Sauer Quarter Horses

Sauer Quarter Horses Raising high quality, 5 panel N/N, foundation bred Joe Hancock AQHA horses. Quality individuals for sale at all times. My horses are all 5 panel tested N/N.

I own a small Quarter Horse operation located near Stanley, New Mexico. My senior herd sire is Hancocks Blue Rebel, an own son of Hancocks Blue Boy. Rebel passed away in December ’20 and I’m now standing his son Hancocks Salty Rebel. I have c**ts available yearly.

02/03/2025

Bit Chart

01/28/2025

The Story of Three Bars - This is a really long article but a must read if you have never read it.

At 4:45 on the morning of April 6, 1968, a living legend of the horse world breathed his last at Sayre, Oklahoma. Three Bars was two days shy of being twenty-eight years old when he died from a heart attack.

He was on his feet until fifteen minutes before he died. He was used for breeding purposes until two days before his life ended. In terms of a long, useful life—and in terms of his value—few horses in the western horse field can be compared to Three Bars. In terms of his impact on the Quarter Horse breed, there is little comparison. It is simply monumental.

Imperceptibly at first, then at dead run, Three Bars breeding refashioned the yardsticks by which the Quarter Horse world measured short racing and good conformation. Three Bars proved that a race horse could be an outstanding conformation horse. Largely through the influence of this one horse, the Quarter Horse world today is breeding a taller, faster, more streamlined animal. As King P-234 set the standard for the stock horse in the 1940s, so did Three Bars—in company with Top Deck and Depth Charge—change the concepts of the 1960s.

Statistics may be dry but in Three Bars' case they are meaningful. In Quarter Horse racing, he was the all-time Leading Sire of Register of Merit Qualifiers through 1967, as well as Leading Sire of AAA Quarter Horses. He also was Leading Sire of Money Earners. Official records at the American Quarter Horse Association at the time of his death show that Three Bars sired 384 offspring earned more than $2.8 million in 7,824 races through 1967. In the show ring, Three Bars descendants earned 259 working points, 1.283 halter points, twenty-three AQHA Championships.

Equally significant is the fact that, through April, 1968, all three of the newly crowned Supreme Champions—Kid Meyers, Bar Money and Fairbars—were get of Three Bars.

Great as he was, the Three Bars story is also a story of people and their love for a really good horse. It may be said to have started where so many great horse stories began, in Kentucky. It started well before the Quarter Horse existed as a breed.

Jack Goode of Paris, Kentucky, began his lifelong love affair with racehorses as a boy. Growing up in racing country, he watched them every chance he got. One speedy filly he never forgot was Myrtle Dee. A daughter of Luke McLuke, she was a Thoroughbred sprinter of such excellence that she held the 5 1/2-furlong record for many years at the Coney Island track in Cincinnati.

So it was that in 1939, Jack—now grown—heard that Myrtle Dee was going to be sold at public auction. Horses belonging to Jack Parrish at Midway, Kentucky, were being dispersed. Jack and two friends, Ned Brent and Bill Talbot, negotiated for and finally bought old Myrtle and two other mares in an $800 package deal, prior to the sale. She was then in foal to Parrish stud, Percentage. That horse had the reputation of being both a sprinter and a distance racer.

Myrtle Dee went out to pasture on Brent's Farm in Bourbon County, Kentucky. Returning from the Keeneland track one April day in 1940, the owners spotted a fine looking stud c**t nursing Myrtle. They each admired the youngster, foaled April 8. No question about it. The old mare had produced a good one.
Recalled Goode: "...We all said that we had hit the jackpot. So we named him Three Bars. You know when you hit the jackpot [on a slot machine] how three bars come up? That's how he got his name..."

It did indeed seem that the trio of owners had a jackpot. This had to be a sprinter -- as Goode confirmed to his own satisfaction when he broke and trained the c**t the following year. Ned Brent remembers that Three Bars ran the quarter mile in 21 and a fraction. He had a tremendous surge of power over the short distance, broke like a bullet and his owners began to dream of the future.

"Then," recalls, Goode, "in the spring of his two-year-old year I was bringing him off the track one morning when it happened. His hind leg turned ice cold, just like you had suddenly turned off the blood. He never got over it while we owned him..."

"Until that happened he was the fastest thing I had put a bridle on. He was too rapid. You had to ease him to slow or he'd get out of hand and you couldn't handle him well. I took him to Keeneland at Lexington and to Detroit but never raced him because his leg would get cold when he exerted himself. We had some of the best vets in Kentucky with Three Bars but they couldn't help that leg."
"Later on," said Brent, "they found that happened to horses when bloodworms clogged an artery and cut off circulation...after a while that leg would be OK. Maybe the next day it would be fine...then Three Bars could run."

