|
![]() |
HOW
TO FIND A DAVENPORT HORSE
|
|
|
The primary purpose of this
fine directory, of course, is to help Davenport people to locate horses
and owners they want to know about. Other values are also important. This
directory gives a definitive picture of Davenport breeding for the present
time. It will be frequently used in study of the breed. It will also be
a valuable tool for researchers who are making a detailed study of the
breeding of the Davenport horse. |
|
|
|
|
Through work on the Directory,
some shifts in the structure of the Davenport herd became apparent. For
example, I saw my first Davenport horses in 1979, and Asara was in the
pedigree of only seven of the 38 foals born that year. In my database,
I have so far 30 foals from 1999. Of these, 18 descend from Asara, but
just four go to her in tail-female; the rest have Asara only through the
middle of the pedigree. In the last 23 years, the Asara descendants have
gone from a minority group to (a majority) accounting for more than half
of all Davenport foals produced. They are deservedly popular and include
some of the most spectacular Davenport horses produced in the last 30
years, but it is also important to continue to foster those groups that
do not trace to Asara. (Editor's note: In addition to its excellent
character as breeding stock, part of the reason for the expansion of the
Asara presence in current Davenport pedigrees may also be that the influence
of minor pedigree elements tends to spread in small, closed breeding groups,
such as the Davenports are.) |
|
As the Asara blood has spread, the Bint Ralf line has dwindled. As far as I know, the youngest living Bint Ralf descendant is 15 years old. There is some recent interest in breeding Bint Ralf horses, which is encouraging. [Editor's note: The Bint Ralf line has produced beautifully, but it has been limited by the loss of several key individuals from breeding.]
And since the Directory was published, it turns out we now have a younger Bint Ralf descendant. Jean Diaz is to be congratulated on "ReCapitulation," by Memoir UF out of Capucine, both out of the Bint Ralf daughter, Reminisce. "ReCap" is shown here, still damp behind the ears! |
![]() |
At one point I had wanted to identify breeding groups in the Directory, but this proved difficult. I finally dropped these designations. The divisions which seemed important and logical to me were not necessarily the same ones that other owners and breeders recognized. If non-Tripoli and non-Fasal horses were identified, why not also tag projects that other breeders are pursuing, such as Asara horses without June? It seemed a better idea to delete all mention of such groups and let people trace their favorite lines through the pedigree and progeny index. |
|
WONDERS OF ELECTRONICS |
|
"A full extended pedigree presents a wealth of information. From a breeding perspective, you start asking what information is important. One very useful piece of information is what percentage of the genes on average comes from each ancestor in the pedigree. By examining such statistics for potential breeding pairs, you can identify interesting preservation opportunities and perhaps better speculate on breeding outcomes. Calculating these percentages by hand is tedious and error-prone. Having a copy of The Annotated Quest, I realized that at least a dated list of each Davenport horse and the sire and dam existed as an appendix to that text. Lo and behold, after a brief email to Jeanne Craver, I hit the jackpot with an up-to-date electronic copy of Robert J. Cadranell's table of Davenports, with the sire and dam of each horse. I wrote a simple 'C' program that linked all of the entries, thereby displaying a full pedigree back to the desert imports for each horse. This program quickly grew to include the ancestry percentages, number of crosses to each ancestor, and the tail-male, tail-female, and offspring for each horse. Web-based output quickly followed. A few minutes of CPU time resulted in a complete web page for every Davenport horse in the data base. These web pages are now available at cutlass.gtrep.gatech.edu/randy/horses/pedigree. Hopefully other Davenport owners will find this useful for exploring breeding strategies or just looking at history. "In addition to the individual information for each horse, the program now supports side-by-side comparison of the ancestry of multiple horses.... The above web page should provide a form that will allow you to enter a set of horses (by registry number) and get a single table with comparative ancestry percentages for them. An interesting output of this program is to run the comparison for all of the horses foaled after a certain year (say 1981) to compare all of the current Davenports with their ancestry...This comparison shows that 13 out of 1005 descend from the second foundation stallion RALF and 994 out of 1005 have the 1922 stallion HANAD in their pedigree. "Obviously this is a work in progress. I plan to add features... I'll happily consider... suggestions... I would be happy to burn a couple of dozen CDs and maybe distribute those for a token fee through the Davenport Conservancy...This might benefit people who prefer a faster, off line version, or just don't want to tie up the phoneline." Charge per CD
will be $7.50 including domestic shipment, check to The Davenport Conservancy.
Address orders to Randy Abler, POB 785, Eden, Georgia 31307. Randy has
continued to refine and expand on his theme, so the above website is hardly
static. |