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Entries in Stud Farms in Africa (8)

Tuesday
Apr232013

GOLDEN GATES OF HARTFORD

Hartford Estate EntranceEntrance to the Hartford Estate
(Photo : Leigh Willson)

“Bred, raised and trained at Hartford were the heroes
of every major race on the South African calendar”

Mick Goss - Summerhill StudMick Goss
Summerhill CEO
I remember the first time I entered the Hartford gates, like it was yesterday. Here was the greatest private breeding enterprise in South African history, here was a driveway adorned with old flower pots dating back to the 40s, bearing the names of 48 gladiators, all champions or the next best thing. Bred, raised and trained at Hartford were the heroes of every major race on the South African calendar, their supremacy so marked that when he penned his treatise on the great private racehorse nurseries of the world, Sir Mordant Milner spoke of England’s Lord Derby and the Aga Khan; of Marcel Boussac, the founder of the Christian Dior organisation in France; of Federico Tesio, the doyen of Italian breeders; he spoke of Phipps, Hancock and Calumet Farm in the United States; and of A.R.Elllis of Hartford. I was in awe. And as my brother Pat and I wound our way down that historic road to the steps of the region’s most gracious homestead, we recalled the tenth of the Commandments against the coveting of “thy neighbour’s house”.

From the time I’d first fondled a Duff’s Turf Guide on the potty as a three-year-old, I knew of the Hartford legends, and as my capacity for the game grew, I learnt that if there was a horse in the parade in the green, black and gold, it was as good as money in the bank. Mowgli, Cape Heath, Salmon, Panjandrum, Ajax, Magic Mirror, Master Polly, Magic Cloak, Magic Charm, Sentinel, Hat Trick, Fantasma, Albion, Lavonia, Fantastic, Famulus, Masham, Sybil’s Nephew, Pussmoth, Preston Pan, Prestissimo, Visionary, Flaming Heath, Magic Link, Cosmonaut, Rudigore, Dazzle, Alyssum, Hey Presto, Royal Occasion, Derby Day, Alhambra, Wayfarer, Pinocchio, Pipes Of Pan, Miracle, Broken Spell, Gypsey Moth, Beacon Light, and Council Rock. The Durban July, the Summer Cup, the Met, the Gold Cup, countless Derbys, Guineas and Oaks, the Gilbeys and the Smirnoff Sprint; on the occasion of the Royal visit to South Africa, three King’s Cups in three different centres; and anywhere from a 1000m to 3000m.

Many of our readers know the story of how Summerhill came to acquire its neighbour, Hartford, through a handshake exchange in the toilet in those bleak days of 1989. If you don’t, it’s a story of its own, and it’s for another day. But the one thing that had always fascinated me was the story of Hartford’s phenomenal success, and I spent a week with Graham Ellis drawing it all out when the handover took place. His father, A.R. (Raymond) Ellis’ curiosity with horses was aroused by the presence on the farm of six Italian prisoners of war, who’d been captured during the 1940 Abyssinian campaign. One of these men was the ex head groom of the greatest European breeder of the era, Senor Tesio; and it was he that ignited the flame which found the motherload. His advice to the Ellises was “breed like you mean it”, and they did. That year Raymond Ellis bought two young fillies at the National Sale, and stabled them in the garden across the way from the old stone house, built by the family of the last Prime Minister of the Colony, Sir Frederick Moor. Those that frequent Hartford House these days will know the stable as Suite 7, named for one of those two fillies, Preston Pan. She was something of a terror, and kicked the hell out of her companion as well as the stable divide, so she was dispatched to a paddock adjacent to the Hartford chapel, from whence she was trained for the duration of her career. Enigmatic though she was, Preston Pan was brilliant to the degree that she remains the only two-year-old filly ever invited to run in the Durban July, the continent’s greatest horserace. Whatever she was as a racehorse though, she was even more as a broodmare. Of the 48 names that adorn the old pots on the driveway, no fewer than 18 trace their lineage to Preston Pan and her daughters.

What was it about the thoroughbred that penetrated the soul of A.R.Ellis and his family, that gave birth to this celebrated farm, to three champion trainers and five champion jockeys, all of whom resided at one time or another in homes and stables built by that handful of Italians?

