Lunchtime

Born 1970, height 16.3 hands

      Menow
    Tom Fool Gaga
  Silly Season   Strait Deal
    Double Deal Nonats
Lunchtime      
      Hyperion
    Hornbeam Thicket
  Great Occasion   Sunny Brae
    Golden Wedding Flighty Falls

Born in England in 1970, Lunchtime came to Austalia in 1974 and moved immediately to one of Australia's most famous Thoroughbred studs, Widden.

He was perhaps one of the most successful racehorse sires of all time - with progeny winning $11.5 million - and as a broodmare sire, with earnings of $13 million. On the track himself, he was a star, an unbeaten two year old, and a stakes winner of three races.

Lunchtime was by Silly Season, the British Champion Middle Distance Horse of 1965, and out of Royal Occasion, a winner at Ascot.

Perhaps less celebrated is Lunchtime's huge success as a sire of beautiful, good moving, show horses. His first hack mega-star was Galloping Gourmet - shown twice to Hack Championships at Sydney by Libby Laing (now Sauer) and Judy Dierks, and a Hack Champion at Melbourne with Libby. 'Gordon' was perhaps not the prettiest of the Lunchtimes but he was probably the most educated, and looked such a lovely ride.

The prettiest was probably Like-A-Lunch, a Pope Cup winner with Scott Adams, although Bruce Flood's Lunchbreak was another stunner. Another famous hack son is Debbie Bayley's Brazen Emperor. The most recent Lunchtime to star, is, of course, Denise Timmerye's Banquet, winner of the Victorian Horse of the Year title.

Galloping Gourmet and Libby Sauer

According to the staff at Widden, what made the Lunchtime foals special was their very placid nature - no doubt a huge help in the show ring, and this is a characteristic that Bruce Flood emphasises:

"Temperament and movement make them so successful - most are good movers and have reasonably cool temperament, they show the stamp of the sire. Some sires have one horse that goes well in the Show Ring, but there have been a string of Lunchtimes, and they have been winners of big classes, Horse of the Year and Royal shows. If you were going to be super critical, you might say they lacked a little quality."

The last word goes to the poet laureate of Australian racing, Les Carlyon who remembers the horse well:

"I saw Lunchtime several times up at Widden Stud. To me, he was the nicest stallion there, even though he was in the shadow of the fashionable sires Bletchingly, Marscay and Vain."

"He was long and stretchy (unlike a lot of Australian bred sprinters), a liver chestnut who carried a lot of flesh. The stud workers would always joke that he was well-named. He had a sweet nature which he passed on to his progeny. Spartacus, probably the best sprinter racing at present, is a grandson of Lunchtime (through Snippets). He's pretty typical - long, heavy-set through the body, a broad forehead, and very intelligent. Rick Hore-Lacy, his trainer reckons he counts the laps when they go for a walk and nips him on the elbows when it's time to go home."