Streaks Of Firewater

Streaks Of Firewater 2015 AQHA Stallion
Streakin Again ($1M+)
Fire In The Bar ($35K+)
Firewater Flit ($5M+)
6 Panel N/N

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02/19/2026

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857 mares on a breeding report. ONE stallion. ONE year.

If YOU, as an AQHA member, had access to the number of mares on a stallion’s breeding report before you bred, would it influence your decision?

Of course it would.

That’s the point.

Information drives behavior.

AQHA is not providing it's members the full data, and then policy is enacted that assumes we are all too incompetent to make informed breeding decisions.

The Jockey Club provides every drop of this information. Why can't we? There are no privacy concerns.

You want genetic diversity? Let the members have the data, then watch them make more informed decisions.

We have a problem. It's not dead stallions.

_______

Listen to the Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZn26WgJd44

Learn how to get involved: https://news.soloselecthorses.com/twoyear

Send your letter - FOR OR AGAINST the rule change. We will share them all. [email protected]

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11/28/2025

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🤩HERE IT IS!!! The great compromise and heck of a deal!!

🙌After a great deal of thought—and after hearing from so many of you who expressed interest in lifetime enrollments following our recent donation to a special cause, I’ve decided that a thoughtful compromise is the best path forward.

As many of you know, NIH/TOH offers annual enrollments because, unlike other incentive programs that rely on yearly stallion nominations to stay funded, we are entirely self-sustained. The yearly renewals from our amazing owners are what allow us to provide added money at hundreds of sidepots across the country.

With that in mind, here is the new compromise: **each year, on the day after Thanksgiving, NIH/TOH will offer 75 lifetime enrollments.** Please review the details carefully—I’ve done my best to anticipate the big “what ifs” and address them in advance.

If you have already renewed your horse for the upcoming season and would like to switch to a lifetime enrollment, please email [email protected], and I will provide you with an adjusted invoice.

Thank you all for your continued support and enthusiasm.

Single Lifetime Enrollment - $850
Dual NIH&TOH Enrollment - $1,200
Limited to 75 TOTAL PER SEASON

- Includes -
- Enrollment may be transferred 1 time to a different horse per season. (Season Nov. 1 - Oct. 31
- Since there are limited lifetime enrollments offered each year, you do reserve the right to sell your enrollment. $50 transfer fee paid by the current holder.
- No refunds for lifetime enrollments since the enrollment may be sold
- In the event NIH/TOH ceases operations, the prorated amount per/will be refunded. $200 for each year that would have been fulfilled by regular yearly renewal.

🔗Lifetime Enrollment Link - https://tinyurl.com/2ke72fy6
❤️Payment Plan - A payment plan is also available through Klara. Email [email protected] for payment link.

‼️Keep in mind, in our first season, over 115 horses won more than $850!!!

11/16/2025

This is a great time to get those “open” mares checked again. Last year I bought an open mare that actually was in foal and had a baby in January, a pretty expensive miss. I also had one mare I fought all season and at the 14 day check had so much fluid I threw her out and said see ya in the spring. That see ya in the spring was the left photo via ultrasound (his eye) and right on the ground 🙃 how this mare was pregnant is beyond me and goes against everything I’ve ever learned about reproduction. So before we hit the final “submit” on our breeding reports it’s best to check! It can also help you prep for 2026 if any of your mares come up open.

11/10/2025

NIH & TOH Nationwide Barrel Horse Sidepots

10/16/2025

EASY JET - 1967 (JET DECK x LENAS BAR)
by AQHA

With a big heart and blistering speed, Easy Jet earned a spot among the legendary figures of the Quarter Horse world.

The sorrel stallion was born in 1967 and was a product of Walter Merrick’s breeding program. Easy Jet was sired by the phenomenal Jet Deck and out of the Thoroughbred mare Lena’s Bar (TB) by Three Bars (TB).

Once broke to ride, the sorrel was worked against Jet Smooth at 350 yards and won. Merrick decided to run Easy Jet in a yearling race at Blue Ribbon Downs in Sallisaw, Oklahoma. The big c**t won with daylight between him and the second-place horse.

This was the beginning of an illustrious racing career. The Oklahoma rancher sent Easy Jet to the starting gates 26 times as a 2-year-old. The sorrel won 22 times, including the All-American, Kansas and Sunland Fall futurities.

In 1969, Easy Jet was the racing world champion. The sorrel returned in 1970, and was the racing champion stallion.
In 1971, Merrick sold half interest in Easy Jet to Joe McDermott. Over the next several years, Easy Jet was sold several different times. The Buena Suerte Ranch in Roswell, New Mexico, bought Easy Jet for $3.5 million, and in the early ‘80s the stallion was syndicated for $30,000,000. Easy Jet’s last owners were Merrick and Mark and Bill Allen.

Easy Jet’s first foals hit the ground in 1971, and by 1973, he was on the AQHA leading sires list. Some of the sorrel’s champion get include Easy Date, Pie In The Sky, My Easy Credit, Easy Angel, Easily Smashed, Extra Easy and Megahertz.

Easy Jet was standing at the Lazy E in Guthrie, Oklahoma, in 1992 when it was decided he needed to be euthanized.

