ton (Holland), Col- bert GTI (Germany), Bliss MF (Florida), Chacoon Blue (at the Schockemoehle facility in Germany) and Canabis Z (Hol- land). “I’ve used Canabis Z twice since his lines are very similar to Con- tendro’s and I un- derstand that his prodigy tend to have a little more spark,” he says. Right now, the Hartigans haven’t sold any of their horses
When asked
Left: Glenn competes his Grand Prix mare by Contendro, Coco, Limbana’s first foal. Together they showed Grand Prix in 2016 with good placements. Right: Stephanie competes Clever, Coco’s younger brother, at Third Level in October 2016, earning them a 70.6%.
by Limbana, who, incidentally continues to demonstrate her jumping ability. “Don’t ever put Limbana in a pasture she doesn’t like,” Glenn warns. “Even when ten months preg- nant, she’ll jump the fence and put herself back where she wants to be!”
why they have a hard time selling their youngsters, Glenn replies sim- ply, “We just can’t replace them.” Coco has become very valuable as his grand prix jumper, and when Stephanie needed a talented dres- sage horse Clever fit the bill. “They are so trainable
and fun to ride, yet I know we can’t keep adding horses to our farm. We will eventually need to sell some, I’m sure.” In the meantime, their little chestnut mare keeps churn-
ing out athletic sport horses, all sprouting to approximately 17 hands. Limbana is a great example of how big things can surprisingly come from a small—but excellent—package.
Warmbloods Today 85
Glenn Hartigan
Shawn MacMillen
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