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Author Topic: Docs Oaks Sugar  (Read 3699 times)
Cowboy
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South East of the Border of Disorder


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« on: August 23, 2005, 12:03:45 PM »

Docs Oaks Sugar is maybe one of my favorite horses ever. I've got quite a bit of time on this horse's sons and daughters and every one of them was quality through and through. These are smart horses with a lot of go and personality and born with cow.
 
Docs Oaks Sugar blood makes a great working ranch horse, working cow horse or a horse to haul to the arena. The offspring from this horse are shorter than some horses and much thicker with a deep chest that holds a lot of air.
 
I have personally broken a 3/8 nylon rope loading a bull into a trailer riding one of Docs Oaks Sugar's own daughters.
 
Docs Oaks Sugar makes a great maternal sire if you're raising broodmares or buying more mares for herd replacements. Look for Docs Oaks Sugar on the top of a mare's papers and you won't go wrong. These mares raise thick stocky colts and they all milk like a Holstein and they travel almost without making tracks.
 
Take a look at /western message board/cowanbrothers.western for several top stallions.
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beavercreek
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« Reply #1 on: August 25, 2005, 07:58:49 AM »

Docs Oaks Sugar looks good too! It sounds as if he is putting some awesome foals on the ground. Do you show him in working cowhorse? good luck with him.
Beavercreek
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Cowboy
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« Reply #2 on: August 25, 2005, 08:30:20 AM »

Thank you,
 
He's not mine. He belongs to Ty and Jill Cowan in Highmore South Dakota. I listed him here because we've owned several of his daughters and the temperment and abilities of this horse are something commendable.
 
You know, a lot of places have a whole pasture of mares that aren't broke, but I've always been of the opinion that if you don't want to ride them then you don't want to breed them.
 
We've bought 4 to 6 year old unbroke daughters of this horse that I have started to saddle as older horses to see how they were. These horses start great as 2 year olds or 6 year olds.
 
They're the kind you want to keep out and not put back into the breeding bunch, but that's the kind you have to breed. The kind you think of when you're thinking of being horseback. [ihorse hay]/thewesternweb.western/community/images/smilies/smile.gif[/ihorse hay]
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