It seemed clear, though, that Three Bars would not be a racehorse with this leg problem. And the three agreed to sell him "off the cuff," to Beckam Stivers for $300. This meant that the $300 was to be paid if and when Three Bars raced and earned that much at the track.

"I believe Stivers paid us after he had given the horse to Vernon Cloud," Brent remembered. "Cloud won a race with the horse and ...when you sell 'off the cuff' you get paid out of the first purse the horse wins..."

In reconstructing the evens of Three Bars early life, Jack Good -- later to become one of the best known track stewards—set the record straight on several points.

"No, there's no truth to the tale that we sold Three Bars for $300 to cover a pasture bill. We did sell him for $300 because that's all we figured we could get for him... "We never bred Three Bars to any Thoroughbred mares—but somebody did. I remember seeing a Thoroughbred mare run in Illinois and she was by Three Bars. yes, Three Bars had a full sister but we don't know what happened to her. The story about Three Percent being a full brother to Three Bars is not true. Three Percent was by Percentage but out of some other mare, not Myrtle Dee.

"I don't really know they cured that hind leg. But I think it was cured during the time Vernon Cloud had Three Bars. Stivers didn't do any good with the horse and gave it to Cloud, the blacksmith. Maybe it just cured itself and I think it must have been during the time Cloud owned the horse."

Cloud practiced his trade at racetracks and Three Bars went with him. And it was during his travels that Three Bars went to his next owner, Eudell "Pinchy" Wyatt. Three Bars' Jockey Club registration papers don't reveal Wyatt as an owner but those who followed the horse are certain it was Wyatt who obtained the stallion from Cloud and took him to the track at Detroit. Which brought other owners upon the scene.

Fog and mist rolled in over the race track at Detroit's 1944 meeting as Stan Snedigar watched the early morning workouts. His racing savvy would become legendary in the business and Stan peered intently at every young prospect the exercise boys ponied by. One c**t in particular caught Snedigar's eye -- a chestnut c**t, small by Thoroughbred measurement. Nearby, Stan spotted Frankie Childs, one of the most noted trainers of the time.
"Frankie," he asked, "who is this little chestnut horse going by?"
"That little horse is called Three Bars," said Childs.
"Know anything about him?"
"Know all about him."
"Tell me something about him."
"He's as fast a horse as I ever saw. We broke yearlings at Keeneland...this horse was in the group of yearlings being broke that year. We gauged all of the yearlings by what they might do with this horse Three Bars, out of the gate..."
"What kind of races is he running in?"
"I think they're running him in $2,000 and $2,500 claiming races," replied Childs.

Snedigar also learned that the owner of the horse was a friend of his, Eudell Wyatt, considered one of the good harness and show horse trainers of the country. When Stan learned later that Three Bars had won his next race at Detroit, he sought out Wyatt.
"Now, Brother Wyatt," allowed Snedigar, "I'm gonna claim that horse if you ever run him again for $2,000. What will you take for him?"

"I don't want to sell him," Wyatt replied. "What do you want with him?"

"I'd like to take him to Arizona with me and cross him with some of those little Quarter mares we have back in that country and use him as a sire."

"Well," said Wyatt, "he might cross alright with them. He sure has speed."

"Yes, and I like his conformation."

However, this Three Bars Admiration Society did not produce a horse trade. When Snedigar left for Phoenix he did not own the horse—although he still wanted to. He told his trainer, Cal Kennedy, to claim the horse for up to $6,000, if he turned up in another claiming race.

"I had been home probably a week when the phone rang one night and it was Kennedy. He said, 'We've got a new horse in our barn tonight.'"

Sure enough, Three Bars had won by about six lengths in a six furlong race and Snedigar and his partner, Toad Haggard, owned him. The claiming price: $2,000. They had their horse shipped to Albuquerque for the meet there and it was on New Mexico turf that Three Bars won again as a four-year-old. The distance was three-eighths of a mile. Next, they moved on to Santa Anita where, in late 1944, came a major disappointment. The war "blacked out" racing for the duration.

"Here we were," Snedigar recalled many years later, "in Santa Anita with a string of horses ready to run. And we had some that weren't the soundest in the world, so we fired two or three horses, among them Three Bars. We fired his knees and ankles and brought him back to Phoenix."

