
Jack Coady/Coady Photography - Regina
(right) who trains and breeds horses with husband Larry, is shown
with daughter Kelly and granddaughter Kylie.
55 years and going strong Horse
racing has been a Wessels family affair
By Dan Johnson
Regina Wessels has gotten the last laugh on her third grade class.
One day the students had to tell their classmates what they wanted
to do as adults.
"The whole class stood up and said what you were going to be when
you grew up," Wessels said. "I said I was going to be a horse
trainer and everybody laughed at me: 'What do you mean?'"
Sixty years later, Wessels is still doing what she predicted. She
and husband Larry are two members of what is arguably the first
family of Iowa quarter horse racing.
The Wesselses' involvement started in their hometown of Lamont in
1956, when Roger (Butch) Wessels, Larry's brother, bought his first
racehorse. Soon, he got Larry and Regina involved, and then the
children of each family became followed suit.
"Butch is the one that started it all," Regina said. "He was the one
that started racing. We were more into barrel racing and horse
shoes. We gave Butch money and he bought a yearling for us at a
sale, and from then on, we were making (race) horses.
"There was competitiveness, but we knew who had the better horse and
it was always Butch.”
Roger's son Kirk and daughter Amy are trainers. So was his son Mike
and his late son, Jeff. Larry and Regina's daughter Kelly is a
former trainer and now married to jockey Tom Wellington.
"They're a good family," said trainer John Hammes. "The whole family
has been in it all their lives. They're hard working and successful.
They've paid their dues. They're very well thought of."

(Jack Coady/Coady
Photography
Roger Wessels (left), who started racing horses in 1956, with
daughter Amy and son Kirk, both trainers.)
All eight of the Wessels have trained Iowa-bred
stakes winners. All told, they have combined to win 29 stakes races,
including 23 at Prairie Meadows.
Prissy Marshall, who won the 1989 Iowa Stallion Futurity was trained
by Roger and ridden by Kirk.
The next year, Kirk switched to training after tiring of cutting
weight so he could ride and won the race with Hobo Magic. He is one
of three people to win stakes at Prairie Meadows as a jockey and a
trainer, along with Mark Curtis and Shannon Ritter.
For 32 seasons before Prairie Meadows opened, the Wesselses spent
their summer weekends traveling to bush meets in Iowa and Nebraska.
"We went when we were babies," said Amy Wessels, who took up
training after graduating from high school. "We've never known
anything else."
There wasn't much money at the bush meets, but it didn't matter.
"It was so much of our life," Regina said. "We raced at Central City
along with Butch and everyone else. We ate a lot of dirt, but had a
lot of fun doing it. We were all involved. our son galloped for us.
We had a little track (at their acreage) where we got them ready,
and off we went on Sundays."
She said the love is still there, especially for horses she and
Larry have bred.
"It's still a thrill to me when you raise a horse and see it from
the very beginning when it's out of the mare," Regina said. "It's
different when you raise them and race them, rather than going out
and buying one. You're waiting four years before you find out if
that horse is going to run or not and if you did the right thing in
the breeding part.
"You get more of a satisfaction when they do well. You get more of
an attachment with the horse, because you've had it so long. When
you finally win a race with it and you're getting your picture taken
in the winner's circle, it's an unbelievable feeling."
The Wesselses will be represented in Prairie Meadows' closing
weekend stakes festival, which includes three stakes on Friday and
six on Saturday.
Larry and Regina have Shake Yor Moneymaker for the Future of Iowa.
Amy will send out A Pizoli for the Terrace Hill Stakes.
Kirk’s 10-year-old Cruzin To Victory, fresh off a win against open
company in the Prairie Meadows Bonus Challenge, will try to win the
Terrace Hill Stakes for the third time in his career. He was part of
an Iowa foal crop that included Trs Dashin Rona and Tal Task, who
are also still winning at age 10.
"I don't know if I'll ever have another horse like him," Kirk said.
"Horses just don't last like that. It's unbelievable."
He also has Pyc Biscuit, a sharp first-time starter in his trial, in
the Jim Bader Futurity, and Wheres Your Wagon for the Polk County
Derby.
Kirk works at a door factory in Dyersville. While he trains at
Prairie Meadows and is helped by his son Alex, a student at Iowa
State, his wife and son Tanner help care for the horses on their
farm.
"We love doing it," he said. "If I didn't, I wouldn't be driving 150
miles to come here. "The thrill is still there," Kirk Wessels said.
"I still have the want-to to win, believe me. When I don't have the
drive anymore, you won't see me here. It doesn't matter if it's a
$5,000 claiming race or one of the bigger stakes, I want to win.
When it's not much a thrill to me, I'll be out."
“It's been very good to us. A lot of people have been real good to
me.
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