Scientific American Supplement, No. 611, September 17, 1887 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 134 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 611, September 17, 1887.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 611, September 17, 1887 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 134 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 611, September 17, 1887.

“I am, very truly yours,

                                      “WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT. 
    “To RANDOLPH HUNTINGTON, Rochester, N.Y.”

My experience with Arabian blood the past seven years justifies all that Mr. Blunt has predicted to me from time to time.  So also do old letters by Andrew Jackson and Henry Clay hold out the same inducements to the breeders of Kentucky and Tennessee in their day.

From my long years of experience in all classes of horses, I am frank to say to-day that I would not be without a thoroughbred Arabian stallion on my place, and journalists who inform their readers that they “are liable to splints, ringbones, and spavins,” give themselves away to all intelligent readers and breeders as exceedingly superficial in matter of horses; for ringbones and spavins are positively unknown among the Arabs.  The way to get rid of such imperfections in our mongrel breed of horses is to fill them up with pure Arab blood.

Such paper men also talk about “fresh Diomed” and “fresh Messenger blood,” as though there had been a drop of it in never so diluted form for any influence these many years, of course forgetting that Diomed was a very strongly inbred Arabian horse.  He came to this country when 21 years old.

He was foaled 1777, and arrived in Virginia in 1798.  From his old age and rough voyage in an old-fashioned ship, it required nearly a year to recuperate from the journey, and was 23 years old before he could do stud service to any extent.  Then, at no time to his death was he a sure foal getter, even to a few mares.  He died in 1808, thirty-one years old, long enfeebled and unfit for service.

Between 1808 and 1887 is quite a period of time, during which we have had four different wars, beginning with 1812, and how much Diomed blood does the reader suppose there is in this country?  Yet I take up daily and weekly papers devoted to horse articles, extolling the value of Diomed blood as cause for excellence in some young horse.  Are we a nation of idiots to be influenced by such nonsense?

I wish there was fresh Diomed blood; thus the public would know what Arab blood had done for England.  So I can say of imported Messenger.  What our breeders want is good, solid information in print, and not the; dreamings of some professional writer for money.  For myself, I am on the downhill side of life, but so long as I can help the young by pen or example, I shall try.

RANDOLPH HUNTINGTON. 
Rochester, N.Y.

* * * * *

SCENES AMONG THE EXTINCT VOLCANOES OF RHINELAND.

In the province of the Rhine there is a range of mountains, including several extinct volcanoes, which offer grand and beautiful scenery and every opportunity for geological study, leading the mind back to the early ages of the earth.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 611, September 17, 1887 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.