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White Marah was our first pure bred mare, and was chosen to compliment Odin. She is by white Diamond, out of Diamond Marah. She has been shown very lightly, and although she was badly scared when we got her, she has done very well! in 2000 she was silver medal winning mare at the Northern Group c show. She is mainly Crabbet with a Polish/Egyptian outcross, but check her pedigree for yourself by clicking her button. It is with the deepest devistation that we saddley report our loss of this wonderfull foundation mare. Marah quietly passed away after a very short illness in the early hours of the 27th of May 2006. She is the second mare of ours to pass on this year and our heart are extemely pained at their loss. Marah is very sorely missed!!
Silver Sunfire
Silver Sunfire has been a wonderfull addition to our stud. She is nearly 100% Crabbet, by Bremervale Emperor, out of Sunset (bred at the Crabbet stud. Again, she has been an ideal match for Odin. Her pedigree will follow shortly. With heart felt sadness we report the loss of this wonderfull mare who was put to sleep by injection on the 27th of January 2006. We decided to bury her amongst a row of Silver Birch trees as we thought it fitting for her name. Her lagacey lives on at our stud through her son CAS Silver Phoenix.
Royal Quest
Royal Quest has proven to be a very good mare for this small stud. She is 75% Crabbet and 25% Polish. She is by Ormolu and out of Gromin. She is now retired from stud but we are retaining her last daughter, Sunean silver aquarius, to carry on the lines.
Sunean Harleys Cleopatra
This is a part bred mare that we rescued. She was in foal when we got her and produced a very flashy colt. Sunean Cleopatra's legend (pictured with mum ) went on to be a very successfull show horse and was never unplaced in 13 outings. It was with great sadness that we had to have this wonderfull mare put to sleep at the beginning of 2004. She had a blind eye when we got her, and over the years it gave her more and more trouble. Unfortunatly, due to her mistreatment, she would not allow us to treat the eye, and would not let a vet near her. It was suspected that the eye had turned cancerous. So after four good days of weather, on the day it broke and rained, we let her go. When she had gone, the clouds broke and a rainbow stretched over the valley. My youngest son said that God had put it there for Cleo to go to heaven! Goodbye sweet mare, you are greatly missed by your friends in the field, and by all of us!!
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