Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.
In the US, the center of the Sheikh's horse business is in Lexington, Kentucky, the "horse capital of the world," where he owns the 800-acre Jonabell Farm.
I recently got a tour of Jonabell Farm, which is home to Kentucky Derby winners and one of the country's top breeding stallions, who has a $200,000 stud fee.
The barns are immaculate and have skylights, each horse has its own personal fan keeping its stall cool, and fences are made out of a material that's twice as expensive as the wooden fencing typically used on horse farms.
The 70-year-old owns Godolphin, a worldwide thoroughbred breeding and racing operation that operates in Dubai, the US, the UK, Ireland, Australia, and Japan.
On a recent trip to Kentucky, I drove out to the Sheikh's Jonabell Farm. I got my first hint of the fact that this was no ordinary farm when I first pulled up to it ...
... and had to pass through a security gatehouse to get in.
I was stopped at this gate, to the left of which was a security gatehouse (not pictured because I was scared of getting in trouble).
A Godolphin employee took down my name and checked it inside before letting me pass.
Inside, I found that the Sheikh has a room filled with dozens of gleaming horse-racing trophies.
The barns are absolutely immaculate, with gleaming wooden panels and skylights.
"As you can probably tell, Sheikh Mohammed has a lot of money to spend on his horses," a Godolphin employee told us during the tour of the farm. "This is his favorite hobby other than his airline, Emirates. So he spends a lot of money here on the farm and takes really good care of his horses."
And if that isn't enough, each horse has its own personal fan blowing into its stall.
Each stall was outfitted with fresh, clean straw and a window.
No expense is spared for the horses at Jonabell. Just consider the fences: They aren't made out of wood. Instead, they’re made of a special material that can cost twice as much.
But it's more cost-effective over time, Tara Nesmith of Centaur Fencing Systems told me in an email.
"Continuous maintenance such as painting and board replacement adds to the overall expense of owning a wooden fence over time," Nesmith said, noting that Centaur "... is a high tensile fence system that requires little maintenance, therefore saving money over the life of ownership."
That brings me to the breeding shed. The shed, where mares from farms all over Kentucky come to breed with Godolphin's stallions, has padded walls and nonslip rubber flooring.
The breeding process seemed downright bizarre to me as an outsider of the horse industry.
During the breeding season, which lasts from February to around the end of June, the stallions at Jonabell will breed with multiple mares per day at three designated times: 7:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., and 6:30 p.m.
One stallion on the farm isn't there for breeding, but to act as a "teaser stallion." Before a mare is brought into the breeding shed, she's held in a nearby stall that shares a window with an adjacent stall. The teaser stallion will poke his head through the window, and if everything goes according to plan, the mare will signal that she's ready to breed by peeing, turning her butt toward him, and lifting her tail. Then she's brought in to breed with the actual breeding stallion.
About eight people are in the room during the breeding process, all wearing helmets. They put soft boots onto the mare's back feet in case she kicks.
"We try and make this process as safe as possible because at the end of the day, you are dealing with a 1,500-pound stallion and a 1,000-pound mare — probably a little bit heavier because they're usually pretty fat," the tour guide told us.
The breeding itself only takes a few minutes. As the stallion dismounts, the veterinarian will catch a sample of his sperm and test it to make sure it's good sperm. If not, the mare will come back and they'll try again.
Godolphin stallions have a 90% success rate of getting mares pregnant.
Jonabell Farm is home to Medaglia d'Oro, one of the most expensive breeding stallions in the world. It costs $200,000 to breed a mare with him.
My tour of Jonabell Farm couldn't have been more different from my visit to one of Kentucky's most prestigious horse farms: Claiborne Farm, a 3,000-acre, 109-year-old farm that's been visited by Queen Elizabeth II — twice. Legendary racehorses Secretariat and Seabiscuit both lived at the farm, and 2013 Derby winner Orb currently resides there.
While I was impressed by how Claiborne pampered their horses, after I toured Jonabell Farm, I realized Sheikh Mohammed's farm was on a whole other level.
From the high-security entrance to the barns with skylights, it was clear the Sheikh of Dubai spares no expense on his precious horses.