Snedigar and Haggard, in both the cattle and horse business together, planned to winter there and turn out their horses because of the racing shutdown. Haggard also had decided at this point to plan on dispersing his interest in the horses—and that decision roughly coincided with the appearance on the scene of the next key person involved in the Three Bars story.

Sid Vail got his horse sense and savvy at an early age in what is usually called the School of Experience. His birth certificate shows he was born in Aberdeen, Mississippi, November 13, 1913.
"We were farmers in Mississippi," he remembers. "I ran away from home when I was 14, headed west to Texas, New Mexico, Arizona. When I was 16 I started riding rodeo bulls and ba****ck horses. Then I broke horses in Montana. In 1923 I packed for the government through Yellowstone Park. They were mapping the park and I packed horses and gear up and down those mountains...it was beautiful.

"Well, when I was going up and down those mountains with those old horses, I used to dream a lot about a real good horse. Then in 1939, I bought a Quarter Horse. I was in Nevada then.."
Since the Quarter Horse registry was not formed until 1940, the term "Quarter" horse in the thirties did not mean exactly what it means today. Then, you were talking strictly about a race-type animal. Westerners loved their "short" races then as now. The competition in Arizona was particularly keen over the short distances. When Vail, within a few years, heard about Three Bars, he was interested. He was then living in Douglas, Arizona.
"I heard there was a good Thoroughbred they were breeding to Quarter mares," he recalled. "I had some Bear Hug mares so I went down to see them about it. When I saw the horse, I knew I had to have him. I had never seen anything like him. And I've never seen anything like him since, either. "Stan [Snedigar] said the horse wasn't for sale after I'd offered $5,000..."
In the bargaining process that followed, which took some time, Three Bars did finally change hands. But it was with the utmost reluctance that Snedigar finally agreed with his partner to sell Vail the horse for $10,000. And Snedigar said he insisted on the stipulation that if Three Bars' legs proved sound a year later, he would have the opportunity to race him some more.

This is what happened, as it turned out. Three Bars did race with some success in 1946, winning eight of seventeen starts for a total of $16,940.

Two decades later, Snedigar could recall clearly what made him like the horse so well: "I liked his ability to run right out of the starting gate. He had the conformation to do this and he had the ability to run. Even though his legs weren't the soundest—they were crippled at the time and he was very sore-kneed—this horse had the will to come out of the starting gate almost always in front and run just as far as he could, as fast as he could. He was a horse you couldn't rate. You could steady him but you couldn't rate him. You couldn't take hold of him and take him back because he'd get mad and wouldn't run.

"With this will to want to win every race, his ability to go ahead and perform according to the way his conformation looked, made me think he'd be a great Quarter Horse sire. And he turned out to be just that."

Although it appears that mares were bred to Three Bars earlier, his first real test in the stud came the year Sid Vail purchased him.
"We stood him in 1945 and 1948 at Melville Haskell's place at Tucson, Arizona...then in '49 and '50 I stood him at John Chaney's place near Tucson. I'd go over and get the horse to breed to my own mares. Then I stood him at Douglas in 1951. In 1952 Walter Merrick took him to Crawford, Oklahoma, where he stood at $300 stud fees. The stud fees went up something like this: $100 in 1945, about $250 in 1948. Then it went to $300...

"After that, it jumped to $500, then to $1,000, next it ws $1,500, then $2,500, then $3,500, then $5,000. From 1963 to 1966 it was $10,000, which is the amount I paid for Three Bars back in 1945. Then in 1966 in the fall, Walter took him to Quanah and stood him for $5,000. That's what his fee was when he died at Sayre, Oklahoma."

"During those years, the mares that came to Three Bars not only represented good business but the cream of the Quarter Horse crop. To mention a few of these great mothers would be a slight to the hundreds that began, by the 1950s, to make regular annual trek to Vail's Three Bars Ranch at Oakdale, California. It might be called the House That Three Bars Built and it was a first class operation. Sid and his wife, Mayola, watched for twenty years as a constant stream of admiring breeders pulled up and unloaded their prize mares, season after season. Not many lads who start punching cows for $40 a month wind up in quite the same position Sid Vail found himself occupying by the mid-1960s. You don't have to be an Einstein to figure out how much money you're handling with a stallion whose stud fee is $10,000—and you're turning business away. Not surprisingly, third and fourth generation Three Bars descendants were soon found topping the auction sales in price, starting to steal the thunder in the halter classes, carrying the calf ropers to the pay window—and dominating the big money Quarter Horse race meets. One one fantastic day at Sacramento, in the running of the 1965 Pacific Coast Quarter Horse Futurity, the first five horses under the wire were all grandsons of Three Bars.

