| A Horse 
						of A Different ColorReprinted with permission
 By
						Bea Kinkade
 © Copyright 1999, 
						Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse, Lewisburg, Tennessee
 Reprinted with permission from Bea Kinkade
 
						 Every 
						once in a while, nature gives us a wonderful gift. Sometimes 
						it's the result of years of human research and diligence 
						. . . a new variety of rose for example. And sometimes it's 
						just luck. 
 On June 19, 1969, nature gave the walking 
						horse world such a gift. A filly was born. By 
						Johnny Midnight 
						and out of Mack's Golden Girl, the baby was an odd color, 
						like sparkling amber champagne, with chocolate points and 
						bright blue eyes that eventually turned amber. She was Champagne 
						Lady.
 
						In 1970 Diane Green of Summerhill 
						Farm, Tullahoma, Tennessee, saw the 18 month old filly tied 
						to a trailer at a horse show. Diane came running back to 
						her mother, exclaiming, "Mother, come look - I've just 
						seen the most beautiful, different-colored filly. You won't 
						believe your eyes. I've never seen anything like her. And 
						I'm going to buy her!"
 The Greens had several 
						top show horses in training, notably Delight's Magic Moment, 
						who became the 1971 World Champion Junior Mare. Diane's 
						mother, Kelly, though impressed with the quality, pedigree, 
						and certainly the filly's unusual color, tried unsuccessfully 
						to discourage the purchase. But Diane was going to have 
						that filly!
 
 Champagne Lady proved to be a wise investment. 
						She was put into training with Marianne Leech and soon became 
						well known for her blue ribbons. She won the two year old 
						class at Montgomery, Alabama her first time in the show 
						ring. She went on to win classes at 23 major shows, in Tennessee, 
						Alabama, Georgia and Kentucky. Many of you remember seeing 
						her.
 
 Diane was curious about her mare's color. What 
						was it, exactly? Everyone had a guess, but no one knew for 
						sure. So she submitted hair samples to the University of 
						Tennessee at Knoxville, and later to Auburn University at 
						Auburn, Alabama. The samples were independently tested, 
						and through microscopic comparison and elimination both 
						laboratories agreed that the color could not be officially 
						classified, that they had no typing for the mare's color 
						gene. Champagne Lady was a color unique unto herself. The 
						experts theorized that she was a "genetic color accident," 
						truly a horse of a different color.
 
 Even though they 
						could not put a name to her color, the experts could definitely 
						state which colors she was not. She was not roan, gray, 
						claybank, red dun, buckskin, perlino, isabella or grulla.
 
 Champagne Lady had proved herself in the show ring, 
						but would she pass on her great abilities when she retired 
						to become a broodmare? Would she pass on her unusual color?
 
 Her first foal was a black filly, Eb's Champagne Velvet. 
						She topped the 1980 Wiser Farm Sale and went on to make 
						a good show mare. In 1989 Velvet was bred and foaled a black 
						stud colt. They were entered and tied seventh in the highly 
						competitive mare and foal class at the 1990 Celebration.
 
 Champagne Lady's second foal was a black colt by
						Pride Of Midnight 
						H. F. He was injured as a weanling and had 
						to be put down.
 
 Meanwhile she had been bred back 
						to Pride Of Midnight 
						and April, 1979 delivered a black stallion, Pride's Champagne. 
						(More about him later).
 
 Her fourth foal was by
						Carbon Copy. 
						It was a filly. A champagne-colored filly! This was the 
						first indication that Champagne Lady could transmit her 
						color! This filly, Champagne Copy, also made a good show 
						horse and then was retired to be a broodmare.
 
						Champagne Lady was proving 
						herself as a broodmare as well as a show mare. She was producing 
						exceptionally talented horses and was proven capable of 
						propagating her color. 
						
