Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Sentimental Journey: Man o' War

Eeeeeeeeeeeee it’s almost BreyerFest!

Back in 2020, the year where everything sucked and we couldn’t do much of anything, I spent all of July writing lengthy Facebook posts about how important BreyerFest is to me and how much I missed it that year. While a lot of those posts revolved around people and rituals and activities and memories, some were more model-related, and I’ll be borrowing heavily from those. Today is one of those days. My original post content will be in italics.
 
 
 
When I was a horse-crazy kid, my ever-enabling parents bought me some of Walter Farley’s books. While I loved the stories about the adventures of the Black Stallion and Flame [and credit them for my obsession with Arabians], my favorite Walter Farley book was about the legendary Man o’ War. I read that thing cover to cover more times than I can count. I was fascinated by the descriptions of his speed, his size, his spirit, his record stride length, and his absolute dominance on the track. If I had to pick a favorite racehorse of all time, it’s him. [Interrupting to add - American Pharaoh, as the first Triple Crown winner of my lifetime, is a perilously close second.] I have often wished I could have been alive during his time to see how spectacular he truly was.
 
 
Breyer has made several renditions of Man o’ War over the years, in several different scales.  One of my first Breyers as a kid was #47 Man o' War, who was produced from 1967-1995. I started collecting at Christmas in 1990, and according to my records, I had Man o’ War prior to September of 1992, when I photographed my collection for the first time. I don’t know exactly how I came by him, but back then, there were really only two ways I got Breyers - as birthday or Christmas gifts from my parents, or by picking them out at Kraynaks or Toys R Us. My gut tells me my parents are responsible for my ownership of him. 
 
 

I’ve got a few other versions of Man o’ War. My B-stamp (top photo) and chalky (bottom photo) versions of #47 have already been covered in previous blog posts, so I won’t say much about them here. The Classic-scale in the top photo is #9149, who was featured in my December Show Stoppers post. The smaller guy in the top photo is #711282 from the 2018 BreyerFest single-day Stablemates. There were 1750 made. I’m really glad I picked up the full set of single-day Stablemates that year at cost during BreyerFest - their secondary market prices are often $150 and up!
 
 
This lighter Classic-scale is the original release #602 Man o’ War, a regular run from 1975-1990. I got him from my friend Heather B.
 
Someday, I’d love to add a #47 with battleship gray hand-painted hooves, as well as the 48-piece WEG release.
 
I’m going to wrap up this post with the rest of my thoughts from 2020, because I really can’t say any better what Man o’ War means to me.

During my first BreyerFest in 2010, I discovered that Man o' War is buried at Kentucky Horse Park. Most famous horses are not buried whole when they die, but he was – every bone of him is right there at the front of the park, underneath a giant statue, surrounded by a fountain and flowers and plaques describing his life and racing career. I can't describe what it was like the first time I visited him there. I've seen other grave sites of some pretty amazing horses -- Cigar, Affirmed, even the mighty Secretariat -- but none of them have evoked the same feeling I get when I visit Man o' War.  It is always humbling and inspiring to stand just feet away from the final resting place of one of the greatest horses of all time. It’s serene and quiet there, and every year, that is how I purposely choose to end my BreyerFest trip. I love to spend those last few minutes of the best weekend of the year hanging out with him, thinking about how great he was, remembering what it felt like as a kid to read about his achievements, and thanking him for being what he was.

If you want to find me on Sunday at 4:00 after the raffle is done and BreyerFest is over, you know where I’ll be. 

Monday, June 29, 2026

Full Spectrum: Custom G2 Scrambling Foal

This time next week, I will be in Lexington!!!! I can't wait! 
 
I have arranged a couple purchases in advance: The newest edition of my friend Penny's Breyer Animal Quick Reference book, the newest edition of Lesli Kathman's Breeds & Colors book, a cull Grazing Mare purchased from a friend, and four Stones purchased from an estate a few friends of mine are helping to disperse - two Arabians, an ISH, and my first Stone Tennessee Walking Horse!
 
Before I immerse myself completely in the joys of BreyerFest, I've got one more rainbow pony for Pride month. 
 
 
This adorable little thing is the third custom from the group I won at Rainbow Rave Live last year, a rainbow striped G2 Scrambling Foal. She makes a complete family with the two adults.
 
Pride Month has been an interesting experience this year. I'm glad to see companies still promoting it despite the bigotry, discrimination, and threats by the current administration, but the hateful voices have gotten a lot louder, and it's scary to watch our society take giant steps backward in a way that puts folks who are non-white, non-cisgender, non-heterosexual, non-wealthy, and non-male more at risk than ever. We need to do better.
 
Be inclusive and kind, love your neighbor, treat others as you would want to be treated, and value the beautiful diversity of the human experience. 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Full Spectrum: CM G3 Cantering Warmblood #2

I'm on a mission to get all my posts done and scheduled through the Monday after BreyerFest, so today's post is going to be short.
 
 
This is another custom G3 Cantering Warmblood I won in the raffle at Rainbow Rave Live last year. His spots are haloed in the same rosy gold used on his hooves. I love that his base color and halo color are opposite of the other guy, and that he has a lot of red on him. Sometimes with the rainbow ones Breyer does, I feel like the red is kind of an afterthought, and most of them are distinctly reddish-orange or more toward magenta. I wonder if red is a hard OF color to paint? I know it's a difficult color to carry off in house paint - you've got to have the right shade of primer underneath, and it often takes a ton of coats to look uniform.
 
Must be kinda like silver paint for cars. My buddy who restores cars and has his own paint shop says it's a nightmare to work with.
 
I've got one more rainbow custom who will post tomorrow, and then we'll be eating, sleeping, and breathing BreyerFest for most if not all of July!