National_Stud_Farm_of_Chaouchaoua

National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua

National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua

Horse stud farm in Algeria


The National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua (Arabic: المركز الوطني لتربية الخيول شاوشاوى; French: Haras national de Chaouchaoua) is a stud in Tiaret in Algeria. The institution is dedicated to the preservation and improvement of Algerian horse breeds, founded in 1874. It is now a center of expertise for issues related to breeding and care of equines.

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History

The National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua was established in 1874 by the French Ministry of War, originally named Jumenterie de Tiaret[1] Its original mission was to supply the French army with horses.[1] In the early 20th century, it bred up to 22,000 foals per year, including military mounts (Barb, Arabian, and Arab-Barb breeds) as well as working horses for agriculture.

Following Algeria's independence in 1962, Chaouchaoua became an Algerian national stud farm.[1]Mechanization significantly reduced its activities and the number of horses housed, which dropped to 208 (including half of them being purebred Arabians) by the end of 2018.[1][2]

In 2022, the Chaouchaoua stud farm signed a partnership to acquire 190 sheep of the Rambi breed, a local breed, with a target of reaching 800 heads by 2025 for the commercialization of their meat and milk. Additionally, they obtained 10 cows, aiming to have a herd of 70 heads within 3 years.

Today, the Chaouchaoua stud farm spans 610 hectares, while it was over 1,200 hectares in the early 2000s. It is currently under construction, with approximately 65% of the work completed, and has numerous ongoing projects. As of 2023, the national stud farm employs 56 staff members.

Activities

The National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua is not subsidized by the government and has to generate its own resources, primarily through the cultivation and sale of fodder and cereals, to ensure its operation.

The 371 hectares of land at the stud farm contribute to agricultural production, which accounted for 60% of its financial income in 2018. However, the agricultural area has been significantly reduced, and the effects of climate change have negatively impacted cereal production, resulting in a reduction in volume of approximately 60%.[3]

The stud farm trains young horses for harness and saddle work and also prepares and presents young stallions for breeding competition. Some of the trained horses are integrated into the Republican Guard at the Soumaa Police School, and others have been exported to Germany, France, Italy, Switzerland, and Brazil.

The National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua offers continuing education courses, particularly for veterinary medicine, horse breeding, horse care, nutrition, harnessing, and farriery. It also offers apprenticeships and internships.

The stud farm is actively involved in research, particularly those aimed at improving horse behavior, health, and fertility. Research has included genetics, infectious and hereditary diseases, animal husbandry, and the enhancement of natural methods of reproduction and fertilization, as well as techniques such as artificial insemination and embryo transfer. The stud farm's research activities are conducted in collaboration with a network of partners, including veterinary faculties, universities, and equine breeding organizations. The research findings are first applied in practice at the National Stud Farm and then disseminated through publications and various courses.

The breeding center at the National Stud Farm of Chaouchaoua conducts research in the field of horse fertility, and offers services to mare and stallion owners, particularly in the area of fertility.

Stallions

Ouassal (1969 - January 1, 1991)
The Barb breed was no longer recognized in France after 1962, at the end of the Algerian War and the dissolution of the last Spahi regiments. However, in 1990, the breed was re-recognized for the stallion Ouassal, who was then twenty-two years old but was finally allowed to breed mares legitimately. Unfortunately, on January 1, 1991, during his third mating, his heart suddenly stopped. Despite this, Ouassal fathered 37 offspring.[4] In 1975, Ouassal had been gifted to French President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, marking the first official visit by a head of state from the former colonial empire to Algeria[5] since its independence.
Mabrouk (1994–)
The white stallion Mabrouk was deemed unworthy of representing the pure Barb breed by the French zootechnicians to whom he was entrusted, and he was reclassified as "Arabian-Barb." In March 2003, Mabrouk was gifted to Jacques Chirac.[6]
Kheir (2004–)
On December 5, 2007, the stud farm presented Kheir, a gray Arabian thoroughbred, to French President Nicolas Sarkozy after his visit to Algiers.[7]
Sami and Sadja
A pair of Barb horses, Sami (dark gray stallion) and Sadja (bay mare), were gifted to French President François Hollande on December 20, 2012, following his visit to Algeria.[8] Upon their arrival in France, the pair was separated—Sami going to the Haras national du Pin, where breeding is no longer practiced, and Sadja was sent to the Pompadour Stud Farm [fr], where the government had stopped breeding for foals. However, in 2016, a filly named Gemme Pompadour was born from their union. Both Sami and Sadja were bred from 2015 to 2016. On May 18, 2017, another filly named Hiba[9] was born from Sami mating with another mare. Although the former president was not a horseman, he became aware of Sami's genetic quality, and he agreed to allow ten matings per year to be granted to the national association of the Barb breed.[10]

References

  1. AFP (23 November 2018). "L'inexorable déclin du Haras national algérien" [The inexorable decline of the Algerian National Stud]. Le Point (in French). Retrieved 2 September 2019..
  2. "Algérie: le haras de Chaouchaoua, un patrimoine à sauver" [Algeria: the Chaouchaoua stud farm, a heritage to be saved]. Franceinfo (in French). 26 November 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2023..
  3. Si Merabet Noureddine (9 April 2022). "Haras national Chaouchaoua de Tiaret : Au royaume du cheval barbe" [Chaouchaoua national stud farm in Tiaret: In the kingdom of the barb horse]. El Moudjahid (in French). Retrieved 11 May 2023..
  4. "Production totale de OUASSAL - Production" [Total production of OUASSAL - Production]. infochevaux.ifce.fr (in French). Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  5. Jean-Louis Gouraud. "France-Algérie : Les chevaux de la discorde" [France-Algeria: The horses of discord]. www.lecheval.fr (in French). Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  6. "MABROUK – page officielle ifce". infochevaux.ifce.fr (in French). Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  7. H, Khadidja (29 March 2022). "France : voici ce que deviennent les 3 chevaux d'Abdelaziz Bouteflika offerts à Chirac, Sarkozy et Hollande" [France: this is what happens to Abdelaziz Bouteflika's 3 horses offered to Chirac, Sarkozy and Hollande]. Dzair Daily (in French). Retrieved 11 May 2023..
  8. "Un des deux chevaux offerts par Abdelaziz Bouteflika à François Hollande a rejoint le Haras national de Pompadour" [One of the two horses offered by Abdelaziz Bouteflika to François Hollande has joined the Haras national de Pompadour]. France 3 Nouvelle-Aquitaine (in French). 11 June 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  9. "La pouliche du président Hollande est née en Volvestre!" [President Hollande's filly was born in Volvestre!]. Petite République.com (in French). 29 May 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  10. France, Centre (30 September 2018). "Haras de Pompadour - Le cheval, noble cadeau présidentiel" [Haras de Pompadour - The horse, a noble presidential gift]. www.lamontagne.fr (in French). Retrieved 13 May 2023.

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