Oak Hill Farm Sporthorses

Oak Hill Farm Sporthorses Oak Hill Farm provides boarding, layups for the thoroughbred racing industry. We also specialize in

06/14/2026

Deka: The Holsteiner Broodmare Who Shaped a Dynasty

In the history of Holsteiner breeding, certain mares stand out not only for what they produced, but for the lasting influence they left behind. One of those mares was Deka, a 1967 Holsteiner broodmare whose name remains closely linked with some of the most important jumping bloodlines in the breed.

Bred by Hugo Tiedemann of Kollmar, Deka was by Consul and out of Oekonomie, with Matador as her dam sire. She belonged to the respected Holsteiner Stamm 730B, a mare family that became strongly associated with performance, quality, and influence.

Deka’s greatest legacy came through her offspring. Paired with the legendary stallion Cor de la Bryère, she produced the celebrated Caletto brothers: Caletto I, Caletto II, and Caletto III. These stallions carried forward her influence into sport and breeding, helping to strengthen the Holsteiner reputation for producing athletic, scopey, modern showjumpers.

Her impact did not stop there. Deka also produced other notable sons, including Gonzales by Grandioso and Lysander by Landgraf I. Through these horses, her blood spread into important breeding programmes and performance pedigrees.

What made Deka exceptional was not simply that she produced successful horses, but that she consistently passed on qualities breeders value: athleticism, strength, rideability, jumping ability, and type. Her descendants became part of the foundation on which modern Holsteiner showjumping breeding continued to develop.

Deka reminds us that great breeding families are often built around great mares. Stallions may receive much of the public attention, but mares like Deka are the true engines of dynasties. Through her sons and descendants, she helped shape generations of sport horses and secured her place among the influential broodmares of Holsteiner history.

Today, Deka is remembered not just as a broodmare, but as a producer of lasting importance — a mare whose legacy continues wherever her blood appears in a performance pedigree.

06/10/2026

Gotthard: The Hanoverian Stallion Who Helped Shape Modern Showjumping

Few names in Hanoverian breeding carry the lasting weight of Gotthard. Foaled in Germany in 1949, this grey Hanoverian stallion became one of the defining sires of post-war sport horse breeding. By Goldfisch II out of Ampa, Gotthard was not simply another state stud stallion; he became a foundation influence in the development of the modern showjumper.

Gotthard stood at the Celle State Stud, one of the great centres of Hanoverian breeding. At 166 cm, he was not an enormous horse by modern standards, but his influence was immense. His value lay not in fashion or appearance alone, but in the qualities he consistently passed on: power, courage, scope, toughness, and a genuine instinct for jumping.

In the years after the Second World War, Hanoverian breeding was changing. The breed had long been known for strong agricultural and cavalry horses, but the demands of sport were becoming increasingly important. Breeders needed horses with more athleticism, quicker reactions, and a greater aptitude for competition. Gotthard arrived at exactly the right time. His progeny helped prove that the Hanoverian could become a world-class sport horse, particularly in showjumping.

For seven years, Gotthard was recognised as the leading sire of showjumpers in Germany. That achievement alone places him among the greats. He produced more than 30 licensed stallion sons, including influential names such as Goldberg, Gardestern I, Goldpilz, Goldstern, and Godehard. Through these sons and through his daughters, Gotthard’s blood spread widely and became deeply embedded in Hanoverian jumping lines.

One of the most important aspects of Gotthard’s legacy is that he was not only a sire of stallions. He was also a powerful broodmare sire. His daughters were valued because they carried forward the practical virtues breeders wanted: soundness, strength, reliability, and performance character. A stallion can become famous through one outstanding son, but true breeding influence is measured through generations. Gotthard achieved that deeper kind of importance.

His descendants appeared in many significant pedigrees, and his name continued to surface behind top sport horses long after his own lifetime. The famous showjumper and sire Voltaire, for example, carried Gotthard through his dam Gogo Moeve. Ludger Beerbaum’s great Goldfever also traces back to Gotthard’s branch of the Hanoverian G-line. These examples show how Gotthard’s influence moved beyond Hanover and helped shape international sport horse breeding.

What did Gotthard give to his offspring? Above all, he gave jumping ability. His descendants were known for scope and bravery, the two qualities without which a true jumper cannot succeed. They also tended to have substance and durability. In an age when breeders sometimes chase refinement at the expense of strength, Gotthard’s legacy is a reminder that a top sport horse must be both athletic and robust.

He also represents the importance of the Hanoverian “G-line,” a family of bloodlines that became closely associated with jumping power. Gotthard’s contribution to that line was so strong that his name remains a reference point for breeders studying traditional Hanoverian jumping pedigrees. Even today, when modern stallions dominate advertisements and licensing headlines, old Gotthard blood is still treated with respect.

Part of his appeal lies in the fact that his talent was not necessarily obvious from the beginning. Like many great breeding horses, his true worth became clear through his offspring. Over time, results spoke louder than first impressions. The horses he produced could jump, compete, and reproduce the qualities that mattered.

Gotthard died in 1978, but his influence did not end with him. His blood remained active through sons, daughters, grandsons, and further descendants. That is the mark of a true foundation sire. He did not merely produce good horses for one generation; he helped shape the direction of a breed.

For breeders and pedigree enthusiasts, Gotthard is more than a historic name. He is a symbol of the qualities that built the modern jumping horse: courage, strength, scope, soundness, and usefulness. His story also shows why older bloodlines should not be forgotten. They are the roots from which modern success grows.

In the story of the Hanoverian, Gotthard stands as one of the great pillars. He helped move the breed from its traditional role into the modern sporting age, and his descendants continued to prove the value of his blood in competition arenas around the world. For anyone interested in showjumping breeding, Gotthard remains essential reading in pedigree form: a stallion whose name still means power, performance, and lasting influence.

05/26/2026
Looking forward to the 2026 show season.We have a few green horses to start their show career.
05/11/2026

Looking forward to the 2026 show season.
We have a few green horses to start their show career.

03/15/2026

We are just a few weeks away from the 2026 Syracuse PHA Horse Show!!

Count down to the Kentucky Derby!!
02/22/2026

Count down to the Kentucky Derby!!

DerbyBox.com

02/08/2026

❤️❤️❤️

The Equine Industry…
02/01/2026

The Equine Industry…

Ag Fact Friday… Equine Edition! 🐎

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Remsen, NY
13438

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