stakes (Group 1) on 23 February at Caulfield. Additionally, Redoute’s Choice has been effective as a broodmare sire as his daughters have produced 16 stakes winners.

He currently ranks fourth on Australia’s general sire list by progeny earnings, with $5,562,745. And three sons - Snitzel, Stratum and Not a Single Double rank in the top 15.

Redoute’s Choice won eight of 10 career starts, including the four Group 1 races in Australia - the 1999 Blue Diamond, Manikato, Caulfield Guineas and 2000 C.F. Orr Stakes - and amassed a lifetime bankroll of $995,264. He is out of the Canny Lad mare Shantha’s Choice and is a full brother to Group 1 winner Platinum Scissors and a half brother to Group 1 winner Manhattan Rain and Group 3 winner Sliding Cube.

She’s Clean won her sixth race from 14 career starts with the Triscay Stakes victory. She was produced by the stakes-placed End Sweep mare Feather Duster, a half sister to Japanese Champion Kinshasa no Kiseki, and is from the family of French Group 1 winner and important sire Groom Dancer, French Group 1 winner Plumania, and French classic winner Falco.

Extract from BloodHorse

Monday
Dec172012

DANEHILL: THREE x THREE = PARTY TIME

Danehill StatueStatue of the great Danehill at Coolmore, Australia
(Photo : TDN Staff Blog)

SIR TRISTRAM vs DANEHILL

mick gossMick GossWe had a fascinating evening in the restaurant at Hartford House last Sunday. Their celebrated chef, Jackie Cameron, had just enjoyed the distinction of her restaurant being counted once again among the Top Ten in the nation, the only one in KZN so exalted. Inevitably, good food and a good bottle of wine equals good conversation, not that these two ingredients are essential to an exuberant chat when Inglis’s Simon Vivian is part of the company. He is nothing if he is not one of the world’s most accomplished auctioneers, and his skills are not limited to his way with people. Simon knows his horses, not only the theory, but he is a fine example of a practical horseman, and of course as an inspector of all yearlings that make the Inglis sales in Australia, he sees a lot of horses. We all have our opinions on this game, that is one of its fascinations, and for good reason, Simon has well-reasoned thoughts on his observations.

One of these is that, in his opinion, Sir Tristram is the greatest Australasian sire of all time, which startled us a little in the light of the overwhelming influence Danehill has had on the affairs of breeding in that part of the world, particularly in Australia. Into the melting pot we should throw the names of Sir Tristram’s most famous son Zabeel, and the major Danehill influences, Fastnet Rock, Redoute’s Choice, Flying Spur and Commands, among many others. We countered with the proposition that Sir Tristram stood in an era when the competition was not nearly as stiff as it is these days, given that his principal opponents of the time were the likes of Bletchgingly and Marscay across the Tasman, while back at home there wasn’t much beyond Sovereign Edition and Star Way, and Sir Tristram’s early sons, Grosvenor and Kaapstad (forgive us if we’ve left anyone out!)

Another statement from Simon which surprised us, but obviously true in that moment, was that line-breeding to Danehill had thus far witnessed, at best, lukewarm results. This reminded me of a statement by another master of the pedigree world, Bill Oppenheim, who once remarked to us that (on the evidence available at that time), line-breeding to Mr Prospector and his sire Raise A Native, was not only inadvisable from a soundness perspective, but it had been disappointing in its outcomes.

No sooner had Bill given us the stats on the “Mr Ps”, than the cross of Mr P on Mr P began churning out an avalanche of top horses, and in Danehill’s case, Simon’s words were scarcely out of his mouth, and a Group One winner pops up with two lines of Danehill. The nine times Australian Champion sire has produced an unprecedented 347 Stakes winners and progeny earnings in excess of A$403million (more than R3.6billion), yet his achievements do not end there. As a sire of sires, he already has the Group One producers Al Maher, Arena, Blackfriars, Catbird, Commands, Danasinga, Dane Shadow, Danehill Dancer, Danetime, Danewin, Danroad, Danske, Dante’s Fury, Danzero, Darci Brahma, Desert King, Exceed And Excel, Fastnet Rock, Flying Spur, Holy Roman Emperor, Honours List, Keeper, Lion Hunter, Lucky Owners, Nothin’ Leica Dane, Oratorio, Rock Of Gibraltar, Redoute’s Choice and Viking Ruler.

