When I asked my friend, Britta Züngel of the
Hanoverian Verband, to introduce me to Werner, the middle one of the three brothers
Schockemöhle, she assured me, 'he is a walking Encyclopaedia of breeding'
and she promised, 'such an interesting man'.
As usual, Britta was right. Werner Schockemöhle is perhaps not as famous
as Paul and Alwyn, but few people in the world can speak as knowledgeably, or
with such insight, about that fascinating quest to breed better and better performance
horses.
We met Werner one cold, rainy morning at his stud near Mühlen. Everything
about his set-up speaks of real horsemanship, the buildings aren't built to
dazzle but to do the job well and safely, and his stable foreman is just so
careful, gentle and effective in his handling of the young stock, it's a joy
to see them brought one by one into the school for our inspection. But it is
not the youngstock we've come to see.
Ever since Germany's largest colt buyer - the mega dealer, Herman Ramsbrock
- put Alabaster at the top of his list of current German dressage stallions,
we've been aching to see the horse. We know that he won his five year old class
at the Bundeschampionat back in 1994 and that since then he has been producing
some very highly priced babies, now is our chance to see him in the flesh, and
we are not disappointed.
He is a horse of the perfect modern type. A beautiful head, wonderful front,
and real power and athleticism in his frame. Our questions start to tumble out,
but no, before we can talk about his stallion, we must go back to Werner's study,
where we can sit, a copy of the pedigree before us, with Werner pulling volumes
from the walls of his library to show us photo and pedigrees of the horses that
make up Alabaster.
When the rest of the dressage world is focussed on the current breeding stars
- the Hanoverian W line, Donnerhall,
Rubinstein,
Alabaster is refreshingly different in his line. This is in accord with Werner
Schockemöhle's breeding philosophy.

Alabaster
"I believe that it is not right to first look at the pedigree. I would
also accept a horse of the 'W' line, if the horse is, in my opinion, the right
horse. I prefer some lines, no not lines, I prefer the progeny of some special
stallions. When I know the stallion, I know his pedigree and I know his progeny,
and I have a good idea of what his progeny will be like."
"Sometimes it is a little wrong to think only in lines. Sometimes when
you see a horse, the influence comes much more from the bottom line. You sometimes
have horses, that they say 'this horse comes from the W line' but when you see
the horse you know that he has been produced from the influence of the genes
of the other lines on his pedigree."
What are the prime influences on the stallion Alabaster?
"It is a combination of several genes. The special factor with Alabaster
is the clear influence in his phenotype (NB. The Macquarie Dictionary defines
phenotype as "the observable hereditary characters arising from the interaction
of the genotype with its environment. Organisms with the same phenotype look
alike but may breed differently because of dominance.) from Abglanz, but he
doesn't have some of the mistakes that are usually associated with the Abglanz
pedigree. "
"For twenty years I have judged the foals in the areas to the north, near
Varkstead, where Argentan stood. Then he was the most important stallion - for
type - in Hanover. He made fantastic types, but he had the mistakes of Absatz/Abglanz.
He was not so good in the shoulder, and often he was not good in the front legs,
especially the fetlock and the pasterns. The fetlock was often not large enough,
it was too light, and the pasterns were too short. Together that shortens the
life of the front leg when it is used hard in the sport."
"Alabaster doesn't have this fault. He has a top front leg, and that is
the influence of several other genes in his pedigree. For example, Busoni, the
Thoroughbred horse, who is Alabaster's great grand sire on the dam's side, and
was also the grand-sire of Gigolo. He was not discovered while he was a breeding
stallion, he was never even discussed because he didn't produce the best types.
When he was gone, suddenly came Gigolo, and suddenly Busoni was interesting.
Alabaster is also influenced in his pedigree by the famous horse, Ferdinand.
Ferdinand was a famous producer of showjumpers, but sometimes he also produced
very good dressage horses."
"The first Olympic horse of my brother, Alwyn, who won a team gold in 1960
at Rome, was Ferdl by Ferdinand. Ferdinand produced horses with a good canter
and good walk. Reiner Klimke's Olympic dressage horse, Mehmed was by Ferdinand.
Another with very nice style was Hugo Simon's Flipper - that was a horse, fifteen
two and a half hands, but with the heart of a lion."
"Ferdinand was a horse who only seldom found the right mare. He needed
mares with blood, and there were few mares with blood that went to him."
"When you look on the top line of Alabaster's pedigree, you find Akzent
11, this is Absatz by Abglanz. Abglanz comes again on the pedigree on the bottom
line, Aalfaenger is directly by Abglanz, and that is the explanation for the
special type."
