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Arabian Visions is an Arabian horse magazine which puts readers first, striving to provide substantial, informative articles featuring Arabian and part-Arabian horses, their owners, breeders, and admirers.
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Rancho San Ignacio: A Look Back
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Raswan
recommended that Richard buy Rabanna, bred by Delma Gallaher in
California. The Gallahers had purchased her sire, Rasik (*Nasik x *Rasima),
from the Kellogg Ranch. Rabanna's dam was Banna (*Nasr x Baribeh), bred
by J.M. Dickinson. Richard bought Rabanna at age six months in 1947,
without even having seen a photograph of her.
In the early 1950s, Carl Raswan lived at Rancho San Ignacio. This was before the breeding program got started, but he visited later and continued to correspond. Over the years Richard also served as a patron to Raswan, helping to make it possible for him to complete and publish The Arab and His Horse and later the Raswan Index. When it came time to breed Rabanna, Richard turned again to Raswan for advice. Raswan was in regular correspondence with Dr. Joseph L. Doyle of Sigourney, Iowa, concerning the establishment of a breeding program which would preserve a high pedigree relationship to the horses bred in the late nineteenth century by Ali Pasha Sherif of Egypt. As it unfolded, the Pritzlaff program would also seek to maintain this high pedigree relationship. Raswan wrote to Dr. Doyle (letter from Rancho San Ignacio dated "Friday"): In another letter to Dr. Doyle from Rancho San Ignacio, dated September 28, 1953, Raswan wrote: Dr. Doyle was standing a 25-year-old stallion named Ghadaf (Ribal x Gulnare), bred by W.R. Brown of the Maynesboro Stud. On Raswan's insistence, Rabanna was bred to Ghadaf in 1954, producing in September of 1955 the first Pritzlaff foal, a grey filly named Kualoha. Rabanna was bred back to Ghadaf for foals born in 1956 and 1957. In 1957 both Ghadaf and Dr. Doyle died; Rabanna's 1957 colt was named John Doyle. But by that time, Richard was already seeking elsewhere to round out the foundation of his herd. Raswan had suggested that Richard look to Egypt. Since 1949 the government breeding program at El Zahraa near Cairo had been under the direction of General Tibor von Pettko-Szandtner. In earlier days he had headed the Hungarian state stud of Babolna, where he made good use of the desert bred Kuhaylan Zaid, a stallion Carl Raswan had helped procure. So in 1956, after visiting Germany and Austria, Richard flew to Cairo. Each day he went out to the farm and looked over the horses of the Egyptian Agricultural Organization. Finally he selected a colt and filly, but as there were no ships headed to the U.S., he had to give up and return home without the horses, hoping one day to try again.
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In April of 1958 he did return. This time, with General von Pettko-Szandtner's help, Richard chose five horses for export. When a ship became available, Richard and the horses left the farm and headed to Alexandria. With papers, feed, bedding, and horse boxes finally arranged, the horses were loaded on board and the voyage to America began. Richard described wrapping himself in his coat and sleeping on the forward hatch near the horses the night the ship set out on the Mediterranean. After 13 days at sea, they arrived in Wilmington, North Carolina. From the beginning, Richard realized what he had in this importation. He wrote repeatedly in his farm advertising that the "General considered Nazeer the finest stallion in Egypt, and Moniet el Nefous was his favorite mare." The horses in the importation were: *Rashad Ibn Nazeer (Nazeer x Yashmak, by Sheikh el Arab), three-year-old bay colt. Richard commented on *Rashad's action and elegance, and stated he stood 15.2 and a half. He described him: "Tall, sloping shoulder, high withers, short back, long neck and reliable disposition -- wonderful for cross country riding."** He lived until 1976. *Bint El Bataa (Nazeer x El Bataa, by Sheikh el Arab), three-year-old black filly. *Bint Moniet el Nefous (Nazeer x Moniet el Nefous, by Shahloul), yearling chestnut filly. Of the imported mares, she had the greatest influence on the herd, through both sons and daughters. *Bint Nefisa (El Sareei x Nefisa, by Balance), yearling bay filly.
(note from Sheila - I copied this page from the Visions website, but I believe there is a piece missing. Until I am able to relocate my paper copy of Visions I have posted what there is of it - but we are missing *Bint Dahma from this list) |
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This was the first Nazeer and Moniet el Nefous blood to reach the United States, and also the largest importation from Egypt since the Babson and Brown horses had arrived in 1932. This first group of "new Egyptians" opened the floodgates for the later new Egyptian importations which followed. The story of Rancho San Ignacio cannot be told without mention of Col. Hans Handler. While skiing in Austria in the 1950s, Richard met Col. Handler and became friends. Col. Handler was made head of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna, and Richard was able to observe the training of the horses there. In later years Col. Handler was a guest at Rancho San Ignacio and schooled a few of Richard's stallions. THE BREEDING PROGRAM AND BLOODLINES ADDED The main sire line used in developing the herd was *Rashad's. *Rashad himself was not doing all the work, however; the program is unusual for the large number of sons and grandsons of its foundation sire used for breeding. Readers are referred to the accompanying chart of the *Rashad male line, which shows the *Rashad line horses which Richard Pritzlaff used for breeding. Stallions are in bold face. Each step to the right represents one generation. Other charts arrange the breeding stock by female line. Ghadaf's son John Doyle made an early and permanent contribution to the herd through his grey daughter Tatu. Later his daughter Chev-RSI was also added to the mare band. The stud books show few outside lines added following the 1958 importation. Richard introduced the blood of only four stallions. The 1960 Babson stallion Faarad (Faaris x Fadba), bred by Jay and Lorane Musser, got his first foal for Richard in 1965. Faarad sired nine Rancho San Ignacio foals over the next six years, but Richard himself does not seem to have used any of them for breeding. Nonetheless as late as 1987 he still spoke of the Faarad blood as a component of the Pritzlaff Arabian.
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Bob & Sheila Harmon |
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