						Meanwhile, the Greens had put "the 
						greatest horse they'd ever raised," (their very words), 
						Pride's Champagne, in training. Their hope, faith, time 
						and belief were swept away when the two-year old colt was 
						maliciously injured, during the night, just five days before 
						his show ring debut.
 Going against three veterinary 
						advisors, including the insurance vet, Kelly and Diane refused 
						to put the horse down; pleading with Dr. Prince of Winchester, 
						Tennessee, to work with Auburn University to save him. Reluctantly, 
						Dr. Prince agreed to try, and kept the horse for almost 
						a year. Pride's Champagne came out of the tragedy terribly 
						blemished and scarred for life, but alive. And miracle of 
						miracles - he was sound!
 
 Pride's Champagne was solid 
						black, with a beautiful head and long neck. He was 16.2 
						hands and could do a perfect four-beat running walk. He 
						was alive and well, but would never grace the show ring.
 
 This is where the Kinkades enter the story. In 1983 
						my husband Jack and I bought Pride's Champagne and had him 
						shipped to California. We had been looking for an outstanding 
						stallion since our great Go Boy's Fancy Pants died. Pride's 
						Champagne was exactly what we wanted. Color was definitely 
						not a consideration. Jack and I have been in the walking 
						horse business most of our lives. Gaits, conformation, bloodlines, 
						and many other factors have always been more important to 
						us than color.
 
 We bred Pride's Champagne to 33 outside 
						mares in the 1983/1984 season. The next year, when his foals 
						started to arrive, I noticed several were born with dark 
						blue eyes that later turned brown. In talking to Diane, 
						and hearing comments from people who had seen Champagne 
						Lady, I started to wonder if her unique color would pop 
						up in later generations. [The 
						champagne gene is now accepted to be a dominant gene, and 
						can not be hidden.] I 
						wanted to breed to palomino or cremello mares to see if 
						Pride's Champagne carried the "champagne" color 
						gene. These colors are not very common in walking horses, 
						so it was hard locating mares. Finally a dark palomino mare 
						was bred to him. The owner phoned to say the mare lost twin 
						foals at about ten months. One was black/bay and the other 
						was a very strange color; like nothing she'd ever seen.  [The 
						foal could have been a buckskin, but not a champagne.]
 
 Sometime in 1984 Diane Green 
						called. She said she had sold all her broodmares except 
						Champagne Lady. The mare had been bred a couple of times 
						but hadn't foaled since 1980, when she had the filly, Champagne 
						Copy. Like many others, I really wanted the mare but just 
						couldn't afford her at the time. Aside from the old mare's 
						outstanding ability, I was becoming more and more interested 
						in trying to breed these amazing-colored horses, and nothing 
						would have been better than owning the originator of it 
						all.
 
 In November 1985 a black Senator mare had a 
						buckskin colt by Pride's Champagne. Close, but not what 
						I was looking for. It was then I decided that I wanted a 
						champagne-colored stallion out of old Champagne Lady or 
						out of her daughter, Champagne Copy. I hoped to line-breed 
						him to Pride's Champagne daughters and granddaughters. By 
						this time, we had a great selection of these outstanding 
						mares in our area.
 
 About that time, the opportunity 
						arose to send Pride's Champagne to Tennessee, to stand at 
						public service. We knew the horse would be well cared for, 
						and it would give him an opportunity to prove what he could 
						produce - breeding him to some of the best mares in the 
						heart of walking horse country. We thought he deserved that 
						chance. And we were right. Pride's Champagne has sired many 
						outstanding foals in Tennessee, first at William Pennington's 
						Stable and now at Billy Gray's Sand Creek Farms in Shelbyville.
 
 Of course, that left room at our breeding farm for another 
						stallion. I knew just the one I wanted.
 
 I called 
						the TWHBEA, asking for the name of the registered owner 
						of Champagne Copy. I hoped the mare might be producing her 
						color. I phoned her owner, Clipper Green in Haleyville, 
						Alabama. He told me that he had bred the mare to his stallion 
						and just a few days before foaling, a storm came up and 
						she was struck and killed by lightening.
 