"We often had problems with the walk with Abglanz progeny but this influence
is balanced by the influence of others - Waidmannsdank, another Thoroughbred,
and Busoni, and again Ferdinand. We see two times the influence of Ferdinand,
on the sire line, Fernanda by Ferdinand, and on the dam's side, Wendepunkt by
Wendekreis by Ferdinand, and then Wendepunkt is in-bred to Ferdinand. Einglass,
is by Marcio xx, a very good producer of dressage horses, and the next dam on
that side is by Ferdinand, so that is the third time we find Ferdinand. The
dam of Einglass, Farki, was in her time the best mare in the whole of the breeding
area. The sire of Einglass, Artos, was not so good but Farki was wonderful."
"Together this makes the special pedigree of Alabaster, and maybe I recognized
these things even more than the owner did when I bought him! He has the type
of Abglanz, and when you breed him to mares with a little Trakehner influence,
then it always comes back."
You like to breed him over mares of Trakehner breeding?
"No, I don't like so much the Trakehners. I come from another side of breeding,
my brothers only discuss showjumpers. I don't like horses that don't have the
possibility of being sporthorses. I think there are too many Trakehners without
the ability for sport. For some years, I think the Trakehner breeders had it
wrong in their heads, they thought when they had the nicest looking horses,
they had the best horses. That was a mistake."
"In the middle of the 1950's the breeding of horses for agriculture was
finished. Along came the tractor and all the breeders had to change their aims.
For example in Oldenburg and Holstein they produced very heavy coach horses
and for working on the farm. These horses were often over at the knee."
"The Trakehner always had horses that had very flat gaits. It was discussed
when I was a young man, and even then, I thought it was a terrible mistake.
The flat gait is always wrong. The flat gait is always combined with a strong
back, not enough elasticity. The Trakehner breeders however believed that the
high movement in the trot was extremely wrong, and the flat movement was extremely
good."
"In reality, we needed more elastic gaits, and they must come more forward,
not extremely high, but they must move over the knee - that is important for
a showjumper, and it is important for a dressage horse. It is simple. It is
necessary to jump clean, and it is important for piaffe and passage, but the
Trakehner breeders went the wrong way, and because it is a closed stud book,
it is very difficult for them to fix the problem."
"For the last ten years, they have been aware of the problem, but it is
difficult for them to find a solution because they have to use their own lines,
and that is the big problem for the Trakehners, in showjumping as well as dressage."
"For that reason, I don't like to see too much Trakehner on the pedigree.
When you look at Alabaster's pedigree, you find Absatz in the third generation,
and Absatz again in the fifth generation, and in my opinion that is close enough.
You still get the wonderful type, and the Absatz is balanced by the other influences,
Busoni, Ferdinand, Marcio, Waidmannsdank."

Waidmannsdank
"On the dam's line we have Landeck, a half bred horse, by the Thoroughbred
Lancelot - one of the best Thoroughbred stallions in the national stud before
the last war. Because he was so good, the central management took him away from
Celle, and put him into Trakehner breeding because they thought he was too good
for the breeders in our area."
How do you think Alabaster will breed with Thoroughbred mares?
I think he is easy to breed with Thoroughbreds.
For all he is famed as a breeder of Hanoverian horses, Werner Schockemöhle
is a huge fan of the Thoroughbred, and regrets that there don't seem to be as
many super Thoroughbred stallions available in modern times:
"Marcio was a horse that produced a lot of good dressage horses. There
has never again been such a Thoroughbred horse with such an ability to produce.
He was not too tough, he was finished when he was 18, a little early for a Thoroughbred
stallion, but he produced a lot of horses for the big dressage. Nearly every
horse he produced was good to ride. He produced only dressage horses, never
showjumpers."
Currently in Europe there is a huge debate between those who believe in the
older philosophy of breeding horses with both jumping and dressage abilities,
and those who suggest that the way forward is to specialise - either breeding
for jumping or dressage...

Marcio
"My idea as a breeder is to have a horse with the ability to do both, top
dressage and top showjumping in the one horse. I think the complete horse should
be able to do both. For example, Grundstein.
Grundstein produced top dressage horses and top showjumpers. That's breeding."
"Normally a horse will be as good as the breeder's ambition. It sounds
a little crazy, but think a little longer about it. When the breeders try hard
enough to come to the highest aim, then it is possible to reach it - that is
the history of breeding all sorts of animals. You can breed what you wish, you
must be clever enough, tough enough, strong enough, good enough to do it without
fear of the consequences, then it is possible. But people are too lazy in the
brain, they say 'we can only breed dressage horses' or 'we can only breed jumping
horses'. That's wrong."