Another generation down and Danehill’s grandsons Bradbury’s Luck (Redoute’s Choice), Choisir (Danehill Dancer), Casino Prince (Flying Spur), Duelled (Redoute’s Choice), Fast ‘N’ Famous (Redoute’s Choice), Snitzel (Redoute’s Choice) and Stratum (Redoute’s Choice) have also each sired Group One winners.

Four of Australia’s current top ten stallions, Fastnet Rock, Commands, Redoute’s Choice and Exceed And Excel, are sons of Danehill, whist another two of the top ten spots are held by sons of Redoute’s Choice, Stratum and Snitzel.

Currently second leading Australian broodmare sire (a title he has already won on six occasions), Danehill has also passed on his genetic strengths to his daughters, who have produced over 200 stakes winners, among which are 41 Group One winners, including superstar Frankel (Galileo).

His son Flying Spur is Australia’s fifth leading broodmare sire, whilst three sons of that Golden Slipper (Gr1) winner occupy the top seven positions in the second season sire chart; Casino Prince, Magnus and Shaft.

Meanwhile in the third season sire list there are five Danehills in the top ten: Holy Roman Emperor, Danerich, Churchill Downs, Darci Brahma and California Dane. In the sires of three-year-olds chart, Danehill dominates with the top four; Fastnet Rock, Commands, Casino Prince and Redoute’s Choice.

Danehill continues to make his mark in New Zealand also, with Darci Brahma and Keeper currently third and fourth. Eleventh meanwhile is Stratum, whose son Southern Lord added his name to the long list of Group One winning descendants of Danehill when storming home to take out last week’s Levin Classic (Gr1).

In overpowering another member of the line, Le Choix (Choisir), Southern Lord (Stratum) provided a further milestone for Danehill, in becoming the first Group One winner line-bred to that influential stallion.

The A$125,000 Magic Millions National Sale weanling is bred on a 3 X 3 cross of Danehill, where he appears as grandsire of his sire and sire of his second dam.

Out of the two times Stakes-placed Rory’s Jester mare, Angel Girl, Southern Lord carries a further two crosses of Danehill’s grandsire Northern Dancer, through Nijinsky II and Lyphard.

Southern Lord is the seventh stakes winner line-bred to Danehill, including the Group Three winners Psychologist (Choisir out of a Danzero mare), Ladies Are Forever (Monsieur Bond out of a Danetime mare), Leitir Mor (Holy Roman Emperor out of a granddaughter of Danehill) and Florentina (Redoute’s Choice out of a granddaughter of Danehill).

Tuesday
Jan312012

SIR PATRICK HOGAN : BATTLER TO BRAVO

Sir Tristram

Sir Tristram
(Photo : Stallions)

SIR TRISTRAM (IRE)
Sir Ivor (USA) - Isolt (USA)

How dominant has Cambridge Stud been at the New Zealand Bloodstock’s Karaka National Yearling Sales, which kicked off yesterday. For 30 straight years, Sir Patrick and Lady Justine Hogan’s operation has led all consignors by gross at Karaka. Or, put another way, since Reagan gave his first State of the Union in 1982.

The history of Cambridge is a fantastic tale of success from humble origins. In the early 1970s, the Hogans operated a small farm that staffed just one worker, in addition to the Hogans themselves. In its first year, the farm had just five foals, and was soon in crisis mode after they lost not one but four mares for various reasons. That left them with a single mare and serious questions about just what the future had in store for them. But in 1975, a saviour came to Cambridge. His name was Sir Tristram (Ire).

