Wyong Vets Breed and Olympic Medal Winner

Website Editor • August 13, 2021

Did you know that...

The silver medal (eventing) winner at the Tokyo Games was bred by the team at Wyong Equine Clinic?


How good was it to see the Australian Eventing Team win the Silver medal in Tokyo!
 
Front and centre on the podium was Shane Rose, who along with his equine partner Virgil, also managed to finish a creditable 10th in the individual medal. 

Virgil was bred by Wyong equine veterinarian Dr Brett Jones and his then partner Michelle Hasibar, with veterinarians Derek Major, Pete Tazawa and Rob Caska also having a hand (literally) in his conception.

 
Brett picked up Virgil’s dam North Pole from local trainer Steve Farley for “not much I don’t think” after a short and rather inglorious racing career.
 
“She seemed to have a nice trot and good temperament we thought she may make a good eventer for Michelle”, Brett said.  Michelle Hasibar is a well-known event and show hack rider.
 
North Pole’s eventing career didn’t really take off and, in a snap decision, Michelle decided to put the mare in foal. Chris Chugg’s stallion Vivant was selected with Derek Major collecting the semen at Agnes Banks and Pete Tazawa AI’ing the mare. The mare dutifully went straight in foal.
 
North Pole foaled at Brett and Michelle’s property in 2005. Michelle named the ungainly leggy colt Virgil after The Thunderbirds TV character Virgil Tracy.
 
“He was always character, even as a foal”, Brett commented. “Somehow he got separated from his dam and managed to find his way under (Ed: or in retrospect was it over?) a fence when only a few hours old.” The horse is still renowned as an “escape artist” and for making surprise appearances having extricated himself from his stable or yard.


LEFT: Brett and Michelle's daughter Alexandra "Buster" Jones, then only 5 years old, teaches a recently foaled Virgil the nuances of performing a "shoulder-in" movement.
RIGHT: Jumping has always been Virgil's highpoint 
 

                   

Michelle eventually tried Virgil as an eventer and soon realised he was something special. Like many of Vivant’s progeny, he was difficult on the flat with a big jump. At 17.1hh he was a handful of horse that needed containment and a strong rider.
 
Virgil was sent to their good friend Shane Rose to trial and possibly on sell. Shane was quickly on the phone offering to buy half of the then four-year -old. Brett would also later sell his remaining percentage in Virgil to the Roses.
 
Brett recalls that Virgil’s defining moment was when he won the CCI2* (= current 3*) in Adelaide as a very green six-year-old. He remembers the crowd gasping in disbelief when he jumped the 2
nd fence in front of the VIP tent, sailing well clear of the 1.15m fence. “It was my birthday and I had had a few drinks by then, but he seemed to clear the fence by half a metre!”
 
The vocal adulation continued for the rest of the round as Virgil soared over the jumps. Coming to the last fence, Shane and Virgil had a “bit of a miss”. The horse virtually Fosbury flopped over the fence, but somehow managed not to touch a rail.
 
After the Adelaide event, the Virgil team received big offers for the horse as a showjumper, but as Brett said, “It wasn’t quite enough to retire on”. Shane was keen to retain the horse and continue to event him.
 
Virgil went on to become a consistent performer on both the Australian and European high end eventing circuits. He was reserve travelling horse for the 2016 Rio Olympics but did not get a run.
 
There were some anxious moments for Brett and the rest of the Virgil Team watching this year’s Tokyo Games on TV.  Virgil’s dressage score initially being erroneously posted as 41. On a recount the correct score was found to be 31.7. He then set the tone on cross country by being one of the first of the day to clear under time. The horse was rated as the second-best showjumping horse in eventing at Tokyo, behind GBR's Toledo de Kersar (Gold team and Silver individual winner in Tokyo). 

Despite his advancing age (16yo), Virgil’s star is still on the rise and Rose believes he still has plenty to offer. With a shortened period until the 2024 Paris Games, let's hope Team Virgil will be back for another shot at that Gold.
 
“At the end of the day, it is another good story for life after racing for the Thoroughbred industry”, Brett said. “North Pole was no good as a racehorse. Her form page has zero’s everywhere.  She was also not much good as an eventer but went on to be the dam of a freak who won a Silver Medal at the Olympics. Many regard him as one of, if not the best of Vivant’s offspring and he is out of a thoroughbred mare.”


