Looks like Awesome Gem moved to Old Friends after that cute photo. Doesn't mention anything about his best friend though

He looked like he was awful content with Daisy. Wonder why they moved him to Old Friends? Hell to make friends and then have to move away...CoronadosQuest wrote:http://www.bloodhorse.com/horse-racing/ ... ld-friends
Looks like Awesome Gem moved to Old Friends after that cute photo. Doesn't mention anything about his best friend though
I think this could be a good move for him. I know originally Craig was hoping to make a pony horse out of him. I think we last visited him at the track during BC time in Nov 2013. There was talk then about maybe he'd be better suited to another kind of second career. My hunch is he didn't transition well from not being a racehorse, he was so competitive and maybe a bit assertive under saddle.WarBiscuit wrote:He looked like he was awful content with Daisy. Wonder why they moved him to Old Friends? Hell to make friends and then have to move away...CoronadosQuest wrote:http://www.bloodhorse.com/horse-racing/ ... ld-friends
Looks like Awesome Gem moved to Old Friends after that cute photo. Doesn't mention anything about his best friend though![]()
WarBiscuit
http://cs.bloodhorse.com/blogs/horse-ra ... iends.aspxIn the starting gate, he was always the perfect gentleman, but on the track he was difficult to handle and dumped many a rider. One morning at Hollywood Park when Awesome Gem was a 3-year-old, Bloom, who would often gallop the horse, and Dollase were watching him out on the track, and were delighted to see him galloping along and doing everything perfectly.
Bloom turned to Dollase and said, "My gosh, it's amazing how good this horse is now. He's really settled down and is so easy to manage." Dollase agreed that he had showed a great deal of improvement. As Awesome Gem was pulling up from his gallop, Bloom and Dollase walked down the stairs from the clocker's stand to wait for the horse and walk back to barn with him. As they waited, here came Awesome Gem...with no rider on his back. No sooner had they said how good he was doing, he dumped his rider, as if on cue.
"He's such a character," Bloom said several years ago. "He can be in the shedrow rearing up and strutting his stuff, but in his stall he's the barn pet. You could bring little kids up to him. I have two daughters and he's their favorite horse. He drops his head down and is like a little kitten in terms of petting him and feeding him carrots. He'll nibble the carrot in your hand. He just loves people and loves attention.
"This horse is such a great story. Sometimes, there's a certain thing about a horse that you can't put your finger on. You can't explain it; they just have it, and he's definitely that kind of horse. He just sparkles."
https://www.americasbestracing.net/life ... ond-careerWhen Mandy Alexander heard millionaire Mister Marti Gras was looking for a second career late last year, she tried to tell herself she wasn’t interested.
She had decided that she was taking a break from horse ownership and figured a horse with Mister Marti Gras’ long race record may not be the best candidate for a second career at the level she once competed at due to how long he’d raced – but that all changed when she saw him.
A fan favorite as a racehorse, Mister Marti Gras raced in 30 graded stakes during his 58-race career where he won over a million dollars, starting in the 2010 Louisiana Derby and ending in the 2016 Hanshin Cup Stakes. Retiring late last year after a few lackluster efforts, he was laid up at Chesapeake Farm when Alexander went to visit him.
Glad to see he's still around! All the best to him!BlindLucky wrote:I'mawildandcrazyguy popped up out of the blue! Apparently he had some time off (I think from a jumping career) just turned out for a while, but has been adopted again and seems to be in good hands these last several months![]()
I just loved this guy--his attitude and all!
That really is a good story! Thanks for sharing.BlindLucky wrote:Nowhere to Hide (he ran in Mine That Bird's KY Derby) seems to have found his forever home with an ex-NFL player. This is such a fun story![]()
http://www.bloodhorse.com/horse-racing/ ... er-team-up
upload the pics to imgur. you're teasing me with border run pics!!Curtis wrote:I've been trying to post some photos of my two OTTB's, Border Run and Anniversary Year, but I keep getting the following message: Sorry, the board attachment quota has been reached.
I'm afraid you'll have to speak English.sweettalk wrote:upload the pics to imgur. you're teasing me with border run pics!!Curtis wrote:I've been trying to post some photos of my two OTTB's, Border Run and Anniversary Year, but I keep getting the following message: Sorry, the board attachment quota has been reached.
Try this:Curtis wrote:I'm afraid you'll have to speak English.sweettalk wrote:upload the pics to imgur. you're teasing me with border run pics!!Curtis wrote:I've been trying to post some photos of my two OTTB's, Border Run and Anniversary Year, but I keep getting the following message: Sorry, the board attachment quota has been reached.
http://midatlantictb.com/cms/index.php/ ... 20-paulrusHerb Hogg was looking for a horse. Thirteen years ago, the lifelong foxhunter had taken a bit of a beating from a “rogue-y” mount who’d left him with a punctured lung and broken ribs. A CPA by profession, Hogg got a suggestion from a client – Hall of Fame trainer Janet Elliot – who mentioned she had a prospect on her Pennsylvania farm.
“Janet never told me anything about him,” he said. “She just said to come try him and see what I thought. So we went out to one of her fields and jogged around, and the next thing I knew we were jumping fences. And this horse is a reallllly good jumper.”
Pleased, Hogg took 16-year-old Paulrus home to his 15-acre farm near Coatesville, Pa. Shortly thereafter farrier Desmond Hewitt came to replace the horse’s shoes. In his thick accent, the Irishman asked Hogg, “Where’d you get this horse?”
“I told him I got him from Janet,” Hogg said. “And he kept saying ‘Derby horse! Derby horse!’ ”
What Hewitt knew – and Hogg quickly discovered – was that Paulrus had finished seventh in the 1991 Kentucky Derby. The field included Hansel, Fly So Free, Best Pal, Corporate Report, Sea Cadet and Strike the Gold, who won the classic that day for Nick Zito and Chris Antley.