A Definition of 100% Crabbet, "Straight" Crabbet, and "Pure"
Crabbet
by Carol Woodbridge Mulder First printed in the April 1992 issue of The Crabbet Influence magazine
There seems to be confusion about the definition of 100% Crabbet, "Straight"
Crabbet, and "Pure" Crabbet. 100% Crabbet, "Straight" Crabbet,
and "Pure" Crabbet all mean the same thing. In this treatise I use
the term 100% Crabbet for the sake of simplicity.
Crabbet Stud was founded in 1878 in Sussex, England, by Wilfrid and Lady Anne
Blunt. It was continued by the Blunt daughter, Judith, the famous Lady Wentworth.
The stud's final owner was Cecil Covey. Crabbet Stud closed in 1971 after some
93 years of world renowed greatness.
A 100% Crabbet pedigree means that the pedigree traces in all lines to Arabians
which were:
- Purchased and owned by Crabbet:
- Original Blunt desert purchases and importations to Crabbet.
- Blunt importations to Crabbet of Ali Pasha Sherif and other Egyptian
source stock.
- Skowronek, bred by Antoniny Stud in Poland from all Polish non-Crabbet
stock, but the major part of the stud career of this great horse was under
Crabbet ownership; acquired for Crabbet by Lady Wentworth.
- Jeruan, bred by Arthur J. Powdrill, of 87.5% Crabbet lines and 12.5%
non-Crabbet lines; acquired for Crabbet by Lady Wentworth.
- Dafina, desert bred mare imported to England through King Ibn Saud of
Saudi Arabia; acquired for Crabbet by Lady Wentworth.
- Dargee, bred by George Ruxton from 84% Crabbet lines and 16% non-Crabbet
lines, but an important Crabbet sire; acquired for Crabbet by Lady Wentworth.
- Arabians bred by others which passed through the hands of Crabbet without
being bred from by Crabbet:
- *Mirage 790, desert bred, which Lady Wentworth much admired and bought
to use, but sold to Selby in America when the General Stud Book of England
closed their books to new original desert stock.
- El Lahr, bred by Miss Ethelred Dillon from a Crabbet bred mare she owned,
but exchanged back to Crabbet when El Lahr was a foal at foot. Crabbet
owned El Lahr for approximately 2 years until she was sold to Boucaut
in Australia. El Lahr left successful influences in Australia. Her pedigree
is 50% Crabbet and 50% non-Crabbet.
- Any purebred Arabian bred by Crabbet stud, from any of the bloodlines used
by that stud, between the years 1878 to 1971.
The non-Crabbet backgrounds of Skowronek, Jeruan, Dargee, and El Lahr are not
considered Crabbet when found in pedigrees through sources others than Skowronek,
Jeruan, Dargee, and El Lahr. These lines are all the Polish ancestry of Skowronek;
Maidan and El Emir in Jeruan's pedigree; *Aldebar 1864, known as Aldebaran in
England, and Shahzada in Dargee's pedigree, and El Lahr's sire, *Imamzada 210.
Some owners describe their Arabs are 100% Crabbet when the animals are no such
thing, but are, instead, of largely Crabbet ancestry. I do not know if any owner
who had erroneously proclaimed 100% Crabbet pedigree with intent to decieve;
nearly always it is done because of a lack of pedigree knowledge. However, it
is not a good idea to say your horse is 100% Crabbet unless you know - absolutely
and with certainty - that it is. A few people take this very seriously, many
times for all the wrong reasons.
Unless you are a dedicated 100% Crabbet breeder, perpetuating a nucleus gene
pool of high quality 100% Crabbets for future use of the breed, pedigree percentages
ought to be less important to you than a high standard of quality in your stock.
Lady Wentworth, herself, was more concerned with setting and maintaining a type
and quality standard than she was with breeding only within the then established
Crabbet bloodlines. She introduced significant new blood into the stud, but,
of course, because it was Crabbet Stud, anything she brought into it became
Crabbet.
There are relatively few 100% Crabbets in North America. The majority of our
"Crabbet horses" here are to be found in the Crabbet/American breeding
group. Crabbet ancestry, however, may also be found in many Polish, Egyptian,
Russian, and Spanish breeding programs. Great Britain has a larger number of
100% Crabbet Arabians and Australia has even more.
There is widespread misuse of the term "Crabbet-bred". It can apply
only to individuals actually bred by Crabbet stud. There are not many Crabbet-bred
Arabians still living; the youngest of them are now 20 years old (in 1992).
When people misuse "Crabbet-bred", they usually actually mean "of
Crabbet breeding", or "of Crabbet lineage." The differences in
terminology mean vastly different things and care must be taken to say what
is actually meant.
In my experiences and travels, I have seen many fine 100% Crabbets. I have
also seen many outstanding Arabians of Crabbet lineage. Some of the best Arabians
I have seen during recent years have been the Crabbet blends. That is making
the best possible use of the precious Crabbet heritage.
Quality is more important than pedigrees or percentages, but some bloodlines
have proven to produce certain types and qualities preferred by many people.
The ideal, of course, is to have both quality and pedigree, but pedigree should
never take precedence over quality because that is a sure way to ruin a breeding
program and gene pool.
-Editor's Note: Carol Mulder and the Crabbet Influence granted permission
to reprint this article. Thanks to Ali Willis for locating this great article
on the internet!
Back
Originally published in Bloodlines
- Volume 3, Issue 4 (July/August 1998)
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