In an oft-quoted response, Graham Ellis, one-time Chairman of the Durban Turf Club following a stint as trainer to the finest string in the game, reminded me that of all the species on earth, including us humans, the racehorse is the only one whose genetic history is tabulated right back to the original founding fathers of the breed. He recalled that the welfare of the thoroughbred had been in the hands of the British aristocracy for more than three centuries. From the outset, the sport was conducted as all sports should be, for the sake of the sport, and it was all about one nobleman beating another. Throughout this time, they selected their stock for the right reasons too, for their nobility, their grace and their presence, for their intelligence and courage, for speed, stamina, mental toughness and physical durability, all the traits we as a species would aspire to. And that’s why the racehorse is the good Lord’s greatest creation.

summerhill stud

Enquiries :
Tel : +27 (0) 33-2631081 / +27 (0) 33-2631314
Fax : +27 (0) 33-2632818 / +27 (0) 33-2632414
Email : info@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Friday
Aug032012

SUMMERHILL SIRES FILM ON TELLYTRACK THIS SUNDAY

Summerhill Sires Film
2012 / 2013

The 2012 / 2013 Edition of the Summerhill Sires Film will be broadcast at 19h00 this Sunday on Tellytrack, DSTV channel 232. Don’t miss it!

Time : 19h00

Sunday 5 August 2012

Tellytrack, DSTV 232

summerhill stud, south africa

Enquiries :
Heather Morkel 27 (0) 33 263 1081
or email heather@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Monday
Jul302012

EIGHT IS THE NEW NUMBER

Equus Champion Breeder Award

Summerhill Stud - Equus Champion Breeder 2005 - 2012
(Image : Summerhill Archives)

SOUTH AFRICAN BREEDERS CHAMPIONSHIP
1 August 2011 - 31 July 2012

Mick Goss, Summerhill Stud CEOMick Goss
Summerhill Stud CEO
The Jockey’s Championship may still be hanging on a thread, but the Breeders’ version is done and dusted. Saturday’s racing finally put paid to any sniff any pretenders may have had to the crown, and so, at last, we can tell the printers to proceed with the 30th edition of the “Summerhill Sires,” including all references to “EIGHT CONSECUTIVE BREEDERS TITLES”.

There was a point in May, when Summerhill lagged Klawervlei by some R400,000, that we looked like “toast”, particularly considering that we were at a distinct disadvantage in terms of numbers, and there were more to come: the impis were lining up in waves!

It is a tribute to one of the best teams in the world, their sacrifices and their dedication, that the margin in the end will be close to R1,5 million in our favour. It is a tribute to those who support us, to the loyalties of those who keep their horses with us, who buy our stock at the sales, to those that train and ride them, and to our fans in the stands.

It is a salute to the uncertainties of the game, to the adage that inspires the belief that kids from the “sticks”, like us, can prevail against the odds. That you don’t have to own a fortune in order to know the top of the mountain. That hard work, obsession and the sheer love of the game can take you to new worlds of conquest. That “eight” is a brand new number in the modern world of breeding, and that it’s attainable by anyone with the will and the resolve to make it happen.

Yet in the end, it will always be a tribute to our horses. Mankind would do well to recall that our histories were written on the backs of these noble creatures in warfare, on the roads, in the workplace, on the sports fields. It is no different at Summerhill.

This is an enterprise unlike most others of its kind, built solely on the skills of its people and the achievements of its horses. It has given birth not only to the home of the champions, but to a world-class hotel, to the continent’s second largest equine insurer, to an elite horsefeed business and to the only school of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere.

To those of you who’ve made it happen, and to those that fought the good fight, thank you.

summerhill stud, south africa

Enquiries :
Linda Norval 27 (0) 33 263 1081
or email linda@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Wednesday
Mar212012

SUMMERHILL STUD : THE JEWEL OF AFRICA

Breeding & Racing

Click above to read article and view photos
in Breeding&Racing’s electronic publication…

Article published in BREEDING&RACING
Issue 103, March/April 2012
Author Gary Knowles

On a recent trip to South Africa, Breeding&Racing editor-in-chief Gary Knowles visited Africa’s leading thoroughbred property, Summerhill, one of the world’s great stud farms.

It would be nice to write about this African equine landmark by employing the standard reporting approach of who, what, when, how and why, but that’s just not possible.