Three times in his life, the horse very nearly met a premature end—once by theft, twice by illness. It was along about 1957, Vail recalls, when someone actually stole Three Bars.
"They came in sometime during the night and took him off. Took him down the road a mile or so and bred a couple of mares. But they had some trouble with him, I think. Anyway, they hit him in the face with something. They'd je**ed the halter right off of him...he came home on his own. I found him trying to fight off another stud through a fence. There was blood all over Three Bars and the fence, too. But it was by being hit in the nostrils...it made his nose awful sensitive after that and boogered him up a little.

"So," continued Vail, "I put a lock on his door for a couple of years...and figured nobody would steal him anymore. Nobody did...but it left his nose very sensitive where they'd hit him. Everytime you put a halter on him he wanted to rub his nose on you or a post or wall or something.

"Then in 1962 or 1963 both he got sheep virus. The vet gave him a fifty percent chance of living on both occasions. We almost lost him both times."

Three Bars was ridden and exercised under a stock saddle like any other western horse—particularly during breeding season—until about 1962, according to Vail.
"Yes, he was easy to handle but Three Bars was full of fire. He was one of the nicest horses you'd want to have around. But he didn't like to be brushed or have his feet trimmed. He'd show a lot of white in his eye. If you didn't know him, you'd think he was thinking about eating you up.

"Sometimes he would make a dive at you, but he wouldn't hurt you. Like I say, Three Bars had a lot of fire to him. Guess that's what made him live so long. I was with the horse for twenty-three years. Owned him all the time until his death. Twenty-three years with the same horse is a long time. I was over at Walter's [Walter Merrick] a few months before he died and they were going to breed him...Anyway, I finally walked off because his knees looked so bad I couldn't stand it. I remember him as a young horse and I've watched him get old..."

Like many noted stallions, Three Bars had his attachments too. One was a mare named Fairy Adams. If it can be possible for a stallion to be in love, Three Bars had this feeling for this mare, by all accounts.

Vail first brought the mare from Jay Frost in 1962. She was blind, he recalled, and was kept in a paddock next to Three Bars in California.

"They became very attached to one another. Three Bars would get excited and upset when she wasn't in the paddock. They just sort of fell for one another. So when Walter came to take Three Bars to Texas I just gave him the mare...I had never seen Three Bars lie down in all the time I had him. But after Walter put Fairy Adams in the stall next to Three Bars, he'd lie down and rest...she was good for him."

Added Merrick: "Whenever we took Three Bars out to exercise, we had to take Fairy Adams or he'd get excited and start fussing. If she wasn't in the stall next to him, he'd start nickering and walking the stall and get uneasy..."

At the time of his death, Fairy Adams was thought to be in foal to Three Bars, was nursing one of his c**ts, and her yearling filly by Three Bars was not far away. She was also one of the last mares bred to him before he died.

Photos of what some called the "Cinderella Horse" show that Three Bars, in terms of conformation, was himself very close to the kind of animal many western horse breeders have been working toward. He stood fifteen hands, one and three-quarters inches in height and, by Sid Vail's estimate, weighed from 1,160 to 1,25, depending upon the time of year. Stan Snedigar recalls that Three Bars as a young stallion, weighed perhaps 1.050 pounds in racing condition.

However, the key to Three Bars' greatness came not merely from his physical appearance nor his speed on the track. It came rather from that special and elusive magic breeders call prepotency. It was his magic—this ability to gather the best that was in him and plant those qualities in his offspring—that made Three Bars the architect of the modern Quarter Horse.

From HORSEMAN Magazine, June 1968
by Bob Gray, Editor
(PERSONAL STORY FROM A RELATIVE OF SID & MAYOLA VAIL)

03/21/2024

STALLION MANAGEMENT:

So I got a little irritated with an anthropomorphic nouveau horse person that said you shouldn’t discipline your horse on another thread. I figured I would share this on my page since it is good advice. Take what you will from it.

You know , I have handled Stallions for over 50 years and I have known some really mean ones.

Every time we had a mean or nasty or oversexed stallion it was because whoever raised him from a youngster did not set boundaries.

You have to be so consistent from the time they come out of the sack if you are going to raise a well mannered stallion.

I Totally do not believe in Kissy facing them or feeding them from your hands. It works for a while until the day They catch scent of a mare in heat and they decide to take your breast off. I have seen these things happen several times.

Also I don’t believe stallions should be able to stick their heads between your b***s and nuzzle you. They need to learn to respect your space and you need to learn to respect theirs!

