
Le Tot de Semilly
| Quirinal | |||
| Amour de Bois | Margarette La | ||
| Grand Veneur | Le Mioche xx | ||
| Tanagra G | Harpette |
||
| Le Tot de Sémilly | |||
| Ultimate xx | |||
| Juriste | Eteuse | ||
| Venue du Tot | Laurier Thym (Ultimate) | ||
| Relique | Histoire |
Born 1977, 167 cm. Breeder - Jules Mesnildrey
Standing at Haras de Couvains
The fantastic success of the French all-stallion showjumping
team at the 2002 WEG in Jerez put the focus back very firmly
on French blood and none was more representative of the Selle
Français heritage than Le Tot de Sémilly.
Like so many stallions Le Tot de Sémilly is bound up
with the fortunes of one horse breeding family – in
this case, the Levallois family. The man who ‘made’
Le Tot de Sémilly is Germain Levallois, whose father
before him, Louis was also a stallion owner and horse dealer
between the wars. However M. Levallois senior, dealt in work
horses not showjumpers, mainly selling Normandy Cobs. After
the war, the trade shifted away from agriculture. According
to Germain Levallois: "The farm horses went to the butchers
by the truck load. The farmers kept only the most luxurious
types to breed hunters. That was the first step towards the
riding horse. Horses that displayed a great aptitude for hunting
laid the basis for the Anglo-Norman horse." (quoted in
‘Le Tot de Sémilly, the rehabilitation of Grand
Veneur’ by Pascal Renauldon, in Z magazine, Feb/April
2000)
Germain’s advice was often sought by breeders in the
Saint-Lô region, and when Jules Mesnildrey was looking
for a brood mare, Germain found him Venue du Tot.

Grand Veneur
As the sire of her fifth foal, Jules Mesnildrey
chose Grand Veneur, then a young stallion and standing at
nearby Marigny. Grand Veneur is out of Tanagra G (although
this is not the same Tanagra who is the dam of Jalisco) who
produced two other international showjumping winners, L’Elue
de Veneur and O’Veneur.
Grand Veneur was a popular sire, and was often France’s
leading sire based on the performance of his progeny at the
national championships in Fontainebleau. Fourteen of his progeny
won or placed at Grand Prix level, and he produced 74 licensed
sons, including Major de la Cour, who became a most important
sire in Belgium.
Germain Levallois purchased the Grand Veneur foal out of Venue
de Tot and christened him, Le Tot de Semilly, and gave him
to his son Eric to ride.
"With hindsight he was far too young for a horse like
that. Le Tot was a powerful horse, but they grew together.
From their first season together, the whole world wanted to
buy the stallion, the Federation, the Americans… He
had a superb foreleg technique. He had steadily grown into
his work, without interruption." (again from Pascal Renauldon’s
article in Z magazine). Together the pair made their names
in the sport. They won 22 international and 63 national Grand
Prix and almost 200,000 euro in prizemoney.

Le Tot de Semilly did not commence his breeding career until
he was eight years old, but once started he slowly gained
popularity. Right until his early 20’s, he was serving
100 mares a year – the maximum allowed by the French
breeding authority – and in 1999 he was judged one of
the 30 best stallions in France and the number per year increased
to 150. Amongst his lady suitors, we find Weihaiwej, the blue
eyed jumping star of Franke Sloothaak who visited him in 1999.
Even in season, 2002, at the age of 26, Le Tot still covered
106 mares to be the 18th most popular stallion in France,
while his son, Diamant de Semilly, took 9th place with 139.
Jules Mesnildrey came to Germain again seeking a filly, this
time with different blood. Germain found Venise des Cresles,
and offered a free service to Le Tot with the deal. The mare
died giving birth and the breeder wanted to get rid of the
foal: "We took it in and bottle-fed it, together with
another orphan. The two were always running free in the courtyard
and would follow us around like two puppies." (Z Magazine)
The foal was Diamant de Sémilly who made the 4, 5 and
6 year old finals at Fontainebleau before going on to a star
studded international career, that included playing a key
role in the gold medal French team at the WEG in Jerez.
Other international competitors by Le Tot de Semilly, include
Michael Whitaker’s Ashley, Fabrice Dumartin’s
Coppelia de lÉpine, Rodrigo Pessoa’s Gandini
Fidji du Fleury. Bolero de Brécey HN, Héloise
de Semilly (represented Australia with Jeff Bloomfield at
Jerez), Dohitzun Guernica, Étoile du Château,
Fétiche du Pas, Fidélio de Ravel and Elkintot
(who represented Italy at Jerez).
According to Germain, Le Tot has improved on the conformation
of the products of Grand Veneur: "I have never heard
anyone say that Le Tots use their back wrongly. They have
very supple backs. Admittedly there are Grand Vaneur products
with a slightly weak back, long and stiff, and that was a
problem. But you don’t see that in Le Tot’s offspring."
At the 2003 Finals in Fontainebleau, Le Tot de Sémilly, with 29 competitors was second only to Narcos with 33, in terms of representation, while his son, Diamant de Semilly was equal third with 28 of his progeny making the finals.
In the survey of the world's top 75 jumping sires that appears in the French publication, Monneron 2007-2008, compiled by Bernard le Courtois (visit www.brullemail.com), Le Tot de Semilly ranks 11th with 11 CSI winners. His best son, Diamant de Semilly ccomes in at 65 with 5 winners,