The way this muscular colt has been turning heads at the yearling parades, he could be the most aptly named harness racing youngster at New Zealand Bloodstockās national standardbred sale in a few weeks.
Brogden Lodgeās Graham and Judy Bowen chose the name Turn O The Tide because he literally embodies their hopes for the future after a frustrating 17 years of breeding horses.
The colt is a half brother to the Bowensā offering last year, who as the even more dramatically named Itās Nae Or Never, crucially broke a long string of disappointing sales, fetching $75,000.
Graham Bowen is hoping the tide will well and truly turn come February 19 given the interest being shown in their Captaintreacherous colt, who āticked all the boxesā for one leading buyer and is even attracting inquiries from the United States.
āHeās the nicest colt weāve ever prepared and two or three of the bigger buyers have been over him numerous times, so weāre expecting more than the filly (Nae) fetched last year.ā
The second foal of the Bowensā speedy nine-race winning mare Juice Brogden, the colt is beautifully proportioned and several visitors on open day noted how well muscled he is for a November foal, Bowen said.
āHeās got a nature a bit like his mum, quite gregarious. If he wants to go left and you want to go right, youāre probably going left. But he wouldnāt have a dirty bone in his body, heās just full-on.
āHe looks like an early goer – heās not as big as he looks in the photo which is actually quite deceiving.ā
Bowen is pleased that, for once, theyāve hit on the right sire in Captaintreacherous who features prominently among the best performed sires in North America.
āNZB Standardbredsā Cam Bray said heād had two or three inquiries from America where his service fee is double what it is here.ā
Captaintreacherous stands at Hanover Shoe Farms in Pennsylvania for US$30,000 (NZ$46,500) compared with NZ$20,000 plus GST here (NZ$23,000) and with only four of his colts in the northern sale, they are sure to be in demand.
āSo often weāve been caught going to hot stallions but by the time we got to the yearling sale no one wanted them.ā
Bowen had high hopes one year for a colt by Real Desire, who was the buzz stallion when he mated Ruby Choozday, but had gone right out of favour come sale day.
āWe hardly got a bid, took him home, and ended up leasing him to Chris Butt with a right of purchase of $10,000.ā
Butt later made a good profit selling Reuben Brogden, who won 17 races in Perth and another 15 in the States where he has taken a best time of 1:50 flat and boosted his earnings to US$361,000.
āWe bought Love Ina Chevy as weanling, because he was by Jeremeās Jet who was hot, and couldnāt sell him the next year as yearling.ā
Eventually sold after winning twice for the Bowens, Love Ina Chevy nearly died in early 2106 after a snake bite in Australia but is still winning as an 11-year-old and claims 31 wins and $409,000 from 217 starts.
“Weāve had a few blood noses at the sales and some we didnāt sell we ended up breaking in and racing, like Love In a Chevy and Miki Miksta.
āIt got to the stage where we were starting to think we didnāt know what we were doing and weād better give it away.
āWe couldnāt just keep going as we were, breeding to good stallions and getting no return. We were pouring in thousands. Iād hate to think how much weāve invested in horses, but it would have to be $300,000 to $400,000.ā
So the Bowens cut right back on their operation.
āWe had six mares at one stage, of fair to medium quality, and a lot of the foals went on and won races.Ā But it was middle-of-the-road stuff and we decided we had to up the quality. So we sold four or five mares like Hayley Brogden, the mum of Juice, and Swift Mirage.ā
Ask Bowen why heās continued breeding at all after so many disappointments and heāll tell you straight: āWe do it to get a horse like Juice Brogden (who just went under to Partyon in the Northern Oaks) and to get a horse like this colt, whoās the best weāve bred.ā
One look at Turn O The Tideās pedigree page, chock full of black type, confirms that.
āWe made the pedigree page very strong by breeding to some of the countryās best stallions. My dad Keith said if youāre not going to mate to the very best stallions youāre still going to have to race against them, and they were very wise words.ā
Bowen was hoping Itās Nae Or Never would help put his coltās name up in lights by contesting the first Young Guns heat for fillies on February 17, just two days before the sale. But while sheād been showing real promise for Nicky Chilcott, a slight setback two weeks ago scuppered that plan.
Brogden Lodge will offer two other yearlings next month, a Betting Line colt out of 10-race winner Beckinsale for the OāBrien family of Blenheim and a What The Hill colt out of five-race winner Caitlinās Surprise for New Plymouthās Nick Fleming.
To view the sales catalogue, click here.
byĀ Barry Lichter