

They come in all shapes and sizes, but horses carrying the Aberlou bloodline
have some things in common: good movement, jumping technique and heart.
The Northland-bred stallion sired some of New Zealand's best eventers
- most famously Messiah, Delta and Alibi - and although he died in 1996,
Aberlou's name continues to appear with remarkable regularity in show
jumping and eventing programmes.
A grey 16.1hh Thoroughbred born in 1970, Aberlou was bred to race by the
Jacentho family, but when George and Kath Cann bought him in conjunction
with Don Harrison and Neville Clotworthy as a five-year-old, the horse
was still unbroken. Aberlou's father, the English horse Aberconway (by
Abernant), was known as a sire of good jumpers, and his dam, Patricia Lou,
was by Revelation, who bred many champions, including the Auckland Cup
winner Rev. Aberlou was never shown or raced.
"We'd seen a horse by Aberconway jumping at Whangarei Show, and he was the
most glorious jumper. He won the champion hunter there three years in a row," recalls
Kath Cann. "We thought that was the style we wanted, and so we bought Aberlou
with the idea of breeding some jumpers."
"It was the first time we had ever tried standing a stallion,
and Ab was very easy. We just used to leave him loose and take the
mare up to the rails. He would tease the mare over the fence, turn
a circle and wait for us to open the gate. He would stand while
you took his cover (rug) off, serve the mare, give a big sigh, and
walk straight back out the gate again. He was marvellous to handle."
Initially, Aberlou had a real mixture of mares, including some ponies.
Carol Byles' Messiah, later to become world champion, came from the first
year's crop.
George and Kath Cann stood Aberlou at Ohaewai for several years,
before Don Harrison had him at Dargaville, where he broke the horse
in as a ten-year-old. Aberlou was then sold to the Lands and Survey
Department, in Whakatane, where Ron Cornelius was manager, and used
him over various mares there. When the department was restructured,
the Canns bought Aberlou back, by which time he had developed something
of a reputation as a sporthorse sire, and was attracting better
quality mares. They stood him at Kaikohe, and kept him until he
was humanely destroyed at home, at the age of 26.
"There were a few knockers," says Kath. "One comment
was, 'He's nothing to look at - if he hadn't been grey, nobody would
have bothered with him.' But when his stock started to do well,
he went from having a dozen mares in a season to 60."
Kath's strongest memories of Aberlou concern his calm temperament, and
'lovely action', which he seemed to pass on to his progeny without fail.
"He had a wonderful nature. A lot of people said that his offspring were
fiery and difficult, but they were very sensitive, and if you treated them right
they were good."
Kataia-based Jo Shepherd-da Silva and her mother,
Gena, have bred and produced more successful Aberlou horses than
anyone. Delta was their first, and she arrived as a six-year-old
with a chronic bucking problem. Still a teenager, Jo was supposed
to school the mare on, but ended up keeping her, and she went from
novice to advanced in one season. Jo campaigned her in England before
handing the ride over to Blyth Tait. Delta had four foals, including
a filly by Westminster.
"Apparently Delta only started bucking after an accident (they
were getting on her and the saddle slipped), but it never went away,
and she was always paranoid. She'd never buck after you moved forward
a couple of steps, which was her saving grace; otherwise she probably
would have ended up in a tin, because she was quite dangerous."
"I started eventing her, not knowing that much and not knowing
she was ever going to be a champion, but I was really lucky to get
her. She used to do crazy things, like miss out strides, and she
was so bold, honest and clever. Blyth actually tried to buy her
off me when he was show jumping Messiah - he offered me $6000 for
her - but I said no, because she was pretty much all I had then.
Even Blyth says that, to this day, she was the best cross-country
horse he has ridden."
"Delta is small - she's 15.3 hh - and looking at her you wonder
how a horse like her could do what she's done. I would never choose
a horse like that now, because she is just not the type that you
want to take eventing."