"The horse that has good technique in showjumping, has more chance to show
good piaffe/passage. In my opinion the breeders are too lazy in the brain. You
must try harder. Alabaster is a good jumper too. I hate horse that can't jump.
I hate horses that cannot show a good walk, a good trot and a good canter."
"The most important thing is the walk. The next most important thing is
the canter - and then the trot. Most people, all they look for is the trot.
Often you can make the trot better with exercises, you can never make better
the walk, and normally you cannot improve the canter."
"I don't like the specialists. I talk sometimes with the Holstein breeders
and they sometimes have horses with only one gait - the canter. That, I am sure,
is the wrong way. The Holsteiners are producing at the moment the best showjumpers
in the world There is no-one in the world breeding community with a better knowledge
of the showjumping horse, but that is only part of the whole."
"My opinion is that the best showjumping stallion, must have the ability
to be trained up to at least 'M' standard dressage - on the other side, a dressage
producer, he must have the ability to go to a showjumping competition up to
at least level 'M'. It is crazy to produce breeding stallions who cannot even
walk, for most of the horse's life it is walking. I say the breeders don't try
hard enough, they must work harder."
"Only 0.5% of horses that go to the highest level of competition, most
horses must be good comfortable riding horses: good walk, good canter, clear
minded - and also the horse shouldn't be too tall. I always say, as long is
the horse, as short is the life! Tall horses have many orthopaedic problems."
Part 2: WE'VE ONLY JUST BEGUN!
Famous Hanoverian breeder, Werner Schockemähle looks at the future of Warmblood
breeding... Part 2 of an exclusive interview with Chris Hector
At the moment I think all German breeding societies are working together with
two exceptions - Holstein and Trakehner. All the other societies in the past
30 years have used the stallions of Hannover. Now the Holsteiners are using
Hanoverian blood a little bit, but the Trakehners not at all."
"All these breeding societies are trying to breed the same horse, but not
all are of the same standard. The Hanoverian is the highest standard for dressage
in the world. There is not another area where you would find such a lot of good
horses for dressage. Nowhere can you find so many good mares – in conformation
and in gaits - as you do in Hannover. But in Hannover, for the past ten to fifteen
years, they gave up on the idea to produce both dressage and jumping horses.
Now they have changed the political direction, and they try again to combine
it, and that is my idea."
"In Holstein, they put it also in their official breeding credo to produce a showjumping horse - but they must come back and pay more attention to breeding for a higher standard for riding. For the normal rider, they must produce better horses, with good walk, with good trot, and with a good brain, and with good canter and good showjumping, and not eighteen and a half hands high, then the vet is always on the farm. Good showjumping alone is not possible, because if they are not good showjumpers then they are only good for slaughter."
"A special breeder, like Leon Melchior or my brother, Paul, will produce a special horse - but to make that a breeding program for a couple of thousand people is another thing. You must produce horses that can be used by the normal rider."
"A showjumper must be ridden like a dressage horse in his training exercises, and it must be possible for the horse to learn these exercises. I think the jumping riders who have thought a little more about this problem, would agree with me. They also like horses that are easy to work"
"In the last twenty years, there has been real progress with some of the top riders trying to develop sport horse stallions, first as sport horses, and later to use them as stallions and make a profit out of this. You have a very famous horse in the sport, and he is a stallion, and he finishes his sport career, then he can be a very successful stallion. Sometimes they combine the two careers, For Pleasure, for example."
When we talk about 'type' - if you look at
some of those famous old mares, like Wolke, the more of
Dr Schulz-Stellenfleth who produced Wolkenstein I and II, then I'm not sure
'an old fashioned' mare like that would be welcomed today if you took her to
a mare show…
" No, they probably wouldn't like her very much. Dr Schulz is a very clever
man but he is a breeder of the old sort. He is not so often at a competition
- but he has top horses, with top abilities for sport."
But my question is, if at the more shows you keep selecting more elegant
more refined, more blood type mares eventually you will lose those big old mares
that have been so instrumental even with 'modem' stallions like Wolkenstein?
"I think ft is possible to have nice types with the ability to produce top sport horses. But you never must believe that the nice type is the only way to produce the sport horse. You can only discover the sport horse by using him. He must show ft. If the nice horse should be the best, then the Trakehners are the best horses!"
