T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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132.1 | ....Just a Beauty Contest | PARSEC::SCRAGGS | | Tue Sep 16 1986 13:52 | 9 |
| I myself, would love to see something like this happen in the
quarterhorse world. I'm tired of seeing people trying to breed
a horse just for a halter trademark. In the quarterhorse industry,
so many of the halter horses come out with leg and hoof ailments,
most of them can't perform past the age of 5. Maybe if they have
the requirement to win in performance also, they'll go back to breeding
for long term soundness! I would also like to see Stallion
requirements, before they can be used for Stud purposes.
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132.2 | Halter or performance or both? | CHAPLN::FOX | | Tue Sep 16 1986 13:55 | 22 |
| As someone who used to show Appaloosa halter and performance horses,
I think that it would be great if a breed organization required
halter horses to prove they can do more than stand there and look
pretty. In the Appaloosa shows (Anne, please let me know if you
agree or not), there are many instances of horses taking halter
championships who couldn't move out of there own way if they tried.
There will be stallions who have great bodies and short, straight
pasterns, teeny little brittle feet and are straight shoulders.
Many of these horses are also unfit and some even just plain fat.
I have even seen horses which are lame and yet still pin (and sometimes
even win!) in halter classes. I have also found it to be very rare
that an Appaloosa which does well at halter will also do well in
performance (and vice versa). Of course, there are exceptions but
not many! There do seem to be a fair amount of horses which race
as youngsters and do well and then go on to be good halter horses.
Well, that's my 2 cents. I hope I have given you something a little
useful!
How much would the IAHA determine a horse's performance ability
as youngsters? Would that change also?
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132.3 | MORE 2 CENTS... | LAUREL::REMILLARD | | Tue Sep 16 1986 15:34 | 50 |
| I used to enjoy going to horse shows to "see the pretty horses".
As I grew however, I got to know some large breeders/farms and
started following horses' show careers... I noticed that many
of the halter horses couldn't do much of anything else. So,
when the interest in that horse wasn't as keen.... the horse
was sold - onward the next batch.
You very rarely see a distance horse that would do well in a
halter class because they aren't "walking tubs" or they don't
fit the current rage - (bulging eyes, little feet etc..)
PERFORMANCE IS THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING! In the long run -
that baby that someone rushed to build those muscles breaks
down at a young age, or the horse is just too heavy and blockey
later and is not a "good all 'round" horse.
I think, alot of the time some folks forget that the horse is
an athlete and we should remember that.... and not get hung
up in STYLE. How will this effect the breed in the LONG run?
The problems that we now have in horses and dogs are mostly
BREEDER brought about for STYLE. So many things can be traced
back to a line that was used too much.
I really think that there should be some guidelines/test that
a breeding stallion would have to pass to be certified. Time
has proven that a breeder will beed what they really shouldn't
and this should go for mares too.
I know that we will still get faults.... but maybe not "unsound"
ones.
Not all folks will agree... I know! But this is JUST my 2
cents worth. When I buy a horse, I want that nag to be mine
for a long, healthy life. So far, I have been lucky. I have
run-of-the-mill old type morgan (30yrs) and I have a SUPERIOR
bred Appy and I see things in the Appy that shouldn't be but
are due to breeding horses that shouldn't of been. Anything
in the Morgan that is a fault - is just that - but not an
unsoundness or start of one.
I have never owned a mare and I had my stallion cut. He has
sired three foals that have a close resemblance to him and have
carried what I think is a bad fault, little feet. So maybe I
am out of line but someone has to stop a fault somewhere ignoring
it won't make it go away.
Susan
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132.4 | Warmbloods - performance over looks | CADLAC::NAJJAR | | Tue Sep 16 1986 16:12 | 9 |
| Bob, Did anything come out off that meeting that you attended
recently? As I told you before, all the warmblod breeds that
I know of have strict requirements about a stallion establishing
a good performance background before being considered for stud.
Most of those horses are dressage, eventing or jumping champions
before they are approved. I think it's a good rule for all breeds
to follow, because sometimes what looks good on paper, doesn't
always perform well. Do you think that the increase in Arabian
racing will have any effect on this new ruling?
|
132.5 | more | CTOAVX::IZZO | | Tue Sep 16 1986 17:16 | 26 |
| Regarding .2
You beat me to the keyboard!!!!!!!!!