After Delta's success, Jo and Gena started collecting more Aberlou
horses: Baxter, Curious George, Sylvester, Torcida and Eze are just
a few who've passed through their hands. Tactics (bred by Jocelyn
Bailey) won the Taupo CCI** and went advanced with Jo, before being
sold to Spain.
."People who are in love with Aberlou will say that every horse
was a fantastic jumper, but it wasn't. I would say probably a quarter
of them were fantastic jumpers, and about half were good jumpers.
They were very bold horses and I found them really easy to train.
Whatever you wanted them to do cross-country-wise they would just
do it, and most of them had good movement."
Aberjack: the laid-back stallion
Mark Todd had the stallion Aberjack, by Aberlou, in the United Kingdom.
He was bred in Northland by Anna Guy, and his dam was the B Grade
show jumper, Miss Charlie (Ranger-Relvaro by Alvaro). Aberjack was
a medium-size 16hh bay, and Mark bought him specifically to stand
as a stallion, because of his type and the fact that he was by Aberlou.
He went to advanced in the UK and was placed in all his starts,
but unfortunately didn't compete much; he developed a rare virus
that kept invading his system, although he did get to one three-day,
Blarney Castle CCI**, where he was second.
"He had the most amazing temperament, particularly for a stallion,"
says Mark. "You could take him anywhere, and anyone could ride
him. We used to compete him and cover mares at the same time. His
only fault was that he was sometimes too laid-back and lazy, and
I would have to ride him with sharp spurs and a long whip. He was
a great mover and had a fantastic jump with excellent technique.
He was also very brave across country."
Mark points out that Aberlou's sire, Aberconway, was by the phenomenally
influential sire Abernant, who can be seen in a lot of Warmblood
pedigrees; he was a used extensively to refine a lot of the heavier
Warmbloods. Aberconway's maternal grandsire, Big Game, was also
a recognised jumping influence.
"I wouldn't say any of the Aberlous I have known have been
great equine beauties, but they are mostly good types and athletic.
The only other Aberlou I had was a horse called Warratah. He was
a little, wiry horse who had quite a fiery temperament, but was
a totally brilliant jumper. He would have definitely been top class,
but sadly was not sound enough. I think the thing that stands out
about Aberlou horses is the fact that they all JUMP, and that is
a huge plus when you are trying to breed a horse for that specific
job."
Aberjack stood for a season at Clissy and Edward Bleekman's Whorridge
Farm Stud in Devon. Afterwards, they sent him to the States, where
he stood at Denny Emerson's Tamarack Hill Farm in Vermont.
"He has proved very popular over there, covering books of about
65 mares each season so Aberjack will literally have progeny all
over the world, which is very fitting for a horse of his ability."
The new guard
WEG squad member Kate Lambie has had two mares by Aberlou: Nufarm
Alibi (who competed at the WEG in Jerez) and Victoria's Secret,
who she evented to intermediate before selling her to the Cottle
yard as a show jumper.
"Both are quite similar, in that they are absolute bitches
to catch!" says Kate. Victoria's Secret had a halter on permanently,
and it can still take up to 25 minutes to lay a finger on Alibi.
While they are good to handle, says Kate, there is an underlying
sensitivity and nervousness and it takes them a long time to develop
trust.
Kate didn't know Alibi was by Aberlou when she bought her, and only
found that out afterwards. She saw the mare at a showjumping show,
and asked if she was for sale - she was. Kate says in some ways
'Lou' has been easy, but there have been hiccups along the way:
at one novice trial, she was stopped in front of a bullfinch drop,
and when re-started Kate intended to just pop over - instead Alibi
ballooned over the fence and, landing in a heap, gave herself a
fright, and ran straight through a fence. She also bolted off a
cliff with a previous owner.
Event rider and trainer Megan Finlayson, from Waimate North, has
several horses with Aberlou bloodlines, her most successful to date
being Lion Heart, one-time New Zealand national advanced three-day
champion.
"They can all jump and they can all move," says Megan
of the Aberlou horses. "But they are sensitive, so you have
to be a certain type of rider to handle them. And they either buck
or they don't - my mare bucks, but Lion Heart doesn't. All the ones
I've had anything to do with have been really special, and if they
like you, they are totally in love with you: all these guys are
waiting for me at the gate before I get there."
