T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1646.1 | Hot+Cold=Warm? | WAFER::CORMIER | | Tue Jul 21 1992 17:08 | 33 |
|
Virginia,
Good Question. I don't know for sure, but I think that some folks (mostly
European? -> Germans,Dutch,French,etc.) crossed Thoroughbreds (hot blood)
with some of their favorite local cold blood draft breeds and came out with
what are now call warmbloods. How's that for guessing??
I can only assume that, through the years, those horses that performed the
best,or had a preferred conformation or appearance, were re-bred until
certain strains of warmblood appeared. Trakheiner,Dutch warmblood,the
french have a name for their warmblood, I beleive, but I forget what it is..
Typically, warmbloods are from European descent. Many of the stallions
used in the States for breeding purposes were/are shipped from overseas.
The most popular ones in the States are usually quite tall (15.2->18hh)
and large boned, and are usually fairly even tempered -> ie; not "Hot"
like the Thoroughbred stereotype.
They became very popular over here, especially in the dressage world, 10
to 15 years ago.
They are usually quite expensive.
Enough speculation...Anyone out there with any cold, hard facts???
/Simone
P.S. I think there's some Warmblood discussion/debate in the dressage note
(#10)
|
1646.2 | Maybe your right | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Tue Jul 21 1992 19:54 | 15 |
| hi Simone,
I guess we are the only ones who care to find out about this. The
truth is, Someone in my area just paid an outrageous price for a
warmblood. I asked her what exactly what she bought and she couldn't
tell me but it was a "warmblood." He stands about 16hh and has a huge
head. To me he looks like a lost kid all the time. She rode him the
other day and tried some fences. This guy is close to being a total
clod. She says he is for drssage, so isn't supposed to be able to
jump.
It seems to me she is more lost than I am.
virginia
|
1646.3 | not all warmbloods are clods | MR4SRV::MSHAMEL | Marsha Shamel | Wed Jul 22 1992 09:39 | 18 |
| Please don't condemn all warmbloods based on this one!
From what I have read and seen, the explanation of crossing throughbreds with cold
bloods is exactly how you got the original warmblood. Now every country under
the sun has a 'warmblood' - all are variations on a theme. Very few appear to be
recognized breeds.
The warmblood is typically a milder temprament and bigger horse but again, not always.
They are usually bought for dressage as they move with grace and catch the judges
eye. However, some turn out to be excellent eventers. One in our barn was Novice
Horse of the Year in Area I for Combined Training.
Also, they are typically expensive because of the reputation. And as we all know,
price does not necessarily get you a great horse! As with all animals, you have
to know not only the history of the animal, but what you want to do with it, what
you can put into its training, and most of all, what the animal is capable of.
Marsha
|
1646.4 | | XLIB::PAANANEN | | Wed Jul 22 1992 12:02 | 34 |
|
Some warmbloods are created by breeding to Arabian stallions. This is
happening in Poland and in Holland that I know of, and probably other
places too. See note 205.27 for more information on this.
Topic 1567 discusses the Selle Francais, sometimes referred to as the
"French Warmblood".
The dressage topic dicusses breed characteristics and suitabilities
off and on throughout the topic, however the latest dicussions occured
from .500 to .650 or so.
There are plenty of warmbloods that jump. Any warmblood stallion that
expects to pass stallion testing must be able to jump well. It's part
of the standards that horse must meet before it is allowed to breed
to any registered mares and have the offspring be registerable. If you
contact any of the warmblood registries (especially the Hannoverian)
they will be happy to tell you what their stallion testing criteria is.
It is very rigorous testing and only the best horses pass. They not
only judge athleticism but also temperament and tractability. I have
heard some criticism of the testing process in that some require that
stallions complete the test before the age of six (or even younger),
and that it puts some young horses risk because they are more easily
injured trying to complete such a test at that age, before they fully
mature.