I'd LOVE to see a ruling such as has been proposed, further I'd
love to see it instated for EVERY breed! I agree with the majority,
I'm so sick to death of judging halter horses who are pretty to
look at but were bred without regard to form to function.
Appy's (my primary breed) areparticularly annoying to me. Haven't
these breeders learned from the quarterhorse people's mistakes?
Here we go again, 1500 pounds on 00 shoes. Then they wonder why
these animals come up with navicular and mechanical founder so much
more often than "in the old days". They traded junk heads and rat
tails for much more complicated problems.
Further more, if these halter horses (which are often used by
perspective buyers as a visual guideline) are so wonderful to breed
to, then why are they only shown in the halter ring and NOT in the
performance ring as well. I think that such a proposale would slow
down some of the indescriminate breeders out there.
Sorry I got so wild, I really am not a hothead, just a subject that
hits home with me.
Ann
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132.6 | Young horses are exempt | PLANET::NICKERSON | | Tue Sep 16 1986 18:14 | 37 |
| Regarding .2
Young horses (under 4) would be excluded from the performance
requirement at this time. The objective here is to limit the top
(National and Regional Champion) breeding horses to those who can
actually do something. As time goes on you would find that the
ideal horse would look different than today and the problem would
no longer be there.
Regarding .4
Julie, the meeting was a board of directors meeting and only addressed
how we would handle information for delegates to attend the convention
with. For too long we have sent a delegate who has no contact with
the constituency and therefore votes for their own issues. My
intention for writing this note was to add fuel to the fire and
show that people of all breed disciplines are aware of the problem.
If you haven't guessed by now, I am strongly in favor of the resolution
being proposed. Horses are athletes and should be bred as such.
I really believe that they are unhappy when not worked and we certainly
don't need any living monuments. So if people are happier riding
horses, and horses are happier working, why would we want to breed
a population of non-workable horses? If there is an answer today
for the Arabian breed it is in the Investment community. They have
done more to destroy the breed singlehandedly than centuries of
breeders. Most of the reason is that they are non-riders and this
is just another investment like Pork-bellies, or Wheat futures,
or stocks and bonds. Sorry I didn't mean to get so worked up but
I was in the business before the investment folks showed up and
I'll be here when they leave. I just don't want my breed of horses
to be set back several generations so someone can stuff their bank
account.
|
132.7 | SOME QUESTIONS ABOUT IAHA RULE | NEWVAX::AIKEN | I love Crabbet Arabians! 301-867-1584 | Tue Sep 16 1986 19:01 | 38 |
| Bob, your note and several of the replies bring up many questions.
Aren't the Nationals for horses age 3 and up? How would the
performance ruling affect the 3-year-olds? Perhaps the solution
would be to change the age to 4. I would be concerned about people
pushing their horses under saddle before their time in order to
meet the rule.
Understand, I wholeheartedly agree with you about beauty vs
performance. Have you thought about WHO it is who set the style?
Is it the trainers, the judges? One trainer I know said my very
athletic filly would never sell because her cannons were shorter
than her upper leg bones (the name of which escapes me right now)!
Funny, that's how I thought it was supposed to be. He contends
that the tall Arabian is more marketable -- maybe to some people,
but Arabians aren't supposed to be giants. My feeling about the
15.2-16h Arabians is that, for that kind of height, cross-breed
your Arabian to a Thoroughbred or warmblood. Leave the "true" Arabian
at or under 15 hands where he belongs.
Maybe what International needs to do is educate all the owners via
their magazine and prospective owners via the new IAHA marketing
brochure: define an Arabian, its purpose for being, its great
athletic ability. Make it stylish to breed for performance as well
as for grace and beauty. There's no reason why an athletic horse
has to, by virtue of its ability, look ugly!!
My farrier told me that one reason why halter horses may not become
performance horses -- even with correct breeding -- is that the
hooves are filed too long and narrow. Even after the horse stops
showing at halter, the foot is often beyond sufficient repair to
allow the horse to perform. Has anyone heard differently?
Are you related to Nick Nickerson in North Carolina? He's going to
judge our Eastern Amateur Arabian Horse Show Circuit futurity Sept.
27 at Prince George Equestrian Center in Upper Marlboro, MD.
Glad to see this notesfile!!!