Entering Summerhill - founded in 1879 by the one-time Deputy Prime Minister of the Old Colony of Natal - there is a flooding of emotions, an unsettling sense of ‘sliding doors’, of never having been here, but never having left.

It is the fall of light, shadows on the nearby Drakensburg mountain ranges, the birdsong and the smells; listening to the linguistic clicks of Zulu men as they handle mares and foals combine to shake me from my reverie that 21 years in Australia have rendered me a non-African. I might have affected a lilt and twang to my accent but, like it or not, roots are roots.

And, besides, this journey is a homecoming in more ways than one.

Nearly 30 years ago Summerhill’s principals Mick and Cheryl Goss patiently bore the brunt of a young man’s unbridled enthusiasm about all things thoroughbred, providing encouragement and a seat outside their stables at sales. It was a vantage point from which I enviously ogled their battalions of year-old horses.

The reference to battalions is apt, because KwaZulu-Natal is scattered with the remnants of some astonishing military history, including mighty battles between the British and the Zulus, and then - in the lead-up to apartheid’s fall - when virtual black-on-black civil war ebbed and flowed in the valleys dotted with African villages.

With sufficient means and global connections to have made a handsome life anywhere in the world, the Goss family chose to stay in South Africa.

“Embracing the African National Congress was easy,” reveals Goss of what was then a looming change to black majority rule. “We grew up in their heartland and we knew which way they were going to go; that’s what gave us our faith in the future.”

It appears on the surface to have been a prescient decision. Mick Goss is no Johnny-come-lately white farmer with a patrician attitude. Although trained as a lawyer, he grew up in far-flung trading posts of Transkei’s Wild Coast, running barefoot with little Zulu umfaans as his playmates, one of who, serendipitously, became one of South Africa’s future rulers.

In a country where most whites struggle to get by with a smattering of pidgin English when conversing with black Africans, it is astonishing to listen to Goss chatter away in Zulu as though it were his mother tongue. In many ways it is. It clearly makes an enormous difference that to the vast majority of his staff he is not some outsider, but a fellow African with a deep affection for their culture and the land they all share.

“They are without question the greatest horsemen I have ever seen,” declares Goss of the Zulus. “I don’t know what it is about the relationship they share with horses, but I can tell you I have never seen a horse try to hurt a Zulu, and neither have I ever seen a Zulu mistreat a horse.”

Geography

Situated at Mooi River, just over two hours to the west of Durban on South Africa’s east coast, Summerhill lies in a region that is atypical of most people’s perception of Africa. It is a green canvas with pockets that appear very English, blanketed in lush, verdant pastures, and home to the pukka landed gentry whose young sons play polo still.

Summerhill skirts the northern reaches of the majestic Midlands Meander’ a leisurely drive that starts near Howick’s famous falls and wends its way through myriad little towns’ restaurants, organic stalls, colonial book-shops, bric-a-brac stores and shabby-chic hideaways.

Long known as the ‘last bastion of the British Empire’ due to its very English history, this part of the former Natal colony is famous for two of the African continent’s finest schools: Hilton College and Michaelhouse. Fierce rugby rivals, their derbies attract cult-like followings where running rugby is the norm, and where students are as likely to be from London or Lagos as they are from a farm near the Limpopo.

Here, apparently, breeding is everything. And it’s catching.

Summerhill Stud was recently crowned Champion South African Breeder - its 7th consecutive championship following record-breaking feats in previous seasons. In 2005 the record books were re-written as the stud claimed the Breeder’s Premiership by a record margin. In 2006 their previous record was eclipsed five weeks before the season’s close, and this was followed by record-breaking margins in 2007, 2008 and 2009. In 2010, Summerhill’s record earnings for the Championship were more than double its closest rival.

The property consists of over 3,000 acres of fully fenced secure paddocks, where all pastures and cropland is maintained on strictly organic principles. In addition, there is a carefully monitored complementary grazing program to control parasites, and paddocks are sewn with a mixture of 11 grass species selected for optimal equine nutrition and growth.

Boasting internationally trained staff across separate divisions that include foaling, yearling, ready to race, stallion and broodmares, Summerhill has 320 stables and a yearling and stallion walker. There are also two 1400m turf gallops, two 1600m sand tracks and a 2400m turf track.

