By Emily Shields
After 20 years in the Quarter Horse business, Dar Hanson has made the seamless transition to Thoroughbreds. He is enjoying a modicum of success thanks to a recent $100,000 California-bred filly sold at the Fasig-Tipton July yearling sale. More prosperity could be on the way, as Hanson has another set to go in the inaugural Fasig-Tipton California fall yearling sale Sept. 26.
But long before he was sales prepping and selling Thoroughbreds, Hanson was managing Ward River Ranch, one of the country’s premier cutting horse breeding farms.
“I’ve been in the horse business my whole adult life,” Hanson said. “I was an apprentice farrier and met some people and started training cutting horses. I did that for a few years. Ward River Ranch was the leading breeder of cowhorses in the country, and the largest cowhorse breeding farm on the West Coast. They sold it back in 2013, and I’ve leased it from the new owners.”
Now called Hanson’s River Ranch, the 60-acre spread in Kingsburg, Calif., is still home to plenty of Quarter Horses, but also eight of Hanson’s own Thoroughbred mares and horses on layup and being sales prepped.
“I’ve probably got 12 weanlings this year,” Hanson said, “and I bred six or seven mares this year.”
Buying broodmares in Kentucky and bringing them back to California to foal and be bred back to Golden State sires is Hanson’s game plan. He does it with the help of Checkmate Thoroughbreds’ Adrian Gonzalez.
“He’s absolutely phenomenal,” Gonzalez said of Hanson. “He ran probably one of the nation’s top Quarter Horse stallion stations and breeding farms for 20-plus years. Part of that was they were selling a lot of these horses at futurity sales, so they’d been sales prepping these yearlings and doing incredible work with them. That’s’s how I got hooked up with him, while trying to get more knowledge on the sales prep side.”