Talking about Trakehner horses is always
talking about history. Why? Because no matter if one loves
Trakehner horses or not, it’s a simple fact that no
other riding horse breed looks back on a tradition as long
as the Trakehner. In 1732 Prussian King Frederick William
I founded the stud in Trakehnen in East Prussia, a region
now partly belonging to Russia and to Poland. Thoroughbreds
were frequently used in the Trakehner breed.
Of course riding horses those days meant mainly the production
of horses suitable for the cavalry. Sound, willing and with
lots of stamina. Until the 1920’s no-one really thought
about tempi changes, oxers or three-day-events – although
eventing has its roots in hunting and the state stud at
Trakehnen was the scene of many cross country steeplechase
come hunter competitions.
Early in the 20th century there was the overwhelming number
of 25,000 mares and 1500 breeding stallions registered with
the Trakehner association. The main stud Trakehnen itself
being home of more than 1200 horses.

A typical young horse competition at
Trakehnen – these were three year olds that were broken,
then hunted and sold through the stud. These sales were
partly the model for Hans Joachim Köhler when he established
the Verden Sales in the 50s.
After World War II
The War to end all Wars as British propaganda would have
it, achieved its most important goal, that was to destroy
the Hitler regime in Germany and bring peace to all the
nations that were occupied by Nazi troops. But it seemed
for quite a while that it was also the war to end the Trakehner
– the breed that before 1941 was not only one of the
largest horse populations in Germany but the one with by
far the most modern breeding programme.
In those pre-WW2 years hardly any of the other famous studbooks
of today focused on the production of sport horses. Holstein
and Oldenburg kept their eyes on coach horses and on working
horses, Hannover was producing horses for the cavalry and
Westphalian farmers would collapse with laughter at the
suggestion of breeding horses with only one purpose, namely
to put a saddle on and ride either dressage or even jump
over fences. If there were horse shows in the 1940s then
the broodmares that day by day pulled carts or ploughs would
have to serve as show horses on weekends.
In 1936 the Olympic Games took place in Berlin and Trakehners
won six gold medals. Kronos and Absinth won individual gold
and silver medals in dressage and Nurmi was the Olympic
champion in three day eventing. Pure bred Trakehner horses
can only have Trakehner, Throroughbred, Anglo-Arab or Arab
parents. This concept made the horses unique among all other
warmbloods in Germany, most of whom were at some stage in
their history bred for agricultural rather than equestrian
pursuits.

Tempelhüter – foaled in 1905,
an extremely successful sire standing from 1909 to 1932.
His female progeny were the most valuable mares
in the Trakehnen herd. What a modern type he was!

