COWBOY COURTESY
AQHA # 4351595
2003 AQHA
Grey/Roan/Black Buckskin Stallion.
Homozygous for Black gene: cannot sire a sorrel foal, can sire only black factor!
Heterozygous for creme dilution: can sire Buckskin or smokey Black foals 50% of the time!
Heterozygous for roan gene: can sire roan foals 50% of the time.
Heterozygous for grey gene: can sire grey 50% of the time
He can  produce-- Black, Bay, Smokey Black, Buckskin, grey and/or Roan!
On any Colored Mare!
*Perlino if bred to another creme dilution


"Topper"
AQHA 2003
HE SIRES BUCKSKIN FOALS!!!
Justin & Melissa Hull
RR1 Box 507
Mounsdville WV 26041
(304) 810-0100
Missyhull@comcast.net
Fee:  $300.00
Buckskin Foal crop!
Cowboy Courtesy
Mr Record Beaker
Impressed By Genaway
Toppers Starry
Federal Impressed
Bar M Genaway
Mr Stacey Meyers
True Girl
Mr Kingsville
Toppers Handful
Impressed
Buckaroo Deb
Bar M Irish Pride
Bar M Easy Money
Toppers Record
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His sire Topper Record earned 3.5 performance points in barrels and poles and earned money in Incentive Funds.     
Mr Stacey Meyers, si 105.25 wins, $16,562 Race LTE; Superior Race

STALLION SHOW RECORD FOR MR STACEY MEYERS
Superior Performance
ROM Performance
Race money-earner
Performance Point Earner
STALLION OFFSPRING RECORD FOR MR STACEY MEYERS
World Champion Offspring
Reserve World Champion Offspring
Superior Performance Offspring
ROM Performance Offspring
Race ROM Offspring
Race Money-earners
Halter Point Earners




From the same neck of the woods as the Dry Doc and Rey Jay descendants, had come Mr Kingsville.  Long before the 1960 Palomino earned AQHA High Point Stallion award in Pole Bending in 1965 and 1966, and AQHA Honor Roll award in Barrel Racing in 1967, as well as the first barrel race at the 1967 Quarter Horse Congress, his reputation had long since preceded him in the pens of barrel and pole races all over Indiana and Kentucky. It has been said by more than one weekend contester, “…if he showed up, you might as well not bother to unload your horse. Nobody could beat him.”
Begged by the New York owner of a then two year old Mr Kingsville, Leonard Russ thought long and hard before investing the modest sum of $300 in the unbroke stallion. The seller managed to convince Russ his kids would be able to achieve many wins with the horse, so he moved to his new-found home in Indiana. They got him broke to ride, sold him to a family friend who was a good hand to “ease one along quiet like,” then Russ bought him back a year later. That’s when Russ began to see genuine potential in Mr Kingsville. With sons Jimmy and Gary in the saddle, they trained him for the barrels and poles, then set out to campaign him for AQHA points. “He was a great horse” Russ said while reminiscing recently, adding “he was so versatile, and good minded. When asked if Mr Kingsville would be competitive against today’s horses, Russ never missed a beat when he replied “… absolutely. A horse is like any athlete. If Joe Louis was alive today, don’t think he wouldn’t still be a great boxer.” Mr Kingsville could run with the best.”