by Denise Hearst Stuart and Sue Larsen might have one of the most disciplined breeding programs in the Arabian horse world: it boasts two horses — a multi-National Champion Stallion, Polidoro FC, whom they bred from a purchased embryo, and a three-year-old filly, Kamila FC (*Kanz Albidayer x A Special Versace). But of course, it wasn’t always so. Stuart’s earliest memories of horses trace to his childhood growing up on a sheep farm in New Zealand’s North Island in the Waikato Valley. There were plenty of dogs and plenty of horses around, and Stuart rode nearly every day. “It was a hilly farm, and the horses were better at covering the country than vehicles,” he says. “We used horses to get a job done. They were work horses; not pretty.” Meanwhile Sue grew up owning and competitively showing many different breeds of dogs and riding hunters. She had always admired the beauty of Arabians through friends involved with them and the admiration of their stature and beauty was the catalyst for her involvement in Arabs. Fifteen years ago, while they were breeding and campaigning some of the top Rottweilers in the country, they took a side trip to visit an Arabian farm. “We had a good friend, Perry Payson, who had shown our dogs for many years and put the number-one titles on all four of our famous Rottweilers,” says Stuart. “And he’s into horses. We were at a dog show in California, and he suggested we go look at Arabians just for fun. Turned out it was a set-up between Perry and Sue to get me involved in Arabians. We were going to look at this really pretty mare at Sheila Varian’s, Kleopatra Jullyen V (*Jullyen El Jamaal x La Kijan), who, as it turns out, already had my name on her stall door. Perry’s got a very good eye. He’s been breeding dogs for a long time. Facing page: The 2010 stallion Polidoro FC (DA Valentino x *Abha Palma).
And he knows the Arabian horse pedigrees very well. “So we purchased our first Arabian mare, had some success showing her in Regional shows and in Canada, and we bred her to stallions like *Marwan Al Shaqab, Marajj and Enzo who gave us some nice foals over a short period of time, all of whom went on to be good performance horses. “When we lost Kleopatra in 2012, we purchased the yearling filly Valori TRF (DA Valentino x Satin Chall LL). We showed her to 2009 Scottsdale Champion Junior Filly, and then sold her. By then we were hooked on halter. “Both Sue and I realized that the two disciplines, Rottweiler and Arabian breeding, had a lot in common. We were looking for a new venture, so we moved more seriously into buying and breeding Arabians. To be able to use the ‘eye’ we had developed through years of assessing conformation in dogs, to find and/or breed structurally correct Arabian winners, became exciting. “At one point we had 12 or 13 Arabians, but with that many it’s hard to focus unless Arabians are your full-time business, which they are not. So after some serious soul searching, we followed our instincts and sold most of our horses into great homes where they could be outside, ridden, and have family interaction, homes where we know they are loved, just as they should be. Now we can focus our energy and our resources on something more precise.” The Larsens got very precise at the 2009 Las Vegas Breeders show, where they were most impressed with *Abha Palma (*Marwan Al Shaqab x Abha Ghazali) the Reserve Champion Junior Filly. “She has one of the most gilded pedigrees and show careers out there, and of course conformationally, she is almost perfect,” says Stuart. “We were lucky enough to convince her owners, Al Mohamadia Stud, to let us purchase her only embryo in America. We bred her to DA Valentino (Versace x DA Love), a six-time U.S. National Champion and
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