Now world-renowned as one of Australasia’s most prolific sires, Sir Tristram was a virtual unknown when he came to New Zealand to stand his first season at Cambridge. A son of Sir Ivor, he had won two of 19 starts racing primarily in Europe for trainer Clive Brittain. However, Brittain thought enough of the colt to send him to the States to compete in the Kentucky Derby in 1974, a fact that may surprise some American race fans. (At 25-1, Sir Tristram ran 11th to Cannonade under Hall of Fame rider Bill Hartack.)

Sir Tristram’s immediate pedigree was as modest as his race record. His dam Isolt, by Round Table, was unraced and didn’t produce a stakes winner, and his second dam, the stakes-placed All My Eye (*My Babu), didn’t produce a stakes winner, either. But Sir Tristram’s third dam was a half-sister to the outstanding international sire Hyperion, and his successful sire siblings Sickle, Pharamond II and Hunter’s Moon, so there was some reason for hope. Still, breeders were hardly clamoring for Sir Tristram’s services, and he began his career at Cambridge for a fee of NZ$1,300.

Improbably, from that modest start, he built up a dynasty in Australia and New Zealand that included a record nine sire championships. He sired over 130 stakes winners, including a world-record 46 individual Group 1 winners, and was the sire of three Melbourne Cup winners.

Paddy”, as he was called at Cambridge, ultimately saw his fee rise to NZ$200,000, and when he was euthanized in 1997 after breaking his shoulder, he was buried standing up following a 40 minute service. Sir Tristram’s exploits built Cambridge into a powerhouse in New Zealand, and he left a lasting gift to the nursery : his son Zabeel (NZ), a Cambridge homebred.

Foaled in 1986, Zabeel won the G1 Australian Guineas three years later, but really made his mark once returned to stand at Cambridge. Twice he’s been Australia’s champion sire and four times New Zealand’s; he has won the Dewar Award (combined Australian / New Zealand earnings) a record 14 times. His get includes over 120 stakes winners and 41 Group 1 winners, and he’s the sire of three G1 Melbourne Cup winners and four G1 Cox Plate winners, including Might and Power (NZ), Savabeel (Aus) and Octagonal (NZ).

Extract from Thoroughbred Daily News…

Wednesday
Dec212011

SIRS PATRICK AND TRISTRAM; MESSRS JOOSTE AND GOSS

Sir Patrick Hogan

Sir Patrick Hogan
(Photo : Racing Victoria)

“Proving it’s better to be lucky than brilliant”

Alec Hogg Graceland FarmAlec Hogg
Graceland Farm
We’re in the process of building an equine library at Jeanette’s Graceland Gallery. With the gallery now specialising in equine art, it makes sense to also stock horse books. Good books about thoroughbreds are hard to find in South Africa, especially since the TBA cancelled its annual pre-National Yearling Sale book sale. Although, in truth, the library is more of an excuse for me to indulge two passions - reading and racing - while investing in my own education.

The idea of an equine library came from my pal Mick Goss, whose leadership has given the country its seven-time Champion Breeders, Summerhill Stud. Always one who believes actions speak louder than words, Mick followed up the library suggestion with a donation - a book about New Zealand’s master breeder Sir Patrick Hogan. Called Give A Man A Horse and written in conversational style by Kiwi journalist and biographer Dianne Haworth, the book’s an inspiration for anyone, not just those in the breeding game.

Haworth’s writing reinforces how life’s lessons come from different places. Reading about Sir Patrick often reminded me of Nassim Taleb’s argument in Fooled by Randomness, a book that changed the way I look at just about everything. Taleb’s classic uses many examples to show how success needs dedication and a passion for what you’re doing - but with the important rider that getting to the very top is dependent not on these everyday attributes, but on a huge dollop of luck.

