Two foals to go to Canadian interests; Gazelle’s owners: ‘We have a grandchild!’
The very first Flanders Embryo Auction in Ocala proceeded in a way that any scriptwriter could only dream of. The collection included a grandchild of the world’s best earning showjumping horse at the moment, Gazelle, ridden by Kent Farrington, and it was to be expected that Gazelle’s owners, Farrington and Robin Parsky, would be interested. And on Friday at Live Oak International, when lot 18 came up, they struck and for $30,000 bought the still-unborn foal.
The good reputation of Flanders Foal & Embryo Auction is rapidly growing world-wide. After the regular foal auctions in Bonheiden and Opglabbeek, Luk Van Puymbroeck and Gerald Lenaerts further developed their format. Their motto: ‘Do not wait for the client to come to you, you should go to the client’ last year resulted in the first embryo auction in the United Emirates and a thumping good foal auction in Bolesworth, where one record after the other was broken.
“Are the Americans ready yet for buying embryos, was a question we were often asked. Well, you never know, but the Arabs were ready! We have had two successful embryo auctions there already,” Gerald Lenaerts tells us. “They are the risks you have to take,” Luk van Puymbroeck explains. “It will all go easier once you have a good reputation. We are extremely pleased that we constantly attract new clients as buyers, people we would never get to come to our auctions in Belgium.”
The embryo auction in Ocala was hosted at the impressive, 2,000-hectare estate from the family of top-class driving-horse driver Chester Weber, one of the active powers behind Live Oak International. Where the sale of embryos already has become customary in Europe, Americans still have to be introduced to the idea. The word embryo is somewhat confusing, because they are often foals about to be born. The first will come in April.
Bids by telephone came from all over the world to get hold of the unborn foals with the genetic backgrounds. Including the sales on the spot, the twenty embryos went for $345,500 altogether, an average price of $17,275. “We consider that a good start already. The idea still has to grow, but it certainly has potency,” says Luk van Puymbroeck.
Van Puymbroeck himself got $18,000 for his embryo by Taloubet out of the full sister of Air Jordan Z, bought by the Muny Sunk Stables. “In two years time I bought five via Flanders,” laughs Christine Vanneck from the Muny Sunk Stables, who also laid down $16,000 for the Cornet Obolensky x Heartbreaker out of the full sister to Primeval Dejavu. For a price of $18,000 the American Lauren di Tallo bought the Balou du Rouet x Chin Chin out of the full sister to the grand prix showjumping horse Gin Chin van het Lindenhof.
Auctioneer Dirk Zagers got things really moving in the second part of the auction. The Canadian team member Francois Lamontagne bid $22,000 for the Thunder van de Zuuthoeve x Plot Blue out of the line of Kashmir van Schuttershof. The Canadian Kristine Semrau from Semrau Farms acquired the Diamant de Semilly x Cornet Obolensky. The Irish Marion Hughes bought the Urano de Cartigny x Wandor van de Mispelaere on the sport for €23,000.
Robin Parsky cannot wait to see her ‘grandchild’ by Bamako de Muze x Elvis ter Putte x Kashmir Van Schuttershof born. She will have to wait until August, however. She bought Gazelle, which has since earned world fame, five years ago in Belgium. “Kent has his stables near Antwerp and we often visit him. Once the foal is born, I will have a good reason to travel to Belgium even more often. I am very happy about it all. I will soon have to come up with a suitable name for the foal. I will make a phone call to Kent. He must believe that I have gone mad. Kent, we have a grandchild!”