I suspect that the reason your friend's warmblood seems klutzy over fences
is that some very athletic horses don't jump well until they start jumping
fences over 3'. And they need to be started properly over fences as well.
If I was to buy a warmblood, even if I just intended to use it for dressage,
I would beware of a horse that couldn't jump. It would indicate to me an
unsoundness or conformational defect of some sort. That being the case, I
would expect it to be priced accordingly (much) lower.
|
1646.5 | Anyone know the Pinto Domino? | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 22 1992 12:56 | 15 |
| An ex-boarder had a warmblood at my barn last year. THe horse was
skitzo! To ride him was almost impossible, he was so lazy and stiff,
that once you asked him to do anything, he go into a bucking frenzy -
and it was the type of frenzy to hurt someone.
This horse didn't have any papers, so I think the girl got sold a bunch
of lies. This horse was supposed to be some sort of lower level
dressage horse......this horse couldn't bend!
I saw some pictures in the Pedlar of Carol Lavell(SP?) and Gifted, he
is a magnificant warmblood!
There is also a Black and White Pinto warmblood stud (hanoverian?)
named Domino who I really like too! Anyone know of him?
|
1646.6 | | XLIB::PAANANEN | | Wed Jul 22 1992 13:11 | 8 |
|
If he's the horse I'm thinking of, I think he's a Dutch Warmblood, Michele.
There is a place breeding paint coloring into Dutch Warmblood lines.
The photos of these horses in the USDF bulletin and other places are
impressive enough to make me want to see one in person, and I'm not
especially interested in paints. If a picture is worth a thousand words
then seeing the horse has got to be worth worth 10 thousand! :^)
|
1646.7 | warm/hot/hot/cold | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Wed Jul 22 1992 13:55 | 17 |
|
OK!
So now this is what I have guessed is what everyone is saying.
Warmbloods are a registerable breed under certian breed
names...ie.Hanovarian, Trahkaner, Dutch Warmbloods, ect.......
The warmblood is made up of a "hot blood" and "cold blood" horse. The
US horses being the "hot ones"? This is where I get confused. I was
thinking it was like Running Quarters are Quarter Horse / Throughbred
cross; Anglo Arab is Arabian / Throughbred cross. Now are Arabs
concidered "hot". Most of the ones I have been around seem that way.
Then again, does the Term Warmblood actually describe temperment.
I hope this is confusing to someone else besides me.
virginia
|
1646.8 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 22 1992 13:58 | 7 |
| I saw this picture in Equus, I think, and yes he looks awsome!
If I got more serious with the dressage (well as far as the Pinto club
goes), and if Domino throws color, I would seriously consider breeding
my mare to him.
|
1646.9 | Unathletic horse | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Jul 22 1992 14:01 | 9 |
| Although I'm basically a dressage rider and Kiirja's basically a hunter
rider, I agree that a horse that cannot jump moderately well will not
do for dressage,especially the upper levels. Both disciplines require
the horse to round(bascule) its back and get its hindquarters
underneath itself("engage" the hindquarters) by flexing the joint
between the spine and the pelvis. If a horse can't do that, it won't be
good at ANY athletic discipline whether it's cutting, reining, jumping
dressage, 3-day eventing or barrel racing! (I'm sure I left out a few
but you get the idea :-)
|
1646.10 | Closing in on reality | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Jul 22 1992 14:35 | 23 |
| VI,
You getting close. The "hot" blood however does not come from the US.
First and foremost, the Thoroughbred was developed in England. It has
since spread throughout the world with major breeding centers in
England, US, France Germany, Australia, New Zealand, etc.
The Middle Eastern horses like the Arab are considered hot blooded and
they served as part of the foundation stock of the TB. By hot blooded,
I mean spirited and active. The TB and Arab stock are introduced into
the Warmblood lines to make them less coarse and less phlegmatic.
