MN Thoroughbred owners hoping for
racino - CANNON FALLS, Minn. — March 31, 2011 -
If racino passes, Lisa Duoos will stay in Minnesota and
expand her business. If it doesn't, she'll be in Indiana by
October.
Duoos, secretary of the Minnesota Thoroughbred Association,
has 38 horses in her care. She operates Dove Hill Farm and
Reproduction near Cannon Falls.
Her business is to breed horses. A lot of people who own
stallions don't want to deal with the stallion's personality
or with an influx of mares, Duoos said. It's a lot of work,
but work she enjoys. Duoos refers to herself as a horse pimp
and nanny, as her job is to mate stallions and mares and
make sure the mares get in foal. She also does artificial
insemination of mares, which isn't allowed for Thoroughbred
race horses. She raises the foals as well.
"I love the horse business," Duoos said. "I love the
reproduction end of it. I love raising the babies."
The Thoroughbred community has embraced her over the last
seven years, but the going has gotten tough, Duoos said.
Around 230 mares foaled in Minnesota last year, and she
expects that number to fall to around 190 this year.
"There's no reason to foal a Thoroughbred race horse in
Minnesota anymore," Duoos said.
"You just can't operate on the purse structure," said John
DeMaria of Hayfield. "Everything has gone up except the
purses. In my case, they've gone backward."
DeMaria and Craig Bishop of Blooming Prairie are partners in
B&D Thoroughbreds.
A Minnesota-bred Thoroughbred can race for a purse of
$18,000 at Canterbury Park, compared to an Iowa-bred
Thoroughbred that can race for $30,000 at Prairie Meadows in
Altoona, Iowa. Prairie Meadows is a racino.
Thoroughbreds and Quarter horses race at Canterbury Park.
Standardbred horses race at Running Acres Harness Park.
In Minnesota, the Thoroughbred industry is in decline right
now, said David Dayon of St. Michael. Dayon owns one of the
largest all-breed foaling facilities in the state.
The purse structure at Canterbury drives the value of
Minnesota racing prospects, he said.
A racino will generate more money for purses and put more
money into a Breeders' Fund, which is an incentive fund to
breed, foal and race in Minnesota, Duoos said.
"Will the racino make us more money? You bet. Do we spend
it? You bet," she said.