Easy Jet died in 1992 at 25, and was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 1993.

10/11/2025
09/07/2025

𝗨𝗻𝗶𝗰𝗼𝗿𝗻𝘀 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗠𝗼𝗻𝗲𝘆...

The rapid rise of ICSI (Intracytoplasmic S***m Injection) has undeniably changed the landscape of breeding in the Western performance horse world. On one hand, it has allowed us to preserve the genetics of superstar show mares and extend the influence of popular stallions. But on the other, it has opened a slippery slope—flooding the market with multiple foals out of the same high-profile mares in a single year.

What was once rare—owning a foal from a truly exceptional mare—is now far more common. While that might seem like a good thing, the reality is it dilutes the value of each individual foal. When dozens of offspring from the same mare hit the sales at once, they inevitably compete against each other, driving prices down for everyone else.

At the same time, the financial strain on stallion owners has reached suffocating levels. Costly enrollment and nomination fees to keep a stallion relevant in today’s incentive-driven marketplace add up quickly, often reaching tens of thousands annually. For many, it’s not about producing better horses—it’s about paying to stay visible. This burden doesn’t just strain stallion owners; it directly impacts mare owners and small breeders who must pay higher breeding fees to cover those rising costs.

Layer on top of this the escalating nomination and enrollment fees required of prospect owners, and the squeeze becomes clear. Small and middle-class breeders—the backbone of the industry—find themselves pushed out. They cannot compete with programs designed for elite breeders who can afford to put 10 embryos on the ground each year and enroll every one in the highest-paying incentives.

The result is twofold: financial suffocation for stallion and mare owners alike, and a constricting of genetic diversity. With only a handful of stallions and mares dominating the incentive landscape, the gene pool narrows, limiting long-term growth and soundness within the industry.

Of course, the cream will always rise to the top. Exceptional horses with elite talent, genetics, and training will continue to command six-figure prices, no matter the market conditions. But those outliers alone cannot sustain the industry. For the equine economy to remain healthy, the “average horse” must retain enough value to make ownership and breeding viable. The industry depends on good-minded, well-bred horses that might not top a sale, but still have a place to go, a job to do, and an owner who values them. Without a strong middle market, even the top-tier horses lose their stage.

Another concern is the growing dominance of large, incentivized shows. While they bring prestige and prize money, they also threaten to choke out the smaller weekend and affiliate-level shows. These grassroots shows are essential steppingstones—they’re where young horses cut their teeth, where amateurs gain confidence, and where the next generation of competitors and horsemen are nurtured. If they disappear, the pipeline for developing horses and riders outside the elite tier grows dangerously thin. Supporting these smaller venues isn’t just tradition—it’s survival. Without them, the middle market withers, and the very programs meant to “grow” the industry risk hollowing it out instead.

The current economic squeeze is amplifying the strain on breeders and horse owners. According to the American Horse Council, the U.S. equine industry contributes a staggering $177 billion annually and supports approximately 2.2 million jobs, even amid a declining horse population. But for many individual owners, mounting costs are becoming untenable.

Feed prices have risen sharply (20% or more) due to ingredient and transport costs, while fuel for hauling has become one of the top financial pain points for horse owners. Veterinary expenses, too, have climbed by 40% or more over the past decade, with many owners reporting they’ve delayed treatments or even considered drastic measures like euthanasia because they cannot keep up.

𝐘𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐕𝐨𝐢𝐜𝐞 𝐌𝐚𝐭𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐬

We’ve talked about how ICSI, sky-high nomination fees, and rising basic costs are reshaping this industry—often at the expense of small and mid-tier breeders. We’ve also looked at the risk of losing the very grassroots shows that give our horses and riders a place to grow.

𝐍𝐨𝐰, 𝐰𝐞 𝐰𝐚𝐧𝐭 𝐭𝐨 𝐡𝐞𝐚𝐫 𝐟𝐫𝐨𝐦 𝐲𝐨𝐮:

• What’s your current situation in terms of breeding or ownership?
• Are you downsizing, holding steady, or stepping away entirely?
• Is the cost-vs-profit squeeze pushing you closer to the edge—or maybe already past it?
• And most importantly, how do we as an industry better support the weekend and affiliate-level shows that keep the middle market alive?

Share your demographic details (scale of your operation, region, involvement level) and your outlook. Together, let’s make this conversation real.

Let’s ask ourselves: is the dream still sustainable—or are we losing the very foundation that made this industry strong in the first place?

09/02/2025

A new study shows that Thoroughbred foals given more outdoor turnout time and weaned later are more likely to succeed as racehorses, with increased starts and higher prize money during their young careers.

The research followed 129 foals from birth to age four, collecting detailed management data and tracking later racing outcomes.

Results consistently linked more time outside and later weaning to positive results, regardless of veterinary care, bloodlines, or farm differences.

Researchers propose that early activity encourages musculoskeletal adaptation, making horses more robust and possibly better at movement and sensory processing.

Ultimately, while industry focus remains on performance and profit, the evidence suggests that practices aligning with horse welfare—like turnout and gradual weaning—benefit both horses AND the business of racing.

Full study: https://beva.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/evj.70084?utm_medium=email&utm_source=substack

09/02/2025

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