I bristle when people make the illogical leap that the TB temperament
came from the Arab/Barb/Turk lines that were introduced. This only
shows their ignorance not only of TB history but of the Arab horse's
temperament.
The English and Irish had been racing at sprint distances for AT LEAST
200 years BEFORE the Arab lines were introduced. Their sprint racing stock
already had the temperament that some TB horses have and which gives
the TB a bad reputation.
John
|
1646.11 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | all my kids have 4 legs | Wed Jul 22 1992 14:53 | 2 |
| The flashy Dutch warmblood stallion that you folks are talking about is Art Deco,
not Domino.
|
1646.12 | | MPO::ROBINSON | let me hear you whisper | Wed Jul 22 1992 16:29 | 5 |
|
No, Domino is also an advertised pinto warmblood stallion.
I have his ad somewhere in my desk here....
|
1646.13 | | XLIB::PAANANEN | | Wed Jul 22 1992 16:38 | 4 |
|
I'm pretty sure the Paint/Dutch Warmblood I was thinking of is Art Deco.
Now that Kathy has mentioned it, that name sounds familiar. Oh well!
|
1646.14 | Dressage Pinto | PFSVAX::SANESTIS | Critter kids | Wed Jul 22 1992 17:06 | 4 |
| Art Deco is a black and white pinto, Dutch warmblood. He was showing
at fourth level when I got to meet him...a very impressive boy with a
pleasant temperment!
|
1646.15 | | MAJORS::QUICK | Yorkshire 1, Suffolk nil. | Thu Jul 23 1992 06:11 | 8 |
|
Re warmbloods.
Presumably what we here in England call "hunters" (i.e. Irish Draught/TB
Shire/TB types) would be called warmbloods anywhere else, we just don't
generally use the term except for non-English breeds?
JJ.
|
1646.16 | Who made up this term? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Thu Jul 23 1992 08:33 | 9 |
| I'm guessing that the term "warmblood" is of recent origin -- unlike
the horses it is used to describe. I have a 50's or 60's vintage book
of horse and pony breeds, and it is quite comprehensive, detailing such
breeds and the Selle Francais, Oldenburg, Hannnoverian, Holsteiner,
etc. But there is no mention of a "warmblood" as such. My feeling is
that it was a term coined to describe the European horses bred
specifically to do dressage and eventing.
-ellie
|
1646.17 | Art Deco sounds right | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Jul 23 1992 08:56 | 6 |
| Now that you guyes mention it, I think it *was* Art Deco I liked. I'll
have to go looking for the add. If Art Deco is the one I was thinking
of, then Domino was another Pinto warmblood someone showed me.
Regardless, one was real sharp, and the other- well the picture could
have been better....
|
1646.18 | another warmblood vote! | MTWASH::DOUGLAS | | Thu Jul 23 1992 10:19 | 14 |
| RE: .4
I agree that some horses just don't jump well over low fences.
My Trakehener Stallion, Different Drummer, (who was previously owned
by Carol Lavalle) looks like he's sleeping over the low fences. The
bigger the fence, the more he shows off!
He has all the warmblood traits, intelligent, kind, big hearted,
big boned, great conformation. He does just as well at dressage and
is very forgiving when "I" make a mistake. I want to breed him to my
TB mare next year.
Tina
|
1646.19 | Cynical View. | A1VAX::GUNN | I couldn't possibly comment | Thu Jul 23 1992 13:18 | 10 |
| "Warmblood" appears to be a fairly recently invented word to justify
adding a zero or two to the asking price of a horse without increasing
its inherent usefulness. "Warmblood" and "Registered" fit in the same
category as far as I am concerned. To those who are enamoured with the
term "Warmblood", I describe my horse as an "Algonquian Warmblood"
since he is a Percheron/Thorougbred cross from a urine farm in
Eastern Canada.