One of the Trakehner stars at the 1936
Olympic Games
– Absinth with Major Friedrich Gerhard.
Trakehners influenced several breeds, namely
the Hannoverians. The Hannoverian breeders made a huge step
in the direction of the modern riding horse when the half
Trakehner, Absatz, by Abglanz, turned out to be a top producer,
especially of horses for the dressage ring. Absatz’s
offspring weren’t always the picture perfect example
of a model horse – sometimes weak in the back, sometimes
not too active from behind and, yes, spooky – but
Absatz changed the world. All of a sudden elegant foals
with that certain look would appear next to mothers that
still looked like a mixture of drafthorse, dairycow and
lorry. The influence of Absatz is still to be found in stallions
such as Akzent II or Argentinus.
Staccato, top sire in the Celle State Stud and internationally
successful showjumper ridden by Eva Bitter is also of Trakehner
Origin, his pedigree via Spartan/Servus/Sesam/Senator can
be traced back to Semper idem by Dampfross.
But first another short step back into history. In the 1950s
famous dressage riders in Germany such as Willi Schultheiss,
Harry Boldt or Otto Lörke would ride Trakehner dressage
horses, in the 70s and early 80s Gabriela Grillo’s
Ultimo was Germany’s top dressage horse, team gold
winner at the Montreal Olympics. Hirtentraum with Uwe Sauer
as well as the gorgeous black mare Kleopatra, one of the
last horses competed by George Theodorescu, were perfect
examples of good sporthorses.
In eventing it was Habicht ridden by Martin Plewa, who later
became Germany’s eventing team coach, who helped the
Trakehner horse to gain a good reputation among sport riders.
Finally Abdullah, Conrad Homfeld’s legendary grey
stallion and Anne Kursinski’s Livius were international
perfomers branded with the double elk horn, the registered
trademark of German bred Trakehners.
So far a story of success – literally a rise like
a Phoenix since the Russians left hardly more than ashes
in the once flourishing main stud of Trakehnen. But of course
there is a but, a BUT in capital letters. Trakehner breeding
politics definetely took the wrong path in the 1970s. The
idea of having something special led to a false goal - beauty.
It was no longer performance that was important but beauty.
More and more Trakehner breeders concentrated on beautiful
faces, straight limbs and forgot about things like rideability
or jumping ability.
By the end of the 70s some of the wiser Trakehner breeders
realized this was a problem - maybe as serious as the situation
after World War II. Stallions with weak toplines, flat movements
and no eagerness to work became extremely popular. If the
progeny of these kind of fashionable stallions would refuse
to work then Trakehner breeders would often blame the problem
on the rider: “He’s just not able to ride something
so special and sensitive as a Trakehner”. One of the
biggest problems was stiff legged movements without any
knee action. Horses that move very flat, more like skaters
than the dancers required in the dressage ring.
Stiff and beautiful were the distinguishing features and
no other warmblood breed was interested anymore in the Trakehner
horse. At the same time, the number of sport riders looking
especially for a Trakehner declined, since with the decline
of the Trakehner breed, came the rise of other warmblood
breeds such as the Westphalians, Oldenburgs, Hanoverians
or Rhinelands. The absence of jumping ability in the Trakehner
breed became proverbial in the 1980s, no matter how high
and well Abdullah jumped.
However there were still a lot of eventers that did a good
job. For example, Habicht whose Anglo-Arab sire Burnus was
ridden by Dr Reiner Klimke early in his career while he
was still an event rider. Thirty years later it was Klimke’s
daughter Ingrid who competed Windfall by Habicht in international
3 star events. The graded stallion, whose dam Wundermaedel
is a pure bred Thoroughbred, was reserve horse for the 2000
Olympics in Sydney for the German team, before being sold
to the US to continue his career with Darren Chiacchia.
He won the Pan American Championships, and was a member
of the bronze winning US-Team at the 2004 Olympic Games
at Athens. Individually he finished 12th.

Dressage stars in the 1980s –
Gabriela Grillo and Ultimo!