With round-the-clock supervision, Summerhill is a registered quarantine facility, with on-site veterinary care, a foaling unit and a surgery unit.

Mick Goss’ family have had a life-long love affair with racing, his grandfather having owned St Pauls, winner of the 1946 Durban July Handicap, South Africa’s most famous race, run over 2200m at Greyville in Durban.

Although his father also enjoyed the industry, business interests had to come first. As a result it was left to genetics to ensure that Mick and his brother Pat would resume the family’s love affair with the turf. Initially involved in 1979 as a legal advisor to the syndicate that purchased the original property (Hartford House was just a neighbour at that point), the Goss boys took the bit by their teeth and gradually increased their shareholding in Summerhill to the point they became majority owners. In the late 80s Mick Goss assumed total control by buying his brother out.

International Connections

Despite its African setting, Summerhill Stud has a surprisingly international clientele… besides playing host to a sizeable proportion of the breeding stock of its own nation’s top owners, more than a third of the farm’s resident horse population belong to customers in the United Kingdom, the USA, the UAE, Australia, France, Japan, Germany, Ireland and Hong Kong.

For a man who has achieved so much in his own back yard, it is ironic that Mick Goss had to travel halfway across the world to find perhaps his best buy.

Goss is a frequent visitor to Australia’s sales, with his regular team of Annet Becker and Tarryn Liebenberg, in search of prospects for Summerhill’s Ready To Run operation. And it was at Inglis’ 2009 Melbourne Premier Sale that a Galileo filly caught their eye from the Kia Ora Stud draft.

Picked up for the relatively modest sum of $65,000, Igugu’s victory in last January’s Gr1 J&B Met at Kenilworth in Cape Town was the icing on the cake. Along the way the 4 year old mare took her record to 10 wins. These included 2011’s Gr1 Vodacom Durban July over 2200m and Gr1 Woolavington 2000 over 2000m (both at Greyville in Durban), Gr1 SA Fillies Classic over 1800m, Gr2 South African Oaks over 2450m at Turffonetin, Gr2 Ipi Tombe Challenge over 1600m, Gr2 Gauteng Fillies Guineas over 1600m, and 2010’s Gr3 Johannesburg Spring Challenge over 1450m (all at Turffontein in Johannesburg) and 2 runners-up (including 2010’s Gr1 Cape Fillies Guineas over 1600m at Kenilworth) from 12 starts.

Igugu’s Horse of the Year title and her place at the top of the earnings table for 2011 (in excess of R5 million) follow on the heels of 2010’s biggest earner, Pierre Jourdan, and Imbongi’s status in the same year as the earnings Victor Ludorum at Dubai’s Racing Carnival.

It is deeply satisfying for Goss that Igugu was on-sold at the annual Ready To Run Sale, whose 2012 Summer edition was recently held at Summerhill’s Centre Of Management Excellence. With the support of other industry bodies, Summerhill has continued to champion the Ready To Run and they, along with a strong and diverse South African buying bench, were again very active at last month’s Inglis Melbourne Premier Sale despite facing an exchange rate where every dollar cost the equivalent of eight rand in South African currency.

Al Maktoum School Of Management Excellence

As part of Summerhill’s “ongoing commitment to education and training”, the stud recently completed their 40th International Scholarship with the return of two of their young Zulu staff from the USA and the UK.

The doors of the on-site Al Maktoum School of Management Excellence opened at Summerhill in May 2011. It is already regarded by many as the finest educational facility of its kind in the world.

At 2011’s Melbourne Premier, Goss excitedly shared the news on the upcoming opening with Breeding&Racing. It sounded, in theory, like a fine idea, however it’s not until one has experienced this faculty in the flesh that one can appreciate the extent of the vision that lies behind it.

Housed in a very special building with majestic views of the farm, the school may be brand new, yet it exudes a presence of ingrained gravitas, its lecture hall’s leather-bound airline seats a curiously satisfying addition to this acoustically designed African setting.

“Africa demands that you give something back,” exclaims an infectiously enthusiastic Goss about this local undertaking which has gone globally viral, and which attracts the crème of the world thoroughbred fraternity as guest lecturers.