I prefer to consider each horse on its individual merits and discount
all marketing hype.
|
1646.20 | | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Thu Jul 23 1992 13:29 | 21 |
| An owner at the barn I have a lease at has an Oldenberg
mare from a jumping family. She's 17 hands something,
requires a custom saddle as nothing will fit her
and has jumped 4'10" free schooling. She's only 4 now.
She's been bred to a stallion in Hamilton MA (can never
remember the name), who is also known as a jumper.
The black & white Dutch warmblood, I saw at the USET Festival
was Art Deco. With all the comments in here and other places
about dressage judges not liking color I didn't think there
was such a thing. He is the first horse I can honestly say
I thought was "pretty".
I brought a videocamera to take some dressage tests and planned to
only take a few classes in full to study later, but had to take the
end of Art Deco's test. Incredible looking horse.
|
1646.21 | getting a book | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Thu Jul 23 1992 13:34 | 15 |
| I want to thank everyone who has replied to this note. After reading
and digesting all the comments and detailed answers, I think.........
I'll go find a book on the subject.
Also, is there a national magazine that would have a picture or an
artical on this Warmblood everyone has been writing about. He sound
like he is magnificent and a good example for me to look at and compare
to. \
thanks soooooo much
virginia
|
1646.22 | | XLIB::PAANANEN | | Thu Jul 23 1992 14:09 | 11 |
|
Pick up the February issue of just about any horse mag (Equus, Practical
Horseman, Chronicle (weekly mag), Hunter & Sport Horse, etc) and you'll
see page after page of glossy photos of warmblood and thoroughbred
stallions, and the requisite advertising hype about the horse and his
offspring. You'll most likely find Art Deco in there, as well as several
pages from Iron Spring Farm (they have several stallions which they market
aggressively) and some local horses (well, local to me, not to you!) like
Moronjo and Bonjour. I'm sure you'll see there are plenty of 'fancy'
stallions out your way too.
|
1646.23 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Jul 23 1992 14:33 | 7 |
| Kiirja,
Is Iron Spring Farm the one which seems to have the first full page
add in Praticle horseman every month (or was it Equus)? That is the
one I thnik I saw art deco advertised from.
M
|
1646.24 | | XLIB::PAANANEN | | Thu Jul 23 1992 14:49 | 9 |
|
The Iron Spring ads are very sophisticated in appearance and usually
printed in full color (very expensive ads!)...the recent ones have
photos of the horses inside very ornate picture frames, with the title
"Presenting the Iron Spring Farm Collection" or something like that.
I probably saw the Art Deco ad in Practical Horseman and/or the USDF
bulletin. It's probably in other mags as well.
|
1646.25 | warmblood testing | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Fri Jul 24 1992 11:04 | 24 |
| One difference we're forgetting about between the various
European warmbloods and the more familar U.S. horses
is the 'tests' they have. (can't think of the name for it).
Anyway, the major breeding in the U.S. is concerned with how fast
a horse can run or how high he can jump. We will put up with
a really nasty animal if he meets those two conditions.
Those European tests attempt to rank horses on say dressage and jumping
ability but also on conformation, rideability and temperment etc.
The mare I talked about in .20 is branded because she "passed"
I think her yearling test. I think the brand is a circle or a triangle,
maybe our noting eventer Kathy R can remember, Kathy has ridden Grace.
Iv'e seen some pretty sad looking warmbloods without the brand.
Of course the difference between a branded and not-branded warmblood
might be the difference between $10,000.00 and $30,000.00 (or God knows
what).
Bill
|
1646.26 | More on Warmbloods... | WAFER::CORMIER | | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:07 | 31 |
|
re: a few back
I visited a farm in Middleboro (southern Ma.) a couple of years ago with a
friend who was looking for a warmblood type horse. The woman who owned the
place had a bunch of pregnant draft mares in the field and couple of
youngsters that I rode while we were there.
She told us that she used to live in Canada and that the draft/TB crosses
were getting popular there, as well. She did say that breeding these
horses was a crap shoot. She was never sure what she was going to get.
