My favorite class at any horse show is the mature mare class. It is my opinion that it takes this amount of time for mares to evolve and finally embody their classic desert destiny. At the Egyptian Event, held in Cairo this weekend, I was thrilled to see the 10-year old mare, Wahg Albadeia, an Al Maraam daughter out of Badeea Albadeia (Magd Albadeia x Hekayet Albadeia). Why do I say thrilled? Seven years ago, as a 3-year old, Wahg Albadeia was shown at the Berlin Cup International Egyptian Arabian Horse Show where she was named a Silver Junior Champion Filly. I was excited to find an Al Maraam daughter in a competition and all these years later, I am still excited to see her! In 2009, Al Maraam stood at Albadeia for one breeding season. Wahg, along with her paternal siblings: Dorrah Albadeia (out of Zaghroudat Albadeia) and Asalah Albadeia (out of Kenooz Albadeia) proved the wisdom of the late Nasr Marei's decision to incorporate Al Maraam within the Albadeia breeding program.
Wahg Albadeia (Al Maraam x Badeea Albadeia) as photographed by the late Erwin Escher |
While Wahg is very much her father's daughter (look at that shoulder), her maternal granddam, Hekayet Albadeia, is an Anaza Bay Shahh daughter out of Simeon Safir (Asfour x Simeon Safanad). In September 2016, in an interview with Samantha Mattocks of The Arabian Magazine, Nasr shared how he felt about Simeon Safir:
"I also bought two beautiful mares who have added wonderfully to the programme: Simeon Safir (Asfour x Simeon Safanad by Sankt Georg) and Ansata Majeeda (Ansata Hejazi x Dal Maharia by Dalul). Both mares continue their extraordinary grace and classic looks as they become long-time residents at our farm." - Nasr Marei
In studying the 6th generation of Wahg's pedigree, you will find that of the 32 horses who populate this section of the pedigree; Wahg is equally influenced by the Saqlawi strain, as she is by the Hadban strain, and of lesser influence is the Dahman strain. However, in Dr. William Hudson's important mtDNA study of the EAO matrilines, we learned that the 1882 mare, Roga El Beda and the 1880 mare, El Dahma, share the same haplotype, suggesting that both mares shared a long ago ancestress. They are more related than we ever believed them to be. If we think along these lines, that of common ancestry, more than half of the genetic influence is driven by the combined influence of the Roga el Beda/El Dahma horses. Judith Forbis in her classic work, Authentic Arabian Bloodstock (the blue book) wrote that despite being a substrain of the Kuhaylan strain, the contemporary Hadban strain horses physically resemble the type we associate with Saqlawi horses. Philippe Paraskevas, within Chapter 6 of The Egyptian Alternative, Volume II, also wrote,
Rather than focusing on whether Wahg conforms to the traits and characteristics associated with one strain over another; maybe the way in which to reconcile the type expressed by this beautiful mare is to celebrate the combined genetic power of all the horses who came before her, to perpetuate the Nejdi horse into the modern day. "The way Venus was bred is noteworthy, as this line was immediately infused with original Saklawi Gidran blood: her daughter Hadba was by Saklawi I himself. Hadba's daughter Bint Hadba El Saghira was by a Saklawi I son, El Halabi. What we have here is a very high concentration of added-on SGIS blood at a very early stage of Hadban Enzahi development in Egypt."
However, with all that said by the two authors, let us not forget the relationship between science and strain theory, as Dr. Hudson shared within his monumental study,
"these data confirm that modern mtDNA haplotyping does not correspond to the traditional strain designation based on Bedouin breeding traditions that depend on maternal lineage."
***Many thanks to Arabian Essence TV for their coverage of the 2022 Egyptian Event Cairo, held at the Pegasus Equestrian Center, Giza, Egypt.***
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