In my other life as a financial journalist, three decades of observation proves the accuracy of Taleb’s thesis. Every big success story I’ve come across owes a great deal more to luck than good judgment. Where beneficiaries of such providence go wrong is when they believe some super-human talents are the real reason for the success. Appreciating this reality helps keep perspective in a world where society wants heroes, often putting personalities onto pedestals they cannot possibly retain, tumbling after getting caught up in the hype. For me, the difference between a great man and a lucky poser often begins with their realization - or not - of life’s randomness.

Warren Buffett, for instance, had the good fortune as a young man to meet his teacher Benjamin Graham and then lifetime business partner Charlie Munger. Without the influence of these two, Buffett would surely have done well. But without them it’s hard to believe he could have become the best in the world. Buffett acknowledges he was in the right place at the right time, calling himself fortunate to have been born in the USA when he was; and to have a brain “hard-wired for capitalism”. His strongest message to young people is that they realize we’re all knowledgeable and perhaps even talented in some areas; success comes from knowing where these sweet spots are and sticking to them.

Well known personalities in local horseracing provide more examples. Table topping owner Markus Jooste, for instance, owes much to being fractionally the lower bidder for SA Breweries’ furniture manufacturing assets at the absolute peak of the market in the late 1980s. The winning bidder, Pat Cornick, offered a mere 25c more a share (R19.50 versus R19.25), and ended up going bust because of overpaying. Had Jooste’s Steinhoff won the auction, it would surely have suffered a similar fate. Instead, Steinhoff was around to pick up the same assets from a bankrupt Pat Cornick at a fraction of what it had been prepared to pay just a year or so earlier. That was the enterprise making deal which created the low cost asset base from which Steinhoff’s global empire was built. Jooste was blessed with good fortune once more when he dipped his toe into the racing world. His first investment: a share in a yearling called National Emblem who became the country’s Champion racehorse and then a leading stallion.

Mick Goss tells a similar story. The mighty Summerhill Stud, he readily explains, was the result of two pieces of great fortune - the first, flight cancelling bad weather that put him together for an extended period with the country’s greatest tax and legal minds (from which tax-incentive breeding partnerships were created); the second, a chance bumping into Northern Guest when he and brother Pat were visiting Ireland to see a different horse. Every barn, stable and pasture at Summerhill, Goss reckons, owes its existence to Northern Guest, the unraced marvel who became South Africa’s multiple Champion stallion.

The benefit of good luck seeps right through the Hogan book. Feted around the world as a genius in the Tesio tradition, Sir Patrick’s talent might never have been recognised had it not been for a nasty natured, poorly conformed (“terrible hind quarters… shocking hind leg”) Irish racehorse who he was strongly advised against buying. That stallion was Sir Tristam who became the greatest producer of Group One winners worldwide, putting Sir Patrick’s Cambridge Stud and, indeed, New Zealand breeding onto the global map.

Hogan’s real talent - something shared in breeding by Goss and in business by Jooste and many others - was an ability to use his random good fortune as a base. He kicked on. Strongly. Doubling up through buying back one of Sir Tristam’s best sons, Zabeel, from Sheikh Hamdan. The Dubai Prince had bought the Cambridge-bred Group One winner as a yearling for $650,000. For reasons best known to the Sheikh and his advisors at Shadwell, he decided not to stand Zabeel as a stallion (or to send him, like Kahal and Muhtafal, to Goss’s Summerhill Stud - what a difference that would have made to South African racing). Instead, Hogan was invited to submit a bid in a private auction and prevailed by a mere $50,000. Over three dozen Gr1 winners later, Zabeel has proved that in racing, sometimes lightning does strike twice. What makes New Zealand’s most famous horseman so extraordinary, though, is how he appreciates this, never losing his humility or his humanity. It’s that part of the man, even more than his amazing breeding achievements, which is most inspiring.

Extract from www.gracelandfarm.co.za

Friday
Dec162011

STALLIONS : STUBBORN SAVAGES OR MAN-MADE DEMONS?