"I know the horses of Dr Schulz and they are not the best types, but he has produced top horses. Garibaldi, for example, I remember him well, he was a horse with a very difficult neck but he produced sport horses. Garibaldi died quite early, he has trouble with one leg - there were two Garibaldis, one and two. Garibaldi I was the bay - the important one was Garibaldi 11, the chestnut. Number one was a better type without any doubt, he was the winner of the grading. I tried to buy him on the first day of the grading. It was in the days of Dr Hartwig, and on the first day he said, 'ft is possible', on the second day, he said 'urn urn', and on the third day, he was the winning horse, and he was for the Landstallmeister."

Garibaldi II
"The better horse was Garibaldi II, he was
not such a nice type but he produced both showjumping horses and dressage horses.
The showjumping ability of Garibaldi only came from Grande. Grande was a little
horse - nowadays if he came to the grading he should never be accepted I'm sure.
But he had a lot of very good genes, and his sons were better than he, and the
grandsons were better."
Under the old system, the stallion was sent to the loco/ stallion station,
and the breeders used them - now the breeders can use any stallion they like,
and those unfashionable stallions, that random outcross doesn't get a chance...
"That is a very difficult question. I have been breeding horses for thirty years, and I will try to explain how in former times, a stallion came to success. He was in a local place, and was mated with his mares by natural cover. Then came foals, some were good, some average, and some not so good. The breeders had knowledge enough because the officials of the National stud told them what to do."
"Today we have a lot of breeders who know nothing about quality, they can only see that the foal has a nice neck or a nice head but they cannot judge the whole of the foal together. In earlier times, the breeders made again the mating with the mares that produced good foals, and average foals - but never with the ones that produced bad foals. So as the years went on, the number of mares that produced good and very good foals with that stallion, became higher and higher."
"Some stallions were not so good, and after a few years they were withdrawn. But the better horses by this method came to success, and the success went on for a long time, every year the numer of mares that fitted with him became higher, that was a way to produce a stallion."
"In earlier times, if I saw a pedigree, i
knew where the horse had been born because I knew the stallions and where they
were placed. Nowadays we are in one big breeding area, the crazy people make
matings by reading books, they make new matings when the foal is not born! in
96 my mare comes to that famous stallion, in 97 to that famous stallion, and
they don't look at the foal. Crazy!"
Today we have the problem where we have so many people who have read two or
three books about horses, they have owned a horse for two years - and they know
everything. No more questions, only answers. For thirty-five years I have tried
to understand something about breeding, and I feel I have more questions than
answers, every day I learn a new question. It's not so easy, and that's what
makes breeding difficult"
"In the past, I had good connections with the people at the National Stud, and they would give me a call and say, you must come, I can show you a good colt foal. I'd go and look, and it would be a good colt foal, maybe not so good that I had to buy it, but very often I would. Today, the young people at the national stud are very good at working in a laboratory, with microscopes. They make a breeding industry but they don't know a horse, and they say, oh we've got a wonderful foal', and I travel 200 kilometres, and I need to spend two seconds, then I say I must go home."
"In former times, only the local breeder had
a chance to use the famous stallions. So stallions like Ferdinand, or Absatz,
they were always fully booked. Nowadays using Al, any breeder can breed to any
stallion. Today, I see a pedigree, and I don't know where the horse has been
produced - and that makes breeding more difficuft."
"Now every breeder thinks, I must take my mare to the top stallion, and
often they don't realise that that stallion is not the right one for their mare.
Breeding is not only to combine famous horses, breeding is more, it is the dream
of looking to the possibility
of genes of the mare, then thinking how must I combine this pedigree with another
one to produce a good horse."
You have always been a fan of Thoroughbred blood?
"When I was a student, I imported Thoroughbred horses from Great Britain. I had special agents in Ascot and Doncaster who knew that Werner was interested in good types, not too expensive and good walkers."
"I would take my breakfast a little earlier, then on the airplane from Bremen to Heathrow in 55 minutes, a taxi for 20 minutes to Ascot, and could be home for my dinner that evening. I would buy four to six fillies, three years old, unraced... and they were not so expensive."
You didn't want them to race to test their character?
"Normally I can tell when I see how people handle their horses, and at that time ft was not normal to give them an injection to be quiet."
What do you think of the Anglo Arab influence in Hanoverian breeding?
"It's not so bad. I think the Arabs of 50, 60 years ago, came from Morocco, and they were heavier horses than today's 'drinker of the winds' with the high tail. Always Arabs have the face of Alabaster! But with their short croups it is very difficult now for the Arabs to produce good riding horses. In former times it was more easy, when the mares were very heay, to use Arab to make them lighter, with better heads."
"The Arab influence was only successful in the second, third or fourth generation."
"Today the Arab is too far away in their type and way of moving from the top riding horses. The tail is too high, 50% of them have a mistake in the breeding with the tail, so that ft is either to the left or the right that is a real mistake, breeders should not like a horse when the tail is not correct. We would never accept a young stallion at the classification with a mistake in the tail."