Merrie Aiken NEWVAX::AIKEN
|
132.8 | 2 More Cents for the pot | DONNER::PEACOCK | | Tue Sep 16 1986 21:22 | 33 |
| Since everybody is offering their 2 cents worth this subject is
one that has brought up my ire on more than one occasion.
First let me say that we have shown on the Arab, Pinto and local
circuits here in Colorado. Second that for the most part I agree
completely with the notes that argue performance.
So many of the horses that I see shown here fall into the looney
tune bucket. Sure these horses have 'show' appeal. They come
into the ring fire breathing dragons. The handler is lucky if
they can get the horse to set up for the class. Usually though
if they can and the horse is large enough they will win. When you
talk to the trainers they seem to all have horror stories(how many
people has the horse hurt). This sure isn't the stud that I want
to breed my mares to for my kids horse. I 'had' a mare that was
very typey and made the mistake of breeding her to a stallion that
was also very typey. The foal looked great, but it was a rodeo
every time we wanted to catch it to work it.
So I what we decided in our breeding program was that the tractability
of the offspring had to be the first concern. Second was the foal's
way of going. Third was the conformation of the foal. And lastly
since we do breed pintos color. If the foal doesn't doesn't meet
all of the above it goes down the road. I won't even care if it
does beat me in the show ring. I will know that what I keep is
safe!
Some people out here think that they really took me to the cleaners
on some of the horses that they bought. But I did warn them on
what I saw as fault's and that was why the horse was priced the
way that it was.
-John-
|
132.9 | Re. reply .7 | PLANET::NICKERSON | | Thu Sep 18 1986 10:02 | 31 |
| The Nationals are for horses 3 and older, but typically the only
three year olds in halter are the national futurity classes which
would be exempt. Even so at the state level, we are showing three
year olds in the snaffle bit futurity classes. I have some
reservations about showing 3 year olds under saddle because of the
stress while they are still growing. Arabs as you probably know
are late bloomers, and my decision to put a horse under saddle is
based on how developed I think it is. The problem, however, is
with getting a four or five year old to the Nationals, since it
takes at least two years to finish a horse to the point where it
can compete at that level. I know that this is a drawback with
the proposal especially since it may give more incentive to use
conditioning programs that include steriods to give the illusion
of maturity. I guess if the same unscrupulous (sp?) people that
are dilating eyes, injecting air in croups subcutaneously, or blowing
baby power imported from Columbia in nostrils, are doing the training
there will be more abuses anyway. In the end we'll have to do the
right thing for the breed despite those folks.
I think the issue of long and narrow feet is a result of people
who are correcting for conformational problems or just increasing
action by shoeing a young horse. Maybe the solution here is to
not show youngsters (below the age of three).
I'm not related to Nick Nickerson. To the best of my knowlege I
am the only one in my family that is involved in the horse industry.
I'll bet that somewhere not too far back, we are related, since
most of the Nickersons started out on Cape Cod. We're thick as
flies down there.
|
132.10 | Wild opinion from a (currently) non-horseman | ARGUS::CURTIS | Dick 'Aristotle' Curtis | Thu Sep 18 1986 18:16 | 24 |
| If an ignorant non-horseman may voice an opinion...
I got the impression that there is a subset of horse breeders who
(probably unintentionally) have been breeding horses whose main
value is for photographers. Such horses LOOK very pretty, but are
below average at DOING things (such as riding or driving), and are
also below average with respect to health and soundness of body.
(Sounds like a clone of Marilyn Monroe -- with 20% off her IQ, and
diabetes.)
If I were to expend the time, work, and money to own a horse, I
would try to avoid such an animal, in favor of one which I would
expect to stay healthy and be ridable. If you'll pardon the analogy,
it's like choosing a 3-year-old but sound pickup truck, instead
of a brand-new Fiat two-seater (picking on Fiat because I've heard
that they're fun for 2 years, and then you trade them or run up
a tab at your garage).
This may be a bad attitude, but mine is that a horse whose main
merits are its looks is a horse whose future contributions to the
gene pool ought to be carefully weighed.
Dick
|
132.11 | get a magazine involved? | WHOARU::NAJJAR | | Tue Sep 23 1986 17:03 | 6 |
| Bob, I wonder if you could get an equine publication such as
Equus to do an article on the subject. They may even include
some type of questionnaire or poll as part of the article.