Stallion Power

Summerhill’s farm is home to arguably Africa’s most formidable band of young sire talent, and includes among its stallion owners the leading studs in Australia, Japan, the United States, Dubai and South Africa.

Great stallions make great farms, and Summerhill was blessed in its early days to have stood Northern Guest, an impeccably bred son of Northern Dancer out of the celebrated blue hen Sex Appeal.

His imposing list of progeny, whose earnings eclipsed R50 million, included the Gr1 winners Senor Santa, Travel North, Spook And Diesel, Northern Princess, Imperious Sue, Unaware, Angus and Mystery Guest. And, with the benefit of hindsight, why wouldn’t he have scaled breeding’s Everest, given he’s a full-brother to champion duo El Gran Senor and Try My Best?

Goss, with complete understatement says: “We owe it all to him. Northern Guest lies behind everything you see here today.”

Of course, since those halcyon days Summerhill has been associated with many, many outstanding stallions, and their current line-up is no exception.

Following the sad loss of exciting young Medicean sire-son Bankable earlier this year, Summerhill currently has 11 stallions on its books. Reflecting a nice cross-section of sirelines, but with an inevitable nod to the ubiquitous Northern Dancer and Mr Prospector lines, they include: Admire Man (Sunday Silence), A.P. Arrow (A.P. Indy), Brave Tin Soldier (Storm Cat), Kahal (Machiavellian), Malhub (Kingmambo), Muhtafal (Mr Prospector), Mullins Bay (Machiavellian), Ravishing (Jet Master), Solskjaer (Danehill), Visionaire (Grand Slam) and Way West (Danehill).

It’s a collection of sire-power that annually attracts many of the crème of South Africa’s mare crop.

Mick Goss is a showman. Beyond the open smile and charisma, though, lies awareness that that while this game is about horses, it’s the people who own them that influence outcomes.

In what is almost an antithesis to the quip that claims accountants know the cost of everything and the value of nothing, Goss has this to say: “We started out on a handshake, and that’s still the way we do business. We’ve never forgotten, transactions build turnovers, but relationships build value.”

Hartford House

In reading this you may be tempted to shrug this off as ‘just another stud farm’, but that’d be a million miles from the truth. Summerhill Stud is actually a combination of Summerhill and Hartford Studs, the latter an adjoining property with one of the most beautiful houses in the Province.

Timelessly elegant and graceful, Hartford House has quickly risen to become one of South Africa’s leading boutique hotels, following extensive renovations and the continued epicurean rise of its award-winning restaurant.

A member of Chaine des Rotisseurs, one would naturally expect that Hartford House would have fine dining, yet it’s a surprise to discover that its restaurant is now among South Africa’s Top 10 under the tutelage and watchful eye of young chef Jackie Cameron. Summerhill is almost certainly the only stud farm anywhere on earth with a restaurant of this calibre.

For anyone who’s ever watched Out Of Africa, and wondered at Karen Blixen’s opening words: “I had a farm in Africa at the foot of the Ngong Hills”, Hartford House evokes a sense of the ‘old Africa’ nostalgia.

In any event, what’s not to like about an evening Pimms on the sandstone balcony listening to the whinny of a nearby colt-foal and the snort of his dam?

Hartford House’s own expressed raison d’etre captures its nuance best:

“[It is] The journey’s exclamation point, a retreat from the hubbub where you make sense of a fast life and its senseless details. This is where we learn to redress ourselves on a first name basis.

There are too many luxury hotels in the world offering the same: a chocolate on the pillow, canned romance, and cuisine called “haut” because it’s spelled in French. Hartford stands apart for its integrity. Its architecture, views, dining, sounds, smells, its racehorses and its people are all exhilarating surprises, unique to this Zululand, this culture, to Africa. Yes, you come here to be pampered, but at Hartford luxury is the journey, not the destination.

The truth is, Hartford just happened. A home, and a grand one at that, which grew into a hotel. A community looks to it as its watering hole, its nexus of entertainment, its fountain of gossip. In so many ways, it’s gained and regained inspiration from the cultures it celebrates. It is life’s exception, a place at the same time comfortable beyond dreams, yet innocent of pretence.”

www.breedingracing.com

Thursday
Nov102011

"WHAT'S THE STORY?" ON FREERACER.CO.ZA

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