'In Holstein there was one Arab horse with some influence, Ramzes. He was a top horse, with the ability for showjumping or dressage, but Ramzes was not a classical Arab, he was by a Thoroughbred, Ritterspom, and his dam was Polish Arabian combined a little bit with Hungarian Arabian. I remember seeing Ramzes, he was a little horse, but the riding type. He was a very good jumper for the middle level competition, no more. He produced some Olympic horses for dressage and Olympic horses for showjumping, and he has a lot of influence right up until today. He was the big exception. He was in Westfalien breeding very important for dressage, and in Holstein, very important for showjumping."
"Nowadays, the Anglo Arab does not produce the top horses for sport. It doesn't come from Matcho. I have owned on Anglo Arab stallion, Paradin, by the same sire as Matcho. I owned him for 12 years, they were quite successful but we didn't get a good son from him."
Just before we visited Werner Schockemohle, we had been at the stallion licensing, where one of the most spectacular moving stallions also had the most spectacular 'winging' of its front legs. The question was, how much conformational defect will you tolerate?
"A little bit is possible. Nobody is perfect."
What defects are not acceptable?
"When it is too much, ft is too much. Normally the horse is going forward, but some horses are going in three dimensions and then it is not acceptable. I cannot tell what percentage, but you see it - I like a correct horse. People sometimes laugh about me, and say, he's crazy, but in former times ft was normal to only accept a correct horse as a stallion. But nowadays, they accept a little more. But in legs, you cannot make too many exceptions, ft will always come back in the progeny."
"I think now we have in our brain what is
an ideal horse, and we have nearly the same ideas. I think there will be real
progress because in the future there will not be a big change in what is wanted."
" I see one problem and that is the influence of the Thoroughbred. There
is no doubt that we need the Thoroughbred horse to produce our good riding horses,
because the Thoroughbred gives us strong muscles, and a good front leg."
"The Thoroughbred front leg is produced for the race track, and stays sound.
It's the right front leg for a riding horse. And we need the Thoroughbred to
keep the balance of canter, the natural quality of canter. That is why we need
the Thoroughbred - but now comes the problem - the Thoroughbred is not bred
with the thought of making a riding horse, he is bred to race, and that is quite
different In breeding riding horses we make progress tse we know what we do
- while the Thoroughbred breeders have no idea of the qualities of the riding
horse. There are many stories of disappointment with Thoroughbreds. Think of
Marcio, Der Löwe and Pik As - all stood in Hanover, but all three very
long ago. Now there is Lauries
Crusador, and I hope he has the ability to produce dressage horses. I must
say I have not seen a horse by him with such an ability to move as the horses
I have seen by Der Löwe and Marcio."
"There was a big difference between Der Lowe and Marcio, Der Lowe was only
successful with a few mares. He was not really a good producer of riding horses,
a lot of them were crazy, and a lot of them wore too little - it was with only
one or two mares that he really produced anything. Really it was only with one
mare, a mare of unknown breeding, and with her he produced Lugamo I and Lugamo
11. His influence is really only through Lugamo I and I I - and yet he was breeding
for 20 years."
"Marcio was a different case. He was not a top producer of stallions, but he was a top producer of dressage horses in the first generation. Lots of them were fantastic movers."
"From what I have seen so far of the Laurie's Crusador horses, they haven't
had the moving ability of the Marcio horses. Laurie's Crusador has been mated
with the top mares and it should be much easier for him to produce good horses
than in the time of Marcio. Marcio was often bred to very heavy and common mares."
"The problem is finding the right Thoroughbred stallion for our breeding. My opinion is that we must try to train the Thoroughbred stallion as a riding horse, and then when we can see him working as a riding horse, we know that his progeny will be riding horses. It is a hard way. Maybe you try ten and only one is good enough, maybe you try ten and none are good enough, but that is the only way to be successful."
"I want a Thoroughbred who produces good horses
in the first generation.. It is also lazy in the brain to say, 'okay in the
first generation you cannot use them, you must wait for the second and third
generation'. This is a wasteful, lazy way."
"It's a big problem finding Thoroughbred stallions, but you cannot breed
without them. Here if you breed without Thoroughbreds, then from generation
to generation, they become a little more heavy, and common. And you can only
fight against this tendency by using Thoroughbred blood."
"In Australia with all your Thoroughbred mares, that should give you special opportunities if you find the right stallions from Europe, life is too short to work with the wrong horses."
These two articles first appeared in the January and February 2000 issues of The Horse Magazine