Did you find the article in the Express paper, or would you
like me to send it to you?
|
132.12 | Good Idea but I may be too late! | PLANET::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Tue Sep 23 1986 18:01 | 12 |
| I did find that article in the Express after you told me about it.
Magazine articles do work because even though I had known about
the resolution before I read the article, it is really what got
me going on the issue. Show Horse would have probably been the
ideal publication to write an article (maybe they are planning to).
The problem is that the convention is in November so any articles
need to be published in October, but they have already gone to press
with that issue. None the less, I'll bring it up with Stephen Kinney
(he's the publisher) next time I see him. I might also run across
Bill or Margie Lexton both of who write for Show Horse. Alas, I
live the life of a procrastinator and should have started this months
ago.
|
132.13 | It's never too late | WHOARU::NAJJAR | | Wed Sep 24 1986 10:35 | 13 |
| Bob, I wouldn't abandon the plan. You could still submit a
request to as many equine publications as you can, and even
if they don't publish the article before the convention, when
they do get around to it, it may spark interest in readers who
will do something about it, like sending letters to people
in charge of creating such rules, etc. The magazine 'Arabians'
has been having bankruptucy & organizational problems, but I
think they have been resolved, and I know they have a large
number of subscribers, and might consider working on an article
like this, I also think they are still working on their Nov
issue which should come out at the end of Oct/beg. of Nov.
It's worth a try.......
|
132.14 | Arab Halter Class | SEDJAR::NANCY | | Tue Feb 23 1988 17:54 | 16 |
| Hi!
I would like to find out what it takes (in your opinion) to win
an Arab Halter class? I have been told that the horse with the
best confirmation should win, how true is this? What are some
of the "key" assets every Halter horse should have?
Do you think that a Taller horse has a better chance of winning?
How about a pretty face...does it count for much? Can you describe
what is ment by a horse having "Presence"?
What beyond Confirmation, are the judges looking for? What kinds
of things can you do to give your horse the best advantage possible
in the Show ring?
Thanks, Nancy
|
132.16 | A good horse is a good horse... | PBA::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Wed Feb 24 1988 12:53 | 42 |
| Here is what I think is important in Arabian Halter Classes.
(note: The opinions I express are not necessarily the opinions
of all halter judges)
In order of priority I look for the following:
Conformation
Type
Disposition
Athletic Ability
Presence
Size
This does not imply that any one of the items listed are so important
that it can stand alone. What you have to judge for is an individual
who is the best representation of the breed in all of these areas.
Conformation:
The physical makeup of the animal. For example, no poor parts such
as ewe necks, long backs, poorly developed bone or muscle structure,
and certainly no cow hocks (this is not an `allowable' arab trait
as some would lead you to believe). The bottom line is that this
is an area which you would judge any good horse on.
Type:
This is the representation of the type established by the Arabian
Horse Registry. Quite simply it is the resemblance of this animal
to the breed standard specified by the registry and pictured by
the Gladys Brown Edwards drawing.
The other areas are pretty much self explainatory but since you
asked about Presence, to me it is the picture that you get from
the horse's expression and carriage.
There are some good explainations in the Golden Book of Horse Showing
if you can find a copy (they are out of print). Or an alternate
source is the Youth Judging guide from IAHA.
|
132.15 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | | Wed Feb 24 1988 13:52 | 4 |
| To me, PRESENCE personified is Khemosabi!
Mary Jo
|
132.17 | my opinions... | TOPDOC::NAJJAR | | Wed Feb 24 1988 14:46 | 19 |
| Nancy,
There is a discussion in note 132 that compliments this one,
readers should also refer to it. Bob's list covers the 'key'
points that should be looked at, however, different people may put
them in a different order. Basically, conformation and performance
kind of go hand in hand, and should be at the top of the list along
with type (since you are judging a particular breed which has a
standard associated with it).
Re: 'presence' - this is also something that is defined differently
by different people, but it should be distinguished from the look
in a horse that was brought about by fear. An example of presence
might be 'Cass Ole' - the Black Stallion. I think people will agree
upon the definition, even if they don't agree upon the individual.
It can be defined as the look/feeling you get from a particular horse
that says "I'm special - look at me!". It's the horse that stands out
from a crowd on his own (doesn't need to be hyped up by a trainer).
|