Nasrullah

Click above to watch Historic Events : Nasrullah’s 1950 arrival at Claiborne…
(Footage : Courtesy of Michael Power)

STALLION TEMPERAMENT :
ACQUIRED OR HEREDITARY?

Summerhill Stud CEO Mick GossMick Goss
Summerhill Stud CEO
Pedigree buff Sarah Whitelaw has just penned an article in the Sporting Post in which she asks the question whether horses, reputed for their savagery, are born that way, or whether man has made them that way. She cites the case of the Ribot tribe, where quirkiness, ill-temper and sheer bloody-mindedness prevailed through the generations, and in the case of our locally successful sire, Sportsworld, was a signature of this behaviour four removes from Ribot.

The legendary American trainer, Charlie Whittingham described champion sire Halo as a mean customer, and as the man who conditioned his best son, the great Sunday Silence, he witnessed first-hand the conduct for which Halo had become infamous. Sunday Silence’s Japanese handlers apparently always counted themselves fortunate in still being in one piece at the time of Sunday Silence’s death at 18 years, so its possible we’ve had a lucky let-off at Summerhill, in Admire Main’s wonderfully equable temperament. He has spirit, yes, but his “man” is Themba Zuma, and they’ve never had a row in their lives.

Then there’s Storm Cat, whose father Storm Bird, unusually for a son of Northern Dancer, was a bad tempered old bugger who passed his quirks on, to the degree that several of Storm Cat’s sons are not only on the “hot” side in general, but prone to self-emasculation. There are several cases of this in the States, while Mary Slack will tell you that Tiger Ridge will turn on himself occasionally, too. When he first arrived here, Brave Tin Soldier was a bit of a handful, and took his chances in his attempt to assert himself, but he has “masters” around him, and he’s the next best thing to a lamb these days.

Sarah speaks too, of the Nasrullahs, and the notoriety many of them earned themselves for their “obduracy”, no more apparent than in his top racehorses, Nashua and the nemesis of many an American stud man, Bold Bidder, sire of the several-times Argentinean champion, Liloy, who lived out his later days at Summerhill. Argentineans are renowned for their skills as horsemen, yet even they gave up on Liloy, despite his 21 Group One winners around the world, and despatched him to the famous Calumet Farm in Kentucky, where he stood alongside the “greats”, Affirmed and Alydar. When I went to inspect Liloy at Calumet before he was acquired for South Africa, his tobacco-chewing handler warned me never to go near the “son-of-a-bitch”, and certainly never to take his head collar off, as catching him with a rod and a hook was the only means he could be brought under control.

When Liloy arrived in South Africa, I forgot to impart this rather vital piece of information to the float driver, so the first thing he did when he released the horse into his box at the Durban quarantine, was remove his head collar. You can imagine my horror when I arrived at the quarantine for the first time with his groom, Mandla Zuma (whose family have populated our stallion barn for decades) to find Liloy’s goose-like neck protruding from his stall, minus head collar! Liloy’s menacing “white” eyes and flared nostrils did little to quell my anxiety. No trouble to Mandla, he simply walked in, picked up a piece of bedding off the floor, rubbed it down the horses back and neck, and told him quietly that if he respected him, Mandla in turn would do the same for Liloy. They were firm mates from that day onwards, and in his latter days, despite the most frightening reputation for savagery in the world, I recall taking my daughter on visits to his paddock when she was 7 or 8 years of age.

The one thing you wouldn’t want to do though, was get between Liloy and a mare, as that was his territory, and you daren’t invade it. John Slade, consummate stud man that he is, once made that mistake when Summerhill was his “show”, and Liloy hoisted him up by the back of his neck, and shook him like a rag doll before dispatching him out of the stallion barn. John was black and blue with the bruising for a few weeks, and nobody ever made the same mistake twice.

