Grannus
| Graf | |||
| Grande | Duellfest | ||
| Graphit | Frustra II | ||
| Frutana | Arabia | ||
| Grannus | Ernst (Lohengrin?) | ||
| Ozean | Selma | ||
| Odessa | Gotthard | ||
| Gitta | Freieche |
Born 1972 - Died 1993 - Black - 168 cm
Breeder – Ludwig Decker
First, let’s clear up the confusion around his
name. Grannus on official German FN records is referred to as Grannus-Granit.
He was called Grannus when he was born but was renamed Granit when
he was licensed in Westfalia before Heinrich Klatte bought him and
brought him to Oldenburg. There was already an Oldenburg Granit,
so his official name became Grannus-Granit.
The black son of Graphit was another of those great sires who was
not a star of his performance test – indeed he scored a miserable
86.46 to come 58th out of a class of 66 at Adelheidsdorf back in
1976.
Luckily for the showjumping world, his owner Heinrich Klatte had
faith in the stallion and his two sons, Guido and Ulrich Klatte
took Grannus out into the competition arena where he collected a
series of wins up to Advanced level.
Grannus only covered a few mares at the beginning of his career
but was extremely popular towards the end of his life and was bred
to as many as 300 mares a year. His final years were clouded by
scandal when blood tests revealed that he was not in fact the sire
of some 40 offspring registered in his name. The Studfarm Klatte
was severely disciplined by several studbooks for this irregularity
and for a period an outside inspector was appointed to oversee the
breeding of mares on their farm.There does seem to be a little re-writing
of history going on recently. In his article on Grannus in the 2004
edition of Annuaire Monneron, Pascal Renauldon records
what would seem to the latest 'spin' on the affair Grannus: 'the
inquiry proved that the person responsible was a rather thoughtless
head groom, who wanted to spare an aging stallion'. This 'explanation'
was never offered at the time, and certainly those who visited the
stud during the period and observed the high tech, high volume flow
of horses through the mare examining barn to the insemination shed,
will find this explanation just a little difficult to swallow!
Nonetheless, Grannus was certainly a hugely important sire. He had
11 licensed stallions registered with the Hanoverian breed alone
and worldwide some 80 approved sons. He bred 540 daughters who are
registered broodmares, of which 46 received State Premium awards.
He sired some 800 competition horses who earnt just under DM4 million
in prizemoney! Showjumping stars by Grannus include Grannusch (John
Whitaker), Grand Plaisir (Ludger Beerbaum), Governor (Phillipe le
Jeune), Golo (Gerd Wiltfang), Gaston M (H. Sprunger), Burmah Grand
Slam (Nick Skelton), Top Gun La Silla (Jan Tops), and many others.
In the Hannoverian Stallion Book for 1999 his progeny in the mare
tests record a negative dressage rating (96) but as might be expected
record a very superior 156 for their jumping abilities. The Grannus
offspring were never the best types and the studbook inspection
breeding values record a negative 98 for limbs and a 96 for correctness.
Once again, it should be pointed out that the Hanoverian Verband
has discovered a negative correlation between good scores on these
inspections and ability to jump – even down to saddle position
– and Grannus proves this once again with a negative score
of 96 for saddle position and 90 for frame.
Grannus has not been a great success as a sire of sires, and although
he has had a large number of stallion sons, only Graf
Grannus appears to be carrying on his legacy. Indeed, Grannus'
legacy may live on more through one of his daughters - Gigantin
- the dam on the increasingly important stallion, For
Pleasure.
Grannus’ dam Odessa was a very modern type, and a good breeder
as well, in 19 years of breeding she produced 15 foals, the last
when she was 22. Bred to the Grande son, Graphit, the resulting
foal carries a double cross of the famous Hanoverian Goldschaum
xx ‘G’ line since Odessa on her dam’s side is
out of Gitta by the famous Gotthard. However on Odessa’s top
side, there is more confusion. A recent article in the Z
magazine (June/July 2003) by Henk Bouwman draws attention to
research by Claus Schridde, that marvellous fount of breeding information,
who questions whether Odessa’s sire Ozean was really by the
Trakehner Ernest, or by Ernest’s stablemate, the Holstein
stallion, Lohengrin. Certainly a study of photos reveals that Ozean
looks exactly like the Holsteiner, and nothing like the drawing
re-produced of the Trakehner. Poor old Grannus, even after his death,
parentage issues continue to dog him!
In the survey of the world's top 75 jumping sires that appears in the French publication, Monneron 2007-2008, compiled by Bernard le Courtois (visit www.brullemail.com), Grannus occupies 13th place with 16 winners.