I rode two of her youngsters -> both had excellent temperments, but one
had a few undesireable flaws in conformation (too long back and too long
pasterns), the other horse had almost flawless conformation.
The friend I was looking for horses with finally ended up with a Dutch
warmblood out of Sidora (Kathy Connelly's old dressage TB mare) and Rampal
(who, in my opinion, sires the best babies -> most of his babies that I
have seen look like Dad, and is he ever gorgeous!)
Different types of warmbloods have different rules for formal registration.
Even though my friend's horse is 1/2 TB, she could be registered as a full
Dutch Warmblood (if she passes the Kur testing), due to the fact that her
mom (Sidora) passed a breeding suitibility test for the Dutch Warmblood
Association and is registered in their books as having good enough confor-
mation and movement. I forget exactly what rating she was given.
Other warmblood types might not allow the offspring of a TB/XX cross to
be fully registered.
|
1646.27 | Steele's farm? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:25 | 10 |
| re .26
Gee, could that have been John and Maureen Steel's farm? They bred
Canadian bred draft mares to their Thouroughbred stallion, and had some
really nice horses. I don't know if they are still in business;
Maureen died of lung cancer a year or so ago, and I'm not sure if John
kept the business going. He had/has his own business as a farrier, and
last I heard he was still shoing for the USET.
-ellie
|
1646.28 | Yes, he is..... | BUSY::MANDILE | Dirty deeds done dirt cheap | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:57 | 6 |
| I think it's spelled John Steil, and he still has Drafts (I
see them in the field as I live 1/4 mile down the road (: )
and still sells horses. He has a youngster 3-4 yrs old,
1/2 Clyde for sale that my customer looked at....
Lynne
|
1646.29 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Mon Jul 27 1992 12:28 | 31 |
| European warmblood breeds were made by crossing thoroughbreds and arabs
with local draft horses. They have been selectively bred for
temperament, conformation, movement and athletic ability for several
hundred years. Registration depends on *type*, rather than
parentage/bloodlines, which is why Ith (the arabian Kiirja referred to
several replies ago) was accepted for registry. They are only
allowed to be registered after testing. Stallions, in particular,
have to pass a rigorous test under saddle that lasts several days (or
weeks) and includes cross country and jumping. Each European country
tends to have its own national breed -- Swedish Warmblood, Dutch Warmblood,
Danish Warmblood, etc. Except of course for Germany, who didn't know
when to stop ;-) with Hanoverian, Trakehner, Oldenburg, Holsteiner etc.
(named after the provinces in which they originated. And except for
Poland, who has their own version of other breeds ;-) (Polish
Trakehner, Polish Arabian, etc). Of the Germany breeds, as a general rule,
some are more suited to jumping and some to dressage, but mostly I think
its more a matter of individual talent. The German breeds also vary in
size and type, eg Trakehners are generally lighter and warmer and
Hanoverians heavier and cooler.
Based on reading and personal experience, I'd be wary of "American
Warmblood" experiments myself. They can have temperament problems
because they don't always know "who they are." With early crosses
you really don't know what you are going to end up with and it takes a
few generations to work out the kinks in any breeding program of this
type.
On the other hand, I consider horses such as the Quarter Horse to be true
samples of "American Warmbloods" since I've read that they were the
result of crossing t-breds and coldbloods back in the early days here.
Same with Morgans and some of our other breeds.
|
1646.30 | Let's get this straight! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Mon Jul 27 1992 14:33 | 28 |
| Actually, I dispute the implications that Mary made about Warmbloods
in the previousreply. Specifically:
"They have been selectively bred for temperament, conformation,
movement and athletic ability for several hundred years."
That's simply not accurate. It was not until AFTER WWII that the German
breeds that we now call Warmbloods were intensively bred with sporting
activities in mind. So, it has only been the last 45-50 years that the
German breeds have emphasized breeding sport horses. And they did that
to insure the survival of their breeds! The horses were no longer
needed for their previous uses!
