Adorer

Colt
Colour: Chestnut, white blaze
Breed: Unknown
Type: Polo and riding pony
Foaled: 1926
Height: 13.0 hands

Sire: Love Song GSB
Dam: Dora II


ADORER Supplement for 1926

COLTS
ADORER
Chestnut, blaze, near fore fetlock, and both hind fetlocks and socks white. Foaled 27 April 1926
Height 13.0. Measured 12 September 1926
Owner and Breeder Mrs J. Oscar Muntz

sire: Love Song GSB (stallion 1065), brown 14.2
dam: Dora II (Approved Mare Register p.168), chestnut, 14-1 ½

It is probable that Adorer would have been at Foxhams from 1926 until 1929, and in 1930 would have been broken, trained for Polo and sold for Polo or as a Riding Pony.
The depression, would now be beginning to bite and the situation in the country would become increasingly more difficult.

Notes;
Volume 19 of the NPS (1925-1927) is the first volume not to incorporate annual supplements.

Therefore Adorer comes under the new system and appears in a Supplement to Volume 18 (1922-1924), for 1926.
This Supplement states, conditions for entry, as follows.

Polo and Riding Pony Young Stock.
Age. – Colts and Fillies not over three years (a Pony reckoned to be one year of age on the first day of the year following that of its birth).
Qualifications – Either (a), (b) or (c) :-
(a) By an entered sire and out of an entered or registered dam.
(b) By a registered sire and out of an entered dam.
(c) By a Thoroughbred, Arab, or Barb sire and out of an entered dam.
Note – The term “entered” applies to entries in the National Pony Stud Book (including the Supplement).
The term “registered” applies to entries in the “Approved Stallion Register” or “Approved Mare Register.”
The term “Thoroughbred” signifies entered in the “General Stud Book.”
The term “Arab” signifies entered in the “Arab Horse Stud Book.”
The term “Barb” signifies entered in the “Arab-bred Register”
Colts and fillies in this Supplement for Young Stock have the same Stud Book value as all entered Stallions and Mares (four years old and upwards). All measurements of young stock given in these pages are those supplied by owners of the ponies concerned.