An inexperienced Virgil makes sure he is not going down at any of these 4* XC fences, jumping well clear of the 1.4m brush and 1.2m rolltop.

Shane Rose (centre), rider of Virgil, shows off his Olympic Team silver. Virgil was bred by Dr Brett Jones of the Wyong Equine Clinic.
 
Rose’s team mate the indominable 62yo Andrew Hoy (right), was the oldest male athlete at the Tokyo Games. It was Hoy’s 8
th Games and 6th Olympic medal, having won Gold three times (1992, 1996, 2000), silver twice (2000 and 2020/1) and a bronze (2020/1 individual). 

Swimming stars Ian Thorpe and Grant Hackett are the only Australian male Olympians to have won more.

 


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Hit TV cowboy drama Yellowstone has certainly brought reining into the lounge rooms of would-be cowboys and horse enthusiasts throughout the world. But for Wyong (NSW) veterinarian Dr Rob Caska , reining is more than just a weekly dose of the addictive series. It has been his passion since he first hopped on a reining horse four years ago. Rob, a senior associate at the Wyong Equine Clinic , grew up locally on the Central Coast of NSW where he progressed from Pony Club to eventing. He had always had Quarter Horses and previously dabbled in western disciplines such as western pleasure and halter classes. Rob jumped at the opportunity to try a client friend’s reiner about four years ago and that, as they say, was that. “I got hooked straight away. It’s very addictive”. “But it is a lot more difficult than I thought it was going to be. You need to gel with a particular horse. They are almost like border collies. Anticipating every move. They come out in the middle and are waiting for the next command. The slightest leg pressure can literally send them into a spin. And it is all done on a loose rein and normally one-handed.” Reining is sort of like dressage for western horses and is performed almost exclusively on custom-bred quarter horses . The primary international governing body is the US National Reining Horse Association (NRHA) whose guidelines for reining state that: “To rein a horse is not only to guide him, but also to control his every movement. The best reined horse should be willingly guided or controlled with little or no apparent resistance and dictated to completely.” Rob continued, “Most riders can go out and do a 1A dressage test and most reiners would fumble their way through a dressage test. But the converse does not hold. Dressage horses and riders could not do a reining pattern. They can’t do the sliding stops, they are not going to spin like they are meant to spin and you won’t be able to control them one-handed. You can pick up contact on a reiner but you can’t throw the reins away at a dressage horse.“ "Like everything, the good riders make it look easy. You are lulled into a false sense of security. But it is a lot more difficult than it looks and takes years of training. I used to think that I would be spinning and sliding within weeks, but it has taken years. Many riders give up because of the hours of training required. They get demoralised with their low scores and end up switching to cow-horse." "I have competed in a number of other disciplines in the past, but reining is a real adrenalin rush! It is sort of like the adrenalin of cross-country and show jumping combined with the technical complexity of high-level dressage. It is about having a horse that you guide one-handed. It requires a lot of attention to detail. I enjoy the adrenalin, but for me, the most important thing is the connection with the horse." Rob currently has one competition mare, a 9yo QH called ‘Mondure Lil Calgirl’, whom he purchased from the Mondure Quarter Horse Stud in Queensland and has been competing for about three years. “I even managed to make it to the Queensland State Reining Championships last year”. Rob did an embryo transfer on the mare the first year he got her and now has a two-year-old (by Shiners Voodoo Dr) that has been sent to legendary trainer Warren Backhouse to commence her education. “Unlike other disciplines, training takes 2-3 years”. "We had another exciting filly born this year through ET at Central West Equine by Inferno 66 . This foal lopes around the paddock and as it slows down she wants to slide. She naturally wants to slideback and turn. These horses are so purpose bred these days. They are just bred to do it. That I find remarkable. But probably not surprising, given we see similar cadence characteristics in dressage foals with no training. “For me the reining season kicks off in early January. Usually with a weeklong clinic with Warren Backhouse. Warren and his wife Carol are the gurus on the Australian reining circuit. They win the major Futurities every year. I train five days per week during comp season. The season finishes at the end of August, allowing me to be back home on Central Coast by 1st September for the breeding season." Rob balances his competition life with his busy work schedule and seven-year-old twins Elken & Mila who are both horse addicts and compete regularly on the show circuit. They are already beginning to show interest in reining. “My mare will go on to one of the kids.” [Parental tip: better clone her Rob!!]