I also never feed my stallions from my hands because when little kids come along and do it they might mistake their finger for a carrot so I always put their treats in their feed bucket.

They get just as many treats they just don’t get them from my hands. Many stallions will start searching your pockets, rip your pockets off etc. if you feed from your hands. All of this is dangerous.

Stallions communicate with their teeth so it’s not always their fault when they use their teeth but they must be taught that you do not allow communication that way even if it takes some pretty tough lessons.

You can Be a good partner and a good friend to your stallion but you must use common sense.

I literally meet mine “coming out of the sack” with a little soft halter just for the time I’m drying them off and checking them and I teach them from week one that a halter and lead rope means you act normal in the barn like any other horse.

Later I introduce them to the breeding bridle or halter set up which is totally different and usually has a chain. The chain just helps to let them know that it is breeding time.

If chains bother you you can wrap it with latex and put it in their mouth if you want. The point is the Breeding bridle is totally different and that way they get to scream and holler and drop but only when they’re in that breeding set up.

I Get very annoyed when people don’t know what they’re talking about When it comes to disciplining horses.

So many good horses are ruined and end up at the kill buyers because people Spoil them by not setting boundaries and making the Horse mind. There’s nothing worse than a bad mannered horse!

I’m just trying to be helpful here because I made the very same mistake with my first horse which thankfully was a mare .... I Spoiled her so rotten and I had to live with her obnoxious manners for 35 years!

Worst thing that bugs me is when people say or make excuses for their bad mannered horse by saying....

“oh he must’ve been abused when he was little“.....

Bull S #*t ....

The horse is probably like he is because his first handlers did not give him proper parameters and teach him what community behavior is acceptable. Most of these people “love” their horses too much. I have seen it over and over and over.

It is Up to you to teach a horse to be a good equine citizen.

And stallions, as well as most horses, are different as people. Some have very nice dispositions and others have rotten ones. We can argue the point all day whether this is nature or nurture but you have to face the fact that horses are as different as people.

I do not like using whips either although if they are used only has an extension of your arm and to give the Horse direction it’s perfectly fine.

I prefer to buy cheap whiffle bats from the dollar store .... They don’t look as bad as whips and they make a big “twack” sound if you have to smack a horse on the chest or the neck to get them to move over or whatever and it won’t hurt them at all but the noise intimidates them usually.

I do want to say in closing that when you have 1000 to 1500 pound stallion with raging libido coming at you to tear your face off or kill you just because he is seeing you as competition to his desires when his testosterone is flowing you must have something to get him to back off.

And there are unfortunately just some psycho stallions like Ted Bundy or Charlie Manson. Sometimes it’s a matter of genetics.

I just want everybody to be safe so I thought I would put my two cents worth in. Take from it what you will but please don’t argue with me unless you have been handling stallions all over the world for as long as I have.

I was at equine affair a few years ago and a whole Lotta trainers lined up to watch me unload all of my stallions out of the same trailer. When I was done they asked me “Patti Bailey, how do you get all those stallions to trailer and mind you so well?”

I just smiled and said to them....

“ BECAUSE THEY KNOW I AM THE ALPHA BITCH”

Bottom line they must know you are the boss ... horses, especially stallions, like to follow strength.

Peace & Love 💕

PS If you don’t know what alpha means when it comes to stallions you better not try to raise one.

03/11/2024

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03/10/2024

❗Time to make some noise if you don't agree❗

Horse people.....did you know??? AQHA is moving to a digital only registration in 2025??

From the 2025 foal crop forward, you will no longer receive your AQHA certificates in hardcopy. They will be online. Horses will transfer online. Horses will need to be in YOUR name to sell them as AQHA and horses will be transferred into your name when you buy them.

YOU no longer have a choice and YOU no longer have your AQHA papers in hand.

WHOA. The AQHA convention begins next week. It is an item on the agenda to discuss this impending rule. We have one week to let OUR voice be heard.

EMAIL them. Tell them you want to keep your hardcopy registration papers. Not all of our customer base has access to computers, much less internet. We already sell thousands of grade horses.

And we've all been on AQHA's forever hold when we call. Yes, you can have your papers on your phone, on your computer, but NOT IN YOUR HAND.

Let them know. Cut and paste and email them today!!

[email protected]
AQHA CEO

[email protected]
AQHA Registrar

Thanks AQHA
10/14/2023

Thanks AQHA

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333 White Lakes Road
Stanley, NM
87056

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(505) 328-8641

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