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Jus
De Pomme
History
Jus de Pomme is one of
those ‘Euro’ stallions that defies convenient
ethnic stereotyping. Born in Belgium of French
breeding, he made his name while owned by a Dutchman,
and ridden by a German, before his untimely death just
weeks after his gold medal victory in Atlanta at the
1996 Olympic Games.
But Jus de Pomme is the classic case of a horse that
very nearly didn’t make it: nearly didn’t make it
through the stallion assessment to breeder status;
nearly didn’t make it as a performer when the early
indications were less than promising.
Yet, the breeding was there.
His sire Primo des Bruyères was a performance
champion who died way too early, at the age of six.
His sire was the great Thoroughbred stallion, Night
and Day, sire of such good horses as Danose, Sunshine
and Shogun. His dam sire, Urbain is out of a mare by
another great Thoroughbred, Furioso.
His dam, Opaline des Pins was one of those mares,
breeders make their reputation with. A 1.30 competitor
herself, she was by the great Anglo Arab, Garitchou,
one of the stars of the Haras du Pin, and she is out
of Jasmina by the Almé and in turn out of Papy de
l’Ile mare, Britt, who produced the two
international jumpers, Indian Tonic and Ouze de Trefle.
Opaline des Pins was sold out of France by Gilbert
Lefevre to the Belgian lawyer, Arnold de Brabandere,
and for him produced nine foals. A colt conceived in
France by Le Condéen, then bred to Primo des Bruyères,
she produced Jus de Pomme, then a colt, Magister (by
Pachat II), a filly, Nymphe (by Sheyenne de Baugy),
the colt, Othello (Rêve d’Elle), colt, Qunitus
(Pavarotti van de Helle), colt, Richebourg (Bayard
d’Elle), filly, Topaline (Major de la Cour) and the
last, a colt, Tresor de al Cour (by Major de la Cour)
– this last born, thanks to embryo transplant –
after the death of his dam.
Of these, Magister was started by Robert Hines before
going to François Mathy, who sold him to Switzerland
where he competed as Lost Boys Magister. Trésor
d’Opaline, Quintus and Richbourg are campaigned by
Claude Vangeenberghe with success on the international
Grand Prix circuit. So that brings the total to five
stallions, all Grand Prix winners, out of that one
mare!
Back to Jus de Pomme who was less than a hit when he
arrived at the Belgian Warmblood licensing in 1989.
Breeding expert, Henk Bouwman in his excellent article
on Jus de Pomme is the Monneron 2006/7
“He wasn’t an impressive youngster at all. In
March 1989, his big head made his eyes seem even
smaller than they were, his fleshy buttocks didn’t
augur much power and because of his under-developed
withers his hindquarter seemed overbuilt. His feet
showed flat heels, as many French saddlebreds did in
those days. So I don’t remember him as a beauty,
rather as quite an ugly horse. Looking in my old
catalogue, I had made a supplemental note of his lazy
gallop and clumsy technique. But the big chestnut, 169
cm high and born in July, showed lots of power in free
jumping and earned 63 points from the judges – two
points below the average of 65 for his class of eight
home-bred colts. Two months later, and he wasn’t
three years old yet, he advanced in his performance
test to 67.97 and only three of his class succeeded in
getting the approved status… Anyhow, the brand new
BWP jury of that year had seen, or at least smelled, a
glimpse of the quality that should grow from this ugly
duckling.”
Standing his first season in Limburg, Jus de Pomme
covered a paltry 19 mares. As a four year old he
finished in the top 20% of his performance test, and
at the age of six, ridden by Bert Romp, showed
something of his amazing scope when he jumped a two
metre wall to win the puissance at the Veendam Indoor
Show, just after he had been sold to the Dutch
stallion keeper, Wiepke van de Lageweg. Leaving
Belgium, he left behind 98 colts and 124 fillies.
Once again the chestnut stallion had to front a
licensing commission – this time the KWPN – and it
was noted that he was: “Phlegmatic, reliable, very
obedient. Seems to have experienced a bad basic
schooling and has lack of flexibility. His gaits are
slow but regular and with plenty of elbow-room. Moves
too much on the forehand. Jumps with a lot of power, a
rather moderate technique in the fore-legs and
finishes his jumps with the hind-legs very well,
Easier to ride in jumping than in dressage.”
Wiepke sent his new acquisition to the German rider,
Ulli Kirchhoff who took him back to the basics. In
1995 they won the Grand Prix in Hickstead, with 4ths
at three World Cup qualifiers, Hamburg, Moorsele and
Berlin. In 1996, the pair won the German National
Showjumping title at Balve, were third in the Grand
Prix at Mannheim, and took home a first prize from the
Aachen Nations Cup.
By now the horse had the reputation of being scopey
but lacking speed, more suited to the old style
tracks, but still he was considered reliable enough
for a spot in the German team to go to Atlanta – and
there luck was with them. In the teams contest, the
big chestnut picked up 0.75 time in the first round,
0.25 in the second. In the individual gold medal
contest, he once again did not touch a pole, but
picked up one time in the second round – but still
with the only jumping double clear took home the
Olympic individual gold medal!
A fortnight later, Jus de Pomme was dead, and his
rider was still smarting from the criticism of the
horse. Kirchhoff told Pascal Renauldon in Z
Magazine (April 1997): “I will never find
another horse like Jus de Pomme again. He was only ten
years old. And for those ten years, the whole world
pissed on him, criticism never stopped. They found
this fault, they found that fault… but for my part,
I was immediately convinced. I continually told the
owner that he would possibly never win a long range of
Grand Prix, but notwithstanding that he would be able
to do something very special. From the very beginning
I had that confidence in him and he proved that to me.
That was out strength. For me it is like losing my
best friend.”
Unfortunately for Wiepke van der Lageweg, because of
the horse’s competitive career, there was no
treasure trove of frozen semen left in the freezer.
His Dutch career resulted in 188 foals, 50 of them
born after his untimely death.
Yet from a total crop of 410, Jus de Pomme produced
some super jumping horses. The 1991 foal, O de Pomme
(out of a Wendekreis mare) took home a team bronze
from the Jerez WEG, with Belgian rider, Stanny van
Paeschen. Harry Potter (born 1992, out of a Feo mare)
has been successful with the American duo of Peter
Wylde and John Pearce, as has the mare Octavia (1992,
mare by Voltaire) with Werner Muff and Jurgen Stenfert.
In his short stud career he produced eight licensed
stallions, the most successful of which has doubtless
been Jumpy des Fontaines (born 1997, out of a Ramiro /
Almé mare) ridden for France by Patrice Delaveau and
a candidate for the Beijing Olympics.
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