Megan believes they are probably late developers; although Lion
Heart went advanced as an eight-year-old, when he turned ten she
noticed a big development in his strength and brain: "You can't
rush an Aberlou - if you tried to, they would say no."
It would seem that the influence of Aberlou is on the wane - at
the 2007 NZ Championships at Taupo, only Lion Heart bore his name,
and surely Lionheart is due to call it a day.
Roll of Honour
MESSIAH (Blyth Tait): World Champion, Olympic
individual bronze, team silver. 16 hh brown gelding, out of the
Thoroughbred Portia. Produced to B Grade show jumping by Colin
and Penny MacIntosh. Amazingly talented, but described by Blyth
as having a 'fragile' temperament, and became increasingly difficult
at competitions as he grew older.
DELTA (Blyth Tait): 2nd Badminton,
2nd Burghley, 1st Scottish Open Championships. 16hh bay mare, out
of a Northland rodeo mare, bred by Ken Lewis. Produced and owned
by Jo Shepherd-da Silva. A quirky 'bush pony' with a four-beat
canter, owing to her dash of standardbred blood, but a cross-country
machine.
EZE (Blyth Tait): Grey gelding, bred
by Mary Glossop, and produced by Jo Shepherd. Advanced eventer,.
Quite different to Messiah and Delta: 'A good technician, but really
rather lazy.'
ALIBI (Kate Lambie): 5th Badminton,
1st Puhinui CCI***, 2nd and 4th Taupo CCI***. Bay mare. Started
her career show jumping, before Kate produced her as an eventer.
Dam was Della Rose, by the Irish Draught stallion, Kingsway Diamond.
On her dam's side, Alibi is a granddaughter of the prolific Thoroughbred
broodmare Rosica.
LION HEART (Megan Finlayson): 1st
Taupo CCI***, Young Event Horse winner. 17.1hh bay gelding. A laid-back
character; late maturer.
CURIOUS GEORGE (owned by Greer Drinkrow):
2nd Taupo CCI***, ridden by Vaughn Jefferis.
Also: Fair Child (advanced eventer, full sister to
Lion Heart); Gentle George (advanced eventer, gone to England);
Gemima Puddleduck (winning Grand Prix show jumper); Tactics (advanced
eventer, sold overseas); Aberrose (intermediate eventer); Six Thirty
(intermediate eventer); Mrs Robinson (intermediate eventer, sold
overseas); Greenwood (intermediate eventer, sold overseas); Cause
For Applause (show jumper); Aberwho (show jumper); Abacus (show
jumper); Aba Chief (show jumper and intermediate eventer); Abalon
(champion hack and hunter); The Gambler (champion hunter and intermediate
eventer).
Keeping the line alive: commercial stallions by Aberlou
Abba's Lad
16.3hh brown stallion, standing at Cheleken Stud, Matakana. Dam: Thoroughbred
mare by Lord Sassinoff. Bred by Ron Cornelius. Helen Rattray, of Cheleken
Stud, describes him as very laid-back, and an excellent mover.
Progeny: Barbara Wallis' advanced eventer, Tried 'n' True; Jayne Craike's
open medium dressage mare, Showfields Sunrise. Some offspring have also
been sold overseas.
Zabalu
17hh grey stallion, standing at Kia Kaha Stud, Waimauku. Dam: Tinseltown,
by Super Stud.
Owned by Diane Seager. Prior to this season, he stood at Croftlea Stud
in Canterbury where he was well patronized by sporthorse breeders.
Masterplan
16hh grey stallion, standing at Paihia, owned by Debbie Langwell. Dam:
Conquest (TB), by Frontal out of an Abridge Member mare.
Waingata
15.3hh grey stallion, standing at Martin and Karen Gow's Craighaven Stud,
Whakatane. 7/8 TB, 1/8 stationbred. The stud's foundation sire, and father
of many of their current broodmares.