|
1) Use our Search!
If you find an individual on our web page and you are
curious to know more about how significant this horse
is for the trotting breed, you will find a lot of information
using the search function. Search
is found on the front page of the site, and also in
the menu to the right. When you search for one specific
horse, you will get a list of links to the pages on
Worldoftrotters.com where this name is mentioned. This
is a very good way to find information about the importance
of certain stallions, and also the production of mares.
If you for instance see a horse in the library, and
would like information about the siblings of this horse,
you might want to do a search on its dam, second dam
or third dam. As an example, let's use Love
You which is one of the most popular stallions in
France of 2004. On the horse's library page you will
see that his second dam is Amour d'Aunou and third dam
is Nesmile. If you do a further search for Amour d'Aunou,
you will discover that she is also dam of another French
stallion by the name of In
Love With You, and that Nesmile is dam of Buvetier
d'Aunou, Defi
d'Aunou and Extreme
Aunou a.o. in addition to Amour d'Aunou.
For those of our visitors who are interested in the
older pedigrees, and who might wonder if there is a
connection between the foundation sires and mares of
today's trotter, you could also perform a search of
the individuals you are interested in. As an example,
take Henry Clay - sire of the dam of George
Wilkes, one of Hambletonian's best sons. If you
do a search on Henry Clay you will also find him in
the pedigree of "The Hambletonian of France" Fuschia
and also in the pedigree of Minnehaha,
one of the most influential foundation mares in the
history of trotting.
2) Important information
in the menu, contains a lot of basic information used
on Worldoftrotters.com. This is helpful because on our
website you will find information from several continents
and there are several ways to express different information.
Explanations in spesific cases of parental doubts, a
conversion table from Mile Rates (Imperial system) to
Kilometer Rates (used in Europe), explanations to country
codes, gender and track sizes etc.
|