Thee Desperado, a 1989
Egyptian Arabian stallion, first made an impression in the Arabian
horse world as a halter champion: U.S. and Canadian Top Ten
Stallion in 1993; Unanimous Grand Champion Stallion at Scottsdale
and U.S
.
Reserve National Champion Stallion in 1994. His greatest success,
however, has been as a breeding stallion. A sire of many U.S. and
Canadian national and international champions, Thee Desperado was
named Leading Sire at the Egyptian Event, an annual international
competition held by The Pyramid Society breeders’ association, for
ten consecutive years. Arabian horse breeders from around the
world seek out his foals to enhance their breeding programs, and
many of his foals are purchased before they are born.
Unfamiliar to many horse enthusiasts, the Straight Egyptian
Arabian is considered by members of the Arabian horse world to be
the purest descendant of the desert horses of ancient Arabia.
Surrounded by legend, the true ancestry of the Arabian horse
has been left to word of mouth, making it nearly impossible to
trace today’s Arabians to a specific horse or family – save the
Egyptian Arabian.
In 1908, the Royal Agricultural Society in Egypt, known today
as the Egyptian Agricultural Organization, gathered descendants of
a herd of Arabians owned by Abbas Pasha I, a ruler of Egypt in the
mid-1800s who kept immaculate written records of his horses. These
descendants were used to establish a line of pure Arabian horses.
A 2007 Arabian Horse Association (AHA) Sweepstakes Nominated
Sire, Thee Desperado is owned by Jim and Judy Sirbasku of Arabians
Ltd. in Waco, TX.