Another “lot” remembered for their squalid conduct, is the Roberto dynasty: Roberto, coincidentally, was another inmate of Darby Dan Farm in Kentucky, where Ribot earned his reputation, and there may be a thread in this story. Though local champion sire, Al Mufti never inherited his father’s wayward genes, Roberto did pass them onto some of his descendents, including the talented racehorse, Lear Fan, in turn sire of Labeeb, another who confounded the Americans with his meanness, and who ended up at Summerhill. Labeeb was an extraordinary talent as a racehorse, he could take on the best turf horses in the States at any distance from 6 to 10 furlongs, and he proved to be a more than adequate sire. However, like Liloy, he had to be caught with a rod in America. His temperament often sidelined him from formal showings of the stallions at his base Gainsborough Stud, until one of our scholarship recipients, Scotty Mnculwane, did his stint there during a Northern Hemisphere breeding season. Scotty was another member of our stallion handling team at Summerhill, and like all of his colleagues, he was not only fearless, he enjoyed a mutual respect with the stallions. In two weeks, he had tamed Labeeb, and that prompted Sheikh Maktoum to part with the horse and send him here.

There’ve been other reputed “savages” around the world, not the least of whom was the greatest New Zealand sire of all time, Sir Tristram, who had no antecedents who might’ve explained his behaviour. He had a special shute out the back of his box to his paddock, which saved the necessity of handling him.

Of the modern day “saints”, A.P. Indy has quite a “tough” history, and there are those who attribute it to a thread that runs through five generations from Nasrullah. Our own fellow, A.P. Arrow, can be a bit of a handful, something I noticed when I went to inspect him in Florida two years ago. His Mexican groom emerged from the shed as white as a sheet, desperately trying to avoid A.P. Arrow’s gnashing teeth from descending on his arms and shoulders as he lead him out. Here again, he’s under perfect control at Summerhill, provided he’s in the hands of a minder in whom he has the utmost faith.

Since there is no genetic explanation for this, it begs the question, where does it come from? Does the answer for these things lie in heredity, or does the responsibility rest in the inadequacies of poor handling? The most likely explanation, is that some stallions, like humans, are born temperamental, and since the alpha male is naturally prone to dominance in the horse world, this is manifested not only in their relationships with their mates, but also in a need to assert themselves over their handlers. It’s worth recalling that in the horse’s natural world, there are no handlers, so this is something of an artificial imposition, more a nuisance than an aid in the opinion of some horses. Human beings, particularly those with a “college” education, are aware of the force and the ferocity some stallions command, and they’re equally aware that if one gets hold of you, the consequences are not worth thinking about.

As a result, if we display too much caution, or any form of timidity, the stallion will instinctively exploit it, and you have the perfect storm for the birth of a demon. The bigger his reputation, the more people are frightened.

It’s a strange thing that at Summerhill, despite the reputations of the likes of Liloy and Labeeb, we’ve never had to grapple with these things in a serious way. That’s as much attributable to our Zulu handlers as anything, even though there was no history of horses in their lives until the last century and a half. It is so that their King Cetewayo, inflicted on the British army, then the best equipped and the best trained in the world, their most humiliating defeats at Isandlwana, Nkambule and Hlobane, where they put an end to the Napoleonic dynasty. While Generals Smuts and Botha, both scourges in their own rights of the British, had at their disposal and knew the value of cavalry, Cetewayo had no such thing among his regiments. What he did have though, was a tribe of men who knew no fear, with a history of association with animals for millennia. Among the finest stockmen anywhere, they’ve obviously converted their instincts with cattle to horses; I’ve never seen a Zulu abuse a horse, and I’ve never seen a horse abuse a Zulu. Mutual respect is evident from day one, and somehow, that expresses itself in a faith and a trust that settles all matters. I’ve said it so many times before, but we’re lucky to live where we do.

There’s an enchanting video clip under the title “Historic events: Nasrullah’s 1950 arrival at Claiborne” above. You have to see it - I believe it’s unique in the world.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...