. The twins' regular show commitments means that Rob does not get to compete as often as he would like. He is looking forward to the forthcoming Reining Australia Nationals in June at AELEC (Tamworth). It will be the first time they have been held in two years due to Covid and consequently there will be record prizemoney on offer. " Yellowstone has certainly put reining on the map. It is massive. Even my dressage clients are now asking me for the videos of my spins and slides and take an interest in when I am competing." Hey Rob, why do all reiner riders look so straight-faced when they are competing? "I've never really thought about it. I guess they are so focused in that moment and on setting up for the next move. It takes a lot of concentration. Everything happens so fast and the horse cues are so light".
By Website Editor February 22, 2022
Nice to be out and about again on a few road trips with Randlab’s NSW Territory Manager, John Dalton. Unlike Sydney, the talk in the towns of Northern NSW was not about Covid, but firmly planted on the latest episode of the hit neo-Western TV series Yellowstone . Seems it is compulsory viewing amongst the equistocracy. As big a hit as the program is in Australia, it is a ratings blockbuster in the USA, with the season 4 finale setting a new record for a series with 9.3M tuning in for the live broadcast. The cast is headed by Kevin Costner, who plays family patriarch John Dutton but features several cameo performances by fabled reining horses and their equally famous riders. Amongst the stars of the series is Australian actor Jacki Weaver , who joined the cast in Season 4. Yellowstone is set on the fictitious Montana (US) cattle ranch of the same name sometime in the recent past. The series follows the fortunes of the Dutton Family and the misfortunes of most that they encounter as they try and manoeuvre their way through a changing world. It is the Wild West for modern times. A sort of Dynasty meets Underbelly meets Game Of Thrones with horses. The series showcases the seductive cowboy lifestyle beyond the Rule of Law. Cowboy life, where, like the ranch itself, life has no boundaries. The show was conceived, written, directed, executive produced and sometimes acted in, by real-life western riding enthusiast Taylor Sheridan . The series has seen Sheridan’s (who plays suave cowboy Travis Wheatley in the show) fortune rise from struggling actor to the hottest property in Hollywood. He is also the man behind the Yellowstone spin off series 1883 (a prequel), 6666 (a parallel series) and the reality cowboy show “ The Last Cowboy ” which follows the fortunes of real-life cowboys as they prepare to compete for the richest reining purse on offer at the “ The Run For A Million ”. 
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All records were smashed at the 2022 Nutrien Classic Performance Horse Sale & Campdraft held at Australian Livestock & Equestrian Centre (Tamworth) in early February with an aggregate of over $17M and 92% clearance rate. The average sale price was $27K with the sales topper being the three-year-old filly Bad In Black (Stevie Rey Von x Spinies Bad Girl) who set a record of $550K when purchased by the patron of all things equestrian, Willinga Park's owner Terry Snow . It was the first time that vendor Holly Clayden of Loomberah Lodge Performance Horses had sold at the Classic. The sale also saw records set for a four-year-old mare ( Hazelwood Country Blues $300K) and for a two-year-old filly, with a daughter of Metallic Cat selling for $260K. The unusually marked red roan sire, Metallic Cat is currently valued at over US$49M and is soon to make a cameo appearance on Yellowstone. One of the highlights of the sale was the Standardbred Campdraft Challenge. A great initiative whereby rehomed standardbreds compete for great prizes. Some of them looked like they had been drafting all their life. The sale also set a new record for Cowboys getting CoVID.
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Randlab
By Website Editor September 3, 2021
The latest edition of our popular annual catalogue has just been published. It has been re-formatted to now show our products grouped and colour-coded into “Suites” (Gastric Ulcer Suite, Joint Suite etc) for ease of reference and comparison. It features all our new products added since the last issue. The popular “Horses in History” section also makes an expanded appearance, and is full of interesting horse facts.
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