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  • Arch sire of Wiki 1st Alw (May 24, 2nd PID). Owner, Midwest Thoroughbreds, Inc.; Breeder, Stuart S. Janney, III LLC....
  • Latent Heat sire of Heated Troubles 1st Mdn (May 24, 5th RD). Owner, Ashleigh Stud; Breeder, Ashleigh Stud, Frank Ramos & JackieRamos...
  • Benchmark sire of Planet Sunshine 1st Alw (May 24, 5th GG). Owner, Thomas A. Shapiro; Breeder, Thomas Shapiro...
  • Canadian Frontier sire of Golden Frontier 1st Alw (May 24, 3rd CD). Owner, George Fister; Breeder, Brereton C. Jones...
  • Flower Alley sire of Bouquet Booth 1st Alw (May 24, 7th CD). Owner, Right Time Racing LLC; Breeder, Brookdale & Dr. Ted Folkerth...
  • Wando sire of Deb's Girly Girl 1st Alw (May 24, 6th RD). Owner, Deborah F. Metz; Breeder, Deborah F. Metz...
  • First Samurai sire of Nakano 1st Alw (May 24, 8th CRC). Owner, Thoroughbred Futures Racing; Breeder, Hubert Vester...
  • Tribal Rule sire of Italian Rules 1st Alw (May 24, 7th BHP). Owner, Barber, Gary and Cecil; Breeder, Nick Cafarchia...
  • Holy Bull sire of Catalan 1st Alw (May 24, 8th BEL). Owner, Elizabeth Loftus; Breeder, B. P. Walden & Dr. S. Marcum...
  • Tapit sire of Quail Hollow 1st Alw (May 24, 8th CT). Owner, Stevark Stable, Inc.; Breeder, Dr. O. M. Patrick...
  • Smoke Glacken sire of Walker Bay 1st Alw (May 24, 8th CD). Owner, Hammersmith, Dennis L. and Paden Racing, Inc.; Breeder, Brian O'Rourke & Derry Meeting Farm...
  • B L's Appeal sire of B L's Tsumani 1st Alw (May 24, 7th PRM). Owner, Gary Spragg; Breeder, Frank Bertolino...
  • Successful Appeal sire of Warning Song 1st Alw (May 24, 6th PRM). Owner, Maggi Moss; Breeder, Bloodstock Holdings LLC...
  • Chapel Royal sire of Mr Rodriguez 1st Mdn (May 24, 2nd BEL). Owner, Imperio, Michael and Loftus, Elizabeth; Breeder, Jill Imperio & Daniella Corian...

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Breeder Kaye-Garcia enjoys success at Midlantic

Posted: Tuesday, October 06, 2009 9:36 PM

by Pete Denk

Carol Kaye-Garcia was one of the few Maryland breeders to walk away from the 2009 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Eastern fall yearling sale in a good mood after her Tapit filly sold for $182,000 on Tuesday.

It was the second-highest price of the sale and the only filly to reach six figures. Kaye-Garcia bought the filly’s dam Purloin—a ten-year-old winning Forest Wildcat mare—when she was in foal to Tapit for $16,000 at the 2008 Keeneland January horses of all ages sale.

“Sometimes everything just falls into place, and this was a great year to have a Tapit. It’s mostly luck, I think. I really do,” Kaye-Garcia said of the filly, named Steal the Dance. “I can’t claim fame for putting that pedigree together. Gainesway [the Lexington farm that stands Tapit] put it together. I bought the mare in foal. So I guess I was the smart one to buy her, because nobody else liked the mare at the time.”

Cary Frommer, an Aiken, South Carolina-based pinhooker, purchased the Tapit filly as agent and said she will point her to the 2010 Fasig-Tipton Calder sale of selected two-year-olds in training.

Kaye-Garcia is the wife of Maryland trainer Carlos Garcia. They have 15 mares at their Wellington Park Farm in Woodbine, Maryland. Kaye-Garcia is a hands-on breeder and preps her own horses for the sales.

She sold fove of the six yearlings she brought to the sale, including a Tenpins colt out of Alpine Cat, by Forest Wildcat, that sold for $52,000. Sally Thomas consigned four of Kaye-Garcia’s horses, including the Tenpins colt and Tapit filly.

“I had the right consignor. Sally did a wonderful job,” Kaye-Garcia said.

Despite her personal success, Kaye-Garcia had the plight of regional commercial breeders on her mind. Very few horses sold for enough to cover stud fees and the costs of getting to the sale.

“I had a great sale, but it was disappointing overall,” Kaye-Garcia said. “If you have the sire, and the right individual, and they’re clean, then you can do okay. The buyers are around for the nice individuals, but there’s no one for the bread and butter horses.

“I enjoy the business. If you enjoy horses you can stick with it even in these times. If you’re just in it for the money, you’re probably going to be doing something different.”

Pete Denk is sales editor of Thoroughbred Times

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