 An autopsy 
						revealed she was carrying a champagne-colored filly. It 
						was terrible news, but I gained one piece of valuable information 
						- the color gene definitely would transmit down to Champagne 
						Lady's third generation. Another thing I learned - Clipper 
						Green told me he heard that Larry Massey was working a young 
						champagne-colored stallion. If this was true, the colt had 
						to be out of Champagne Lady!
 
 With the death of Champagne 
						Copy, there was only one horse in the world that I knew 
						was the champagne color, Champagne Lady herself. If the 
						rumor of the young stallion was true, that would make two 
						of them.
 
 Once again I called the Breeder's Association, 
						asking for the new owner of Champagne Lady. I was told Wiley 
						Bailey of Little Rock, Arkansas had bought the mare from 
						Diane and Kelly Green.
 
 I called Wiley. I could hardly 
						contain my excitement when he confirmed that there was indeed 
						a two-year-old son, the same color as the old mare. Also, 
						Champagne Lady had a black yearling filly by her side and 
						was in foal to the great amateur horse, Royal Senator, by
						Ebony's Senator. 
						The foal was due in mid-April 1989.
 
 The bad news 
						was Wiley did not want to sell his two year old stallion. 
						Knowing Champagne Lady was safe in foal, I impatiently waited 
						until the end of April before calling Wiley for the results. 
						Yes, she'd had a big champagne-colored colt. Great! But 
						Wiley wouldn't think of selling him. Not so great. However, 
						he was going to breed the mare back in a couple of months, 
						so maybe I still had a chance to own my champagne stallion.
 
 Alright, have you been counting? We now have three champagne-colored 
						horses. The old mare, her now three-year old son, Champagne 
						Night, and the newborn stud colt, by Royal Senator. Remember, 
						we would have had five if Champagne Copy and her unborn 
						filly had not been killed.
 
 I could not give up the 
						dream of owning a champagne-colored stallion. In late summer, 
						1989, I called Wiley again. He told me he had bred his Black 
						Power mare to Champagne Night, and expected her to foal 
						May 1990. I explained my strong desire to propagate this 
						color, asking Wiley if he'd consider breeding any outside 
						mares to his horse - preferably one of our Pride's Champagne 
						daughters. He said yes. That was fine, but all of our mares 
						were in California. So we pretty much let it drop.
 
 I asked him how the weanling stallion was doing. He 
						told me the colt was really nice, moved right, and was very 
						big. He expected to wean him in a couple of weeks.
 
 Months passed, and I kept thinking of Wiley's offer 
						to breed one of our mares. I pondered the prospects of getting 
						the color I wanted, and weighed that against the shipping 
						and boarding expenses. Should we do it or not?
 
 All 
						the time I was trying to choose the right Champagne Lady 
						granddaughter for my project. I finally decided on a beautiful 
						black mare whose bloodlines go 11 times to
						Merry Legs F-4 
						and nine times to Hunter's 
						Allen F-10. Besides, she had a prophetic name, 
						Champagne Chance.
 
 What the heck, I decided, Let's 
						just do it! In early Spring 1990, we shipped her to Champagne 
						Night, now a four-year old in training in Tennessee.
 
 Wiley and I talked once or twice after the mare arrived. 
						At one point, he stated, "I don't believe Champagne 
						Lady is in foal. I was sad about that news, but we just 
						visited about the horses and didn't speak of buying or selling. 
						We had become very good "phone friends" after 
						all this time.
 
 Tuesday night, April 10, 1990, I picked 
						up the phone and called Wiley. We talked for a minute or 
						two. "Well, I've got good news," he said, "Champagne 
						Lady's vet-checked to foal in August."
 
 "How 
						wonderful," I congratulated him, then simply asked, "Wiley, 
						when are you going to sell me her yearling colt?"
 
 He sort of laughed, "You really want him, don't 
						you?" (I don't recall answering him.) "Well, " 
						he continued, "I guess I'll just sell him to you." 
						(My heart leaped.)
 
