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| TB Helwa (Ibn El Nil Rahim x TB Hasna) bred,owned & photographed by Monika Savier of Tre Balzane Stud |
"I'd say the biggest thing is to remember why you started in the first place. For me, no matter how tough things got, I always came back to the fact that I loved horses. If you can find that love and passion for what you're doing, it'll carry you through the tough times." - Matt Brown, 5-star eventing rider, in an article written by Tyler Held for Eventing Nation, Between the Ears
How does one photo metamorphasize with such power into something bigger, than what is an image of a horse, frozen in time? I have seen this particular mare's photo in several issues of the Tutto Arabi publications, never really aware of the impact it was making upon my subconscious.
Life has become weird, nothing makes sense anymore, not even the truth, if you can still find it. Only in those moments when my mind begins to wander, and I am free from the grip of the brokenness that surrounds me, it is celebratory to find TB Helwa, as physically, she is reassurance that while the world may have changed, classic Arabian horse type still remains timeless. She is an extremely beautiful mare, close-coupled, rounded lines, a strong, smooth topline, well-sprung ribcage, her neck meets her head at an angle to form a finer throatlatch and her head is as dry as one would expect a desert queen to be. That's what she is for me, a picture perfect example of what I imagine to be is, an authentic desert horse.
As beautiful as this mare is, her pedigree is equally fascinating, as more of the pedigree is dominated by a few key horses. You might miss it at first glance but a deeper dive within the pedigree will reveal the strategic use of the bloodlines in this mare's genetic history. You find concentrated pockets of bloodlines, which in turn point you to still other ancestral groups, all interconnected. For example, her matriline, which happens to be one of my favorites in straight Egyptian breeding, traces back to Mahfouza, through her daughter by Anter, Maysa. Mahfouza was a 1943 bay mare, bred by the Inshass Stud, whose pedigree does not include any of the Blunt desert horses. Mahfouza's sire was Hamdan (Ibn Rabdan x Bint Radia) and her dam was El Mahrousa (El Zafir x El Shahbaa), a 1937 mare bred by the Inshass Stud. El Mahrousa's dam, El Shahbaa, foaled in 1925, was an Abeyyan strain mare, sired by a Hamdani stallion, she was purchased by King Fouad in 1931. The genetic influence of Maysa is reinforced through Montasir, the sire of Ibn El Nile Rahim. Maysa is the maternal great granddam of Montasir.
Ansata Halim Shah appears in multiple lines, contributing almost 22%, however, his sire, *Ansata Ibn Halima, more than doubles his son's influence, in terms of the number of lines via several of his daughters, in addition to sons. The same can be said of Hanan, the dam of the stallions, *Jamil and Salaa El Dine, as well as the mares, KEN Amal and Ashraff, whose sire, Mohafez, an *Ibn Moniet El Nefous son, connects with his paternal sibling, Moniet el Sharaf. Speaking of Mohafez, his Babson ancestry through Ahroufa, connects with the Ansata mares: Jellabia (Maarqada) and the Nile prefixed mares who trace back to Falima (Fa-Habba). And what about Ansata Nile Charm, an Ansata Ibn Sudan daughter, whose dam, Ansata Nile Queen was also by Ansata Ibn Sudan?
TB Helwa is a proven broodmare, some may even call her elite, with 8 foals to her credit, her last foal, a filly by Naseem Al Rashediah was recently foaled, April 8, 2025 and she is currently in foal to Hilal Al Waab (Sinan Al Rayyan x Sharuby HP). She has produced 2 other fillies by Jamil Al Rayyan and 5 colts by NK Hafid Jamil, Al Adeed Al Shaqab and also, Jamil Al Rayyan. It will be interesting to consider the similarities/differences between her Al Adeed colt, TB Ashhal and Hayet Al Salem, her Naseem Al Rashediah (Al Adeed son) filly.
Congratulations to her breeder, Monika Savier for her clever use of the genetic influences, which when combined, resulted in this gorgeous mare. TB Helwa.

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