Breeds like the Hanoverian, Trakehner, Oldenburg, Holsteiner were
originally used as carriage, artillery and cavalry horses. The individual
studs bred whatever the local prince, Kaiser or what have you told them
to breed. And for the most part, they bred heavy carriage horses. I am NOT
talking about draft horses the size of the Percheron, Shire or Belgian.
They were more like the Cleveland Bay but perhaps even somewhat heavier.
In other words, 16-17H horses in the 1200-1400 pound weight range.
In fact, Germany used such horses as an important part of its freight
transportation system until the end of WWII. That's one reason that the
Nazis "drafted" all horses that weren't breeding stock. They needed
them to transport supplies for the military. Throughout WWII, Germany
transported more military material by horse drawn wagons than the did
by motor vehicle.
John
|
1646.31 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Mon Jul 27 1992 14:57 | 5 |
| I stand (actually sit) corrected. I could swear that I have read that
they were selectively breed for at least a couple hundred years -- not
for sport, but for temperament, conformation, etc.
Mary
|
1646.32 | books, books........ | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Mon Jul 27 1992 17:03 | 16 |
| What book(s) is this information in and where (in the So.Cal. area) can
they be found. There is a great library At Santa Ana Feed and they can
get almost any book as long as you have the title and author or
bublishing company. So, if any one has the spacifics on some books, I
would apreciate it greatly.
I used to be interested in Peruvians, QH, TB, and crosses there of. I
now would like to read up on the Warmbloods. Breed origins facinate me
and I try to read up on as many as I can get a hold of.
Thanks in Advance
virginia
|
1646.33 | Keeping my image as an iconoclast | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Mon Jul 27 1992 18:29 | 13 |
| Mary,
Sorry if I was a bit harsh. I didn't mean to be. I'm sure you didn't
create the myth! Actually, I'm sure you have read/heard that the German
warmbloods have been bred for centuries to certain specifications. That's
the propaganda that is commonly put out.
For instance, there was a short segment on the TV show 'HorseWorld' a
couple months ago about Oldenburgs. They laid out a bunch of claptrap
about Oldenburgs being bred for centuries for showjumping and other
equine sports which just isn't accurate.
John
|
1646.34 | Look in "Books in Print" | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Tue Jul 28 1992 08:25 | 13 |
| re .32
I've never seen a book specifically devoted to the origin of the breeds
collectively labeled "warmbloods", but there *might* be one out there!
What you might do is to look in "Books in Print" -- probably available
in a local bookstore -- in the "subject" category, or the "titles"
category, for things like warmblood, horse breeding, etc.
Of course, it may be that just such books are available in great
variety and supply -- only in German! or Dutch, or French....
Good luck,
ellie
|
1646.35 | Yo John, read it and weep! | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Jul 28 1992 10:06 | 135 |
| Oh, sure John! Decide to be nice, apologize, and steal my thunder!!!
Hrumph! ;-)
Ahem. Last night while watching olympic diving, I got a little bored and
pulled out _The Observer's Book of Horses & Ponies" by R.S. Summerhays,
copyright 1948 and 1961.
I quote:
TRAKEHNER
"....The most prominent role in the foundation of the East Prussan breed
was played by the Trakehnen Stud, founded in 1732 by Frederick William I
of Prussia (father of Frederick the Great), who supplied both the land
and the foundation breeding material, partly from Royal Studs and
partly by importation of many high-class Arabs from Prince Radziwill's
Stud at Taurogi, in Poland. Trakehner horses soon became the pride of
German horse-breeding, and Trakehnen Stud becam the "pepiniere" of the
East Prussian breed....
"In the Trakehnen Stud the service period was towards the end of
November and foals were left with their dams until four and a half
months old. As three-year-olds they were sent to the training
establishment, which was on the spot, where they remained for a year.
When they were four-year-olds they were submitted to trials which
included hunting with a pack of hounds and cross-country races, the
obstacles being fences, banks and open ditches. The best ones were
retained for breeding in the Trakehnen Stud...."
HOLSTEIN
"Another very good German breed, suitable for both riding and
driving, is the Holstein Horse, whose Andalusian origins (and oriental
according to some believers) is supposed to date back to the 13th
century. The horse was bred on very good pastures of alluvial origin
on the right bank of the River Elbe, which were very suitable for
providing a powerful animal, and in the 16th to 18th centuries this
breed was in high esteem not only at home but also abroad, paticularly
for expert to France. The breed fetched good prices and was experted
in large numbers, but afterwards it deteriorated.
"According to E. Iverseon's "Abstracts of Animal Breedking," March
1939, p. 6, 'Das HOlsteiner Pferd, 1937':
"from 1825 onwards a reorientation of breeding took place,
particularly owing to the introduction of the Yorkshire Coach Horse.
The resulting compact conformation combined with a satisfactory gait
proved successful, and an increased demand for Holstein horses again
caused a serious dearth of breeding of uniform quality. This led to
the organisation of breeders and of the central stud at Traventhal..."
HANOVERIAN
"The Hanoverian breed, as it is known today, is a comparitively modern
production, owing its origin to the influence of our own Hanoverian
kings, who, from the time of George I down to 1837, took a great
interest in the horse of their native Hanover and sent many English
Thoroughbreds to cross with the existing German breeds.
"These breeds were spring from the German Geat Horse o the Middle
Ages....
"With the advent of gunpowder and the disappearance of armour the type
had to be modified again, and German breeders developed the 17th and
18th century light and heavy cavalry horse, falling into three main
groups -- Hanoverian, Mecklenburg and Danish.
"This old Hanoverian breed was then, as we have seen, interbred with
the English horses sent over by the Hanoverian Georges, and had finally
disappeared by about the middle of the 18th century, to be replaced by
the modern Hanoverian, a close and direct descendant of the famous
fathers of the English Thoroughbred, the Darley and Godolphin* Arabians
and the Byerly Turk."
*I have read in other places that Godolphin may have been a Barb, not
an Arab.
OLDENBURG
He doesn't give a history of the Oldenburg, therefore I assume it is a
more recent production.
SWEDISH, DANISH, etc. He talks generally about natives horses of combined
local draught and German warmblood breeding used for both light farm
work and under saddle. (Kris Bobo told me that when she bought Kyrie
she was able to see his mother on the farm. She was "walking down a
dirt road, pulling a plow, with a tiny boy riding her bareback with a
halter and leadshank, and with a foal at her side!) He mentions that
initial attempts in Denmark to create official breeds complete with
studbook records took place around 1900.
GELDERLAND
"Horses of this breed, which derives its name from the Dutch province
of Gelderland, where breeding is still carried on quite extensively,
originate from a very old native breed which was crossed many years ago
with such stallions as Enslish Thoroughbreds, Norfolk Trotters,
Holsteins and Anglo-Normans. During the past few decades, the main
consideration has been consolidation of type, with very remarkable
results, for the breed has greatly improved of recent years, themoder
horse being wide and deep, yet of beautiful build, with a very stylish
action. A docile arm horse and an excellent saddle-horse, it is
claimed to be an unsurpassable show horse in Holland. In the past
several Royal Studs, including Great Britain's have been regular buyers
of these horses."
ANGLO-NORMAN (he doesn't mention the Selle Francais, which I guess is
the breed mentioned to me 20 years ago by my French college roommate.
She raved about the native French horse which was like a German
warmblood but lighter and more brilliant. She didn't tell me the breed
in French, but said that it didn't translate literally and the closest
she would call it was a 'Frenchblood.' Anybody know any history of the
Selle Francais? Perhaps it was formed from the Anglo-Norman.)
"In the origin of this breed we find as the foundation, a Norman horse
which was a powerful and enduring animal, and very much appreciated in
those times as a war horse. William the Conqueror is said to have
brought to England a large number of these horses, which did much good
in improving the English native horse.
"In later times the Norman horse deteriorated by careless crossing
with the Danish and Mecklenburg cart-horse, and since 1775 Arabs and
English Thoroughbreds and half-breds were used. Between 1834-60 a
large admixture of Norfolk trotter blood gave origin to the
Anglo-Norman trotter....Besides this group fo trotters there are two
main types of Anglo-Norman: first the draught type, standing from 15.2
to 17 hands with a strong admixture of Percheron and later of
Boulonnais blood....Secondly, there is the cavalry type, which was much
used in the army and for sport....Normandy is also a great breeding
centre for racehorses, wherein past days "Capucin" and many other
prominent racehorses were bred, as was "Bois Roussel," winner of the
1938 ENglish Derby."
|
1646.36 | Yo Mary, Take that! :-) | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Tue Jul 28 1992 14:55 | 32 |
| Yo Mary!
I did the same thing with a different book, "The Encyclopaedia of
The Horse" which gives a hort history of the breeds.
BTW, I didn't say the breeds weren't old just that they hadn't been
bred for athletic ability until after WWII.
According to "The Encyclopaedia of The Horse":
Trakeheners were cavalry and light farm horses. Arab stock was
introduced in the 19th century but by the early 20th century 80% of the
mares were half TB.
Oldenburgs are the heaviest of the German warmbloods and were founded
in the 18th century on Friesian stock as a heavy carriage horse. They
later introduced Dpanish, Neopolitan, TB, CLeveland Bay, Norman and
Hannoverian stock.
Hannoverians were founded by the House of Hannover (King George of
England to be precise) as all round riding, driving and light draft horses.
Since the mid-1940's they have concentrated on athleticism for
competition.
Holsteins - Heavier version of the Hannoverian. Originally used for
coach horses and tiding horses. Based on 14th century war horse(you
know the ones that had to carry all the armour) stock.
So, it seems that our sources are consistent except that yours didn't
cover Oldenburgs
|
1646.37 | Warmblood Books!!!!!! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:07 | 34 |
| About the request for books on warmbloods:
I looked in the catalogs for 2 great book dealers and found some you
might be interested in. Of course, the dealers are on the east coast
but I'm not and I do business with them all the time. I assume you have
access to a telephone and UPS and/or US Post Office will deliver to
you. See the books note for their phone numbers.
Robin Bledsoe(cambridge MA) carries
"The International Warmblood Horse" $39.95
A world wide guide to breeds and bloodlines. It's described as a 1
volume guide in ENGLISH to Trakehners, Hol, Han, etc from Europe,
North America, Australia and New Zealand.
The Coach Horse: Servants w. Style. $10 Discusses HANNOVERIANS, OLDENBURGS,
Friesans and Cleveland Bays
The Heavenly Horses $8 Hungarian Warmbloods
Stallion Book of the Holsteiner Warmblood Breed $20 VOLUME 2
Knight's Equestrian Books carries:
"The International Warmblood Horse" $39.95 same as Robin B's shop
The Trakehner $24
The Hanoverian $24
The Flight of the East Prussian Horses (Trakehners) $17
That oughta be enough to break your book budget for this project
John
|
1646.38 | | BROKE::MELINDA | | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:46 | 26 |
| John,
I think the term athletic ability is too general, since I think just about
all breeds of horses are intended to be athletic.
Based on your own excerpts, I think its fair to say the warmbloods _have_ been
bred for athletic ability for 100's of years. I think any breed that's been
"bred" for the
- cavalry (Trakehner)
- all around riding (Hanoverians)
- 14th century war horse (Holsteiners)
has been bred for athletic ability.
I interpret your own excerpts in a way that fully