The modern Trakehner eventer in action
- Windfall and Darren Chiacchia.
By far the most important among Habicht’s
sixteen graded sons is Sixtus. An eye-catching black standing
at 16.1 hands, his career started at the grading where he
was awarded a premium and was named best jumper of the year.
As a six-year-old Sixtus went into training with Gilbert
Boeckmann who qualified him for the World Young Jumping
Horse championships in Zangersheide.
With a total of more than 50 placings in 1.40 metre classes
and four wins, Sixtus is something special in the Trakehner
breed. His jumping index based on the scores the offspring
received at mare inspections, horseshows and gradings is
138 points – no other Trakehner stallion was able
to come close to that in the past decade. Sixtus seems to
know of his outstanding position – he’s a male
diva so to speak.
Sixtus sired Altefled’s Rob Roy who after winning
the Bundeschampionat is now on his way to the top in German
eventing, already winning regional championships.
Among the first stallions to be graded there was Buddenbrock
– another black modern Trakehner who found his new
home at Hoerem stud with the Poll family of very influential
breeders. Buddenbrock stood next to legendary halfbred Consul.
Buddenbrock was competed from novice to intermediate level
in 3-day-eventing and stood for a couple of months at German
eventing team member, Andreas Dibowski’s barn. “Dibo”
placed Buddenbrock at the Bundeschampionat. There is continuity
in that like his grandfather Sixtus and great grandfather
Habicht, Buddenbrock throws offspring that excel in both
showjumping and dressage.
At the millenium approval Buddenbrock caused quite a stir
when out of his first crop, the champion stallion King Arthur
and the premium stallion Connery were graded. King Arthur
was purchased by Petra Wilm, a member of Germany‘s
B-squad dressage and president of the Trakehner association,
for 350,000 Dmarks. Connery remained with the Polls who
raised both stallions and is now, although still standing
at Hoerem Stud, listed as Hannoverian state sire and can
be booked via the Celle state stud. A picture perfect example
of a refined Trakehner stallion Connery was in the eyes
of Dr Burchard Bade, Celle state stud director, a perfect
match for those Hannoverian mares that lacked that certain
something often referred to as “modern”. So
far Connery has not yet proven to really fulfil these expectations
in the Hannoverian breed but in his home studbook he was
able to present a very nice and subtle bay stallion, the
reserve champion of the 2005 grading.
King Arthur, also already sire of several graded sons –
one of them a sublime bay presented at the 2005 Oldenburg
grading by Paul Schockemöhle - who in former times
would never even consider buying a Trakehner, another example
of how the evaluation of these horses has changed in the
past years! King Arthur made it to the finals of the World
Championships of Young Dressage horses and is already internationally
successful in the small tour.
Buddenbrock also sired another champion stallion, In Flagranti
now owned by the Bavarian State Stud Schwaiganger south
of Munich. For quite a while it seemed Buddenbrock would
sire more approved stallions than sport horses but in the
past two years the number of Buddenbrock offspring successfully
shown on renowned horseshows has increased. One of them
is Hinnerk owned by Holger Schmezer, Germany’s national
dressage coach and ridden by Carola Koppelmann.
Axis is another son of Sixtus who was accepted by the Hannoverian
association after finishing a very good performance test
in Neustadt/Dosse. This black stallion, who is owned by
British pair Sean and Marc Reade of Bluewood Trakehners,
was the best jumper of his grading and it was his son Hirtentanz
that won this title in 2005 – no doubt this Trakehner
is the complete opposite to every prejudice one may have
against Trakehners. Not a real beauty this colt jumps like
a Holsteiner, the kind of a horse you can easily imagine
to meet as “Eurocommerce Hirtentanz” in any
class of an international show.
Even more famous among sport riders but never really so
popular as Sixtus was Consul by the Thoroughbred Swazi.
Australians may know Consul as sire of Ricky McMillan’s
Crisp who is far from the only top dressage horse that this
bay stallion produced.

Sixtus – the Trakehner ‘diva’
who despite his good looks can really jump!

Hinnerk and Carola Koppelmann at last
year’s Bundeschampionate.
Consul was a very handsome horse with a
beautiful big eye and a stunning presence. Hubertus Poll
would only put a rope around the stallion’s neck and
take him out to show him in the yard of Hoerem stud where
Consul did what was his duty. He stood like a monument,
even if mares or foals would appear. A true gentleman, really
awesome – yet Consul’s offspring seldom showed
the beautiful head of their father (Crisp of course is a
notable exception.) In fact you don’t want to talk
about mules but big heads and long ears were often a typical
mark for Consul’s crop. At the beginning of his career
the Consul-mania worked well and many graded stallions,
even champion stallions seem to secure the line for the
generations to come, but at the moment, the number of stallions
carrying this special blood is decreasing.
The breeders had a problem. Ever tried to sell a Trakehner
foal with a plain head? Ever tried to get good scores at
the inspections? Forget about it! So many breeders used
other stallions, neglecting the fact that Consul sired international
performers for dressage and eventing –(Vilano was
in the German eventing team at the WEG in Jerez 2002) and
a large number of at least fairly good showjumpers.
It was in his last years – Consul died in 2000 – that
the quality of Consul’s daughters became popular especially
in Hannover. Hoerem Stud is only half an hour away from
the Hannoverian headquarters in Verden. Hannoverian Champion
stallion Don Frederico, right now the talk of the town because
of his outstanding offspring, is out of a Consul dam and
so is Celle state stud’s Don Vino. Finally it was
Donnerberg TSF who supported his sire’s reputation:
with more than 150 wins in Prix St Georges and intermediate.
This gelding with the spectacular trot was another example
of the kind of Trakehner one just would love to ride. At
least once. Across the diagonal in extended trot...