Welcome to draftcross.com home of Dundulk Sporthorses and thanks for visiting. We strive to put together an extraordinary collection of cross bred horses. We truly believe the crossbred horses you will find on our sales pages are different from most draft crosses out there. To put together our collection, we travel great distances and inspect literally hundreds of horses to present the dozen or so we have for sale at any given time. The horses we source must be out-of-the ordinary in terms of refinement, temperament and athleticism. We look for horses that are suitable for a wide range of sports: Field hunting, dressage, eventing - we've even sold horses to vaulters. We vet our horses before we market them and while there is no such thing as a "perfect horse", we are confident that the horse we sell is sound for the job at hand - While there is a great demand for refinement in draft crosses, there is also a great demand for sane, easily trainable horses. We are firm believers that the draft blood should be on the bottom of the pedigree, i.e., from the dam's side, and the lighter blood from the stallion's side. We feel the majority of the genetic influence comes from the dam and we want more of the draft temperament. This can result in a heavier (but quieter) type of horse. This is where we think our draft crosses are far superior to most others on the market - we find the ones bred out of draft mares that are exceptionally refined. We may look at 40 horses before we buy one that meets our requirements. We strive to offer you refinement, movement and temperament in the horses we select.

We take great pride in correctly representing our horses - they are what we say they are! If we say a horse will jump anything for anybody - it will. If we say it has the movement for dressage - it does. Because we hunt and event ourselves, we know what a horse needs to be successful. If you are not happy - we are not happy. The number one comment we hear from buyers is: "he's exactly what you said he was".

We take even greater pride in matching up people with horses. We select, care for, train, ride and market each horse so we know it very well. Our reputation is very valuable to us and we can provide references from past customers.

All of our horses go through a round-pen program that makes them much less likely to spook. They are competed, hunted and shown. We also have prospects that have not yet been competed or hunted and are priced accordingly.

We also have a few homebreds each year that are uniformly exceptional, please consider them if you are looking for a young prospect. Please visit our site often, as our sales list changes regularly.

On the rare occasion, we will take a horse on consignment for someone else. If we do this it is because we know the horse and owner very, very well and the horse fits the profile of the type we try to sell which is an extraordinarily sane horse, first and foremost. We do not represent horses we do not know.

Thank you for visiting.

"Be happy in your work . . . this is a gift of God". . . . Ecclesiastes 5:19

You will note that some of our draft crosses contain Hackney blood. The Hackney Horse is considered a "rare breed" in the United States by the AHSA and are indeed, hard to find, so most people are not familiar with them. The Hackney is a foundation bloodline for many European warmbloods such as the Trakehner, Holsteiner and Dutch Warmblood. The Hackney horse, while bred originally as a driving horse, exhibits a conformation that allows them to elevate their shoulders, collect and drive with their haunches. Just what we need for dressage and jumping! In fact, the world high jump record of 8' 2" is held by a Hackney cross bred, Sir Ashton (later called Greatheart). Many, many jumpers in the 30s and 40s were cross or full bred Hackneys including Tosca, a Gold Medallist for the German Olympic Team of 1936. Long time Hackney breeders will tell you that the Hackney is a phenomenally intelligent animal, that they think before they react.

We like a draft crossed with a Hackney as opposed to a TB. You get a horse with phenomenal self carriage, the ability to elevate their shoulders and reach (whether reaching over a fence or in an extended trot) and collect on their haunches. The Hackney was bred to go a distance, bringing endurance into the picture. Thoroughbreds, bred for racing, tend to be more "downhill" and built with a lower set neck, the better to flatten out at a gallop. 

Picture of the Hackney Stallion Canada's Performer courtesy of Maple Hill Hackney Farm.
 

We do not sell PMU horses. We are adamantly opposed to the industry. Without climbing on a soapbox here, let me just say that PMU ranching benefits drug companies first and foremost - not the ranchers, not the people buying the horses and certainly not the horses. They can put any spin on it they want (and what a wonderful spin it is - look at the MFHA publication Covertside to see their expensive, flashy ad campaign for the CanAm SportHorse) but the fact remains that mares are kept standing tied for the majority of their gestation. Are the facilities clean? Yes, mostly. Are the horses fed well? Yes. Is it a humane way to keep a horse? It is my considered opinion that it is not. The very nature of the horse is to be free and this confinement goes on year after year of the mare's life. As someone who makes her living off of the horse I can't, in good conscious, overlook this. Sure, it's a cheap supply of horses, but child labor produces cheap clothing too. Do we close our eyes to its origin because it's cheap?

I am also a supporter of the small farmer - being one myself. The breeders we buy from raise a few horses, raise a few cows, raise a few crops - they are not huge "factory farms" like the PMU ranches or the concentrated feeding operations for swine, chicken or turkey. They have bloodlines going back generations, they can talk about a mare their father, or grandfather had and the traits it has passed on to succeeding generations. There is something. . .right about that. I will give my support to the small breeder everytime. Everybody wants a deal - everybody want a cheap horse I know, but in the overall scheme of things, the money you pay for the horse is such a small portion of what you will spend over the time you own it, it's not a significant a percentage. So, the next time you hear about, or see an ad for CanAm sport horses or the NAERIC (North American Equine Ranching Information Council), think about the origins of these horses.