 "Well, I guess I'll just 
						buy him," I answered. The deal was struck! Just before 
						we hung up, I asked, "Wiley, do you know what his name 
						is? "Well, sure," he answered, "it's Champagne 
						Senator, or Senator Champ . . ."
 I interrupted him. "No, 
						it is Champagne Look. I named him last year when he was 
						born." Wiley laughed as we hung up.
 
 
  For 
						a month I wondered if I was daft. I'm a very conservative 
						person, and bought a very expensive horse, sight unseen, 
						primarily because of his color. By the time Champagne Look 
						walked out of Clark Ford's trailer at our stable in Elk 
						Grove, California on May 10, the whole neighborhood was 
						anxious to see what sort of creature was responsible for 
						Aunt Bea's "temporary insanity." 
 No one 
						was disappointed. The tall, strong colt boldly marched down 
						the ramp and crowned himself king of his new domain. I had 
						barely let out my first long sigh of relief - the colt was 
						a dandy, well put together, great long stride, and a great 
						disposition according to Clark, who had just spent several 
						days on the road with him - when the questions started about 
						his color.
 
 Some people who knew the colt was coming 
						phoned to ask, "What color is he?" Others who 
						had come to see for themselves would look right at him and 
						ask, "Well, what color is he?" The only answer 
						we had is "He's champagne-color." One lady had 
						called to say how exciting it was to have this young stallion 
						on the West Coast. She said, "I saw Champagne Lady 
						show many times, I've never forgotten her color, and you 
						can't describe it either, but if you ever see it - you never 
						forget it." Now we could see what she was talking about.
 
 In a few days, I called Wiley to report on the colt's 
						safe arrival, and how pleased we were with him. Wiley had 
						great news. His Black Power mare had just had a champagne-colored 
						stud colt (by Champagne Night). Now there were four Champagne 
						horses! With the prospect of Champagne Lady's next foal 
						and our own mare safe in foal to Champagne Night, it looked 
						like we might be on the way.
 
 August 1990, there came 
						some bad news from Wiley. Within days of foaling, old Champagne 
						Lady had died. What a shock and a loss! She wasn't autopsied, 
						so we'd never know what color foal she was about to deliver. 
						Her death made one less champagne-colored horse. There were 
						only three again.
 
 
  Everything 
						was falling into place in our breeding program, however. 
						Champagne Look grew fast, and in the fall of 1990 we accepted 
						two outside mares to be bred, a brown Super Stock mare and 
						a gray Sun Dust mare. We had several others scheduled for 
						spring breeding. Breeding mares to Look brought all the 
						wonderful anticipation kids experience at Christmas. As 
						soon as the mare was checked in foal, we'd all start wondering 
						what was inside her. And we still wondered what color we 
						were dealing with. Everyone had a theory. They would come, 
						go over Look like Sherlock Holmes looking for clues, and 
						you could almost see the question mark start to form over 
						their heads. Look loved the attention. They all brought 
						cameras. Look loved to pose. The photos did not reproduce 
						the color well, however. Sometimes it came out lavender, 
						sometimes gold, and sometimes even greenish! And the coat 
						was not just a weird color, it was a weird texture, too. 
						Even in the dead of winter Look was slick and shiny. And 
						he was not kept blanketed or even in a stall. 
 Finally, 
						when our vet, Dr. Stephen Leonard, came to check some horses, 
						he said, "I've been talking to my associates about 
						Look, and we want you to call Dr. Ann Bowling at the University 
						of California at Davis. She's a nationally-recognized geneticist 
						who is an authority on equine color, and we believe she 
						should see Look."
 
 
  I 
						thanked him, but I wanted to wait until after our mare, 
						who was in foal to Look's brother, gave birth in mid May. 
						It would give Dr. Bowling that much more to work with. I 
						believed with all my heart and soul that the mare would 
						have a champagne-colored foal. 
 In early May, the 
						vet came back to draw blood for typing Look. "What 
						color is he?" he asked. "What color do I enter 
						for the record?"
 
 "Just write 'champagne-color'," 
						I answered.
 
 "Didn't you call Dr. Bowling?"
 
 "No, our mare is only 10 days from foaling," 
						I explained. "Patience, Doctor, patience. We're not 
						breeding mice, you know! We just have to wait."
 
 On May 15th at 4:30 a. m. our mare delivered her long-awaited 
						package. It was just what I wanted for Christmas in May 
						. . . a big champagne-colored filly! I'll spare you all 
						the details and excitement of her birth, except to say there's 
						no mistaking a champagne foal. It's born champagne-colored, 
						with pink skin and bright blue eyes. Mother and daughter 
						were fine. Daylight came. I looked at the filly and said, "Touché!" 
						So we named her "Champagne Touche." And wrote "champagne-color" 
						on her registration application. This baby brought the number 
						of champagne-colored horses back up to four again.
 
 By August there were seven outside mares in foal to 
						Look. I had been keeping good records on them, documenting 
						the color of the mare and the color of her ancestors as 
						far back as we could. When it looked like everything was 
						under control, I called Dr. Bowling and gave her a brief 
						explanation. She made an appointment for August 10, 1991, 
						to come and examine the horses.
 
 
  The 
						next couple of days were full of anticipation. Would she 
						say, "Oh, that's an isabella." Or, "Yes, 
						you see these diluted buckskins once in a while." A 
						thousand possibilities ran through my mind. 
 Dr. Ann 
						and her husband Mike (who is the photographer of the duo, 
						and is a geneticist knowledgeable in equine colors as well) 
						finally arrived. My heart pounding, I led Look out. The 
						moment of truth.
 
 No one spoke. Dr. Bowling was carrying 
						a pad and pen as she walked around the horse. Then she and 
						Mike started discussing him, she making notes, he taking 
						photos. I answered their questions when asked. Dr. Ann collected 
						hair samples and continued to exchange comments with Mike.
 
 Their examination and evaluation with Look took about 
						40 minutes, then they turned their attention to Touche. 
						I explained her startling blue eyes at birth. Almost 3 months 
						old now, the filly's eyes now appeared more amber-green.
 I led Touche over to Look. Mike took more pictures and they 
						both agreed the horses were the same color.
 
 When 
						we returned to the house, I showed them the records I was 
						keeping. I told them about Diane Green giving Champagne 
						Lady's hair samples to the two universities, and the lack 
						of an answer. Several times Dr. Bowling said, "I'm 
						not going on record yet" . . . or "I'm not ready 
						to go on record. . . "
 The suggestion was made that 
						this color might be a diluted black. Dr. Bowling had seen 
						a color very similar to this in a grade Icelandic pony. 
						We all had a good laugh when Mike asked her, "Ann, 
						what color did they call that?"
 "I don't know," 
						she smiled, "I don't speak Icelandic."
 
 I was left with instructions to keep up the documentation, 
						try breeding to sorrels, chestnuts, palomino and cremellos, 
						and to keep them informed when the foals came. A decision 
						could not be made until Look has 25 or 30 foals.
 So the 
						question is still "What color is that horse?" 
						And my answer is still "champagne-color." I sincerely 
						believe we are on the edge of documenting a new color in 
						American horse breeds.
 
 As of today, Look has three 
						foals on the ground. They are all champagne-colored, and 
						they are out of 3 different colored mares - chestnut, brown 
						and light sorrel. Look's brother Champagne Night has sired 
						1 more - there are now 8 champagne-colored horses in the 
						world.
 
 It all started June 19, 1969, when Champagne 
						Lady was born. A genetic color accident? Maybe nature's 
						attempt to keep Tennessee Walking Horses a colorful breed. 
						And the best part about this color is that it comes wrapped 
						around descendants of a grand old show mare that exhibited 
						all the best characteristics of our breed. [It 
						is now known that Mack's Golden Girl H., Champagne Lady's 
						dam, was a gold champagne and that the champagne gene has 
						been in existence for much longer than was originally thought.]
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