Skipper W (1945-1963) is an American Quarter Horse and a famous stallion. Though not shown in many horse events, he later became the senior stallion of his breeder reproductive program. Although he has only 132 children, the product of his breeder program is still commonly known as the "Skipper W" horse. He was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 2011.
Video Skipper W
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Skipper W is a 1945 hippodrome raised by H. J. Wiescamp from Alamosa, Colorado. Trusted by Nick Shoemaker, whose father is Nick who is backed by Shiek P-11, Skipper W leaves out from Hired Girl, the P-12 Cowboy girl. The second dam, or grandmother of the mother, is Leche, who is also the father of Nick by Shiek P-11. The horse is named Skipper W because, like Wiescamp related:
I have a nice stallion born around the same time as Skipper. He is a palomino living on the Gold Mount and out of Slipalong Wiescamp. It was also the year that a good movie, Showboat , came out and I named the little yellow colt after the picture. Anyway, I have rented a Hire Girl at home and, after he froze, I told a colleague who worked for me to disinfect the navy on the [Skipper W] stallion. After the man did that, the horse got up and turned and kicked him because he was clever. I said to the man, "Look at that, he already knows he's his boss! I have a sailing ship, and every ship needs a skipper, so that's what I'll name him - Skipper." I added W to Wiescamp.
Before Skipper W was born, Wiescamp had tried to sell Hired Girl when she was pregnant with a horse, but at $ 150 (about $ 2,000 in 2018), did not get a buyer. While the foal was weaned, Wiescamp gave him a price of $ 500 (about $ 6,800 in 2018), and one potential buyer decided the price was too high for a horse that the buyer planned to make a goat. When Skipper W was a year old, another possible buyer, who wanted a potential stallion, looked toward the horse, but when they discovered that Wiescamp wanted $ 1500 (about $ 18,800 by 2018) because the horse decided not to buy. Instead, Skipper W never sold and spent his entire life with Wiescamp.
Wiescamp had Skipper W trained as a horse when he was two years old, and the hands of a training farm said after a few days working in a small cage he had just attacked him, and the first time I attacked him I just changed this donkey, to him, and just whip him up with a bit of control, and the foal picks it up and goes away, so he never jumps, he never does anything. "The same farm hand then uses Skipper W as a horseman, and says that the horse really loves doing farm work. At the age of three, Skipper W is about 15 tall hands (60 inches (150 cm) and weighs about 1,250 pounds (570 kilograms).
Wiescamp showed Skipper W as a halter horse three times when the horse was four years old. Skipper W was crowned champion of three performances he attended, 1948 West National Shares Show in Denver, Colorado State Exposition in 1948, and New Mexico State Exposition 1948. Wiescamp later commented that "I am happy now because we do not show it anymore, because he must have been in public so he might be sold. " However, Skipper W's American Quarter Horse Association, or AQHA, shows the record does not show this record of victory, unusual for horses shown in the 1940s, since records are not always the best during the early years of AQHA.
Maps Skipper W
Breed career
In early 1948, Nick Shoemaker, Wiescamp's senior stall and Skipper W, died in a strange accident while in his paddock, tucking the ice and breaking his neck on the fence. This means that Skipper W's performance career is cut short so that he can replace Sire as the main stud stud. During his entire career, Skipper W has never grown up for every horse that Wiescamp does not have. Wiescamp wanted to make sure that the horses he cultivated were the best horses for a particular stallion. From the time of Nick Shoemaker's death to the death of Skipper W himself, the horse remains a senior Wiescamp stallion.
During his career breed he became a farmer of 18 plants, with a total of 132 horses registered with AQHA. Among his children were Skip's Dilly, AQHA High Point Western Pleasure Mare in 1964, Skipette, AQHA High Point Calf Roping Mare in 1964, and Skip Sir Bar, AHAF High Point Steer Roping Horse in 1968. In addition, he also credited 13 AQHA Champions, 7 Superior Halter Horses, and 18 Merit Recipient Performance Lists. He became the father of four horses who obtained the Race Register of Merit with AQHA.
Skipper W died in 1963, possibly due to a heart attack. Wiescamp defended his 7 sons as a male and his 57 daughters as children in the stretched Wiesebamp program.
Although he is not the master of a large number of horses, the linebreeding program that Wiescamp follows leads to program products often called "Skipper W horses". The horse was inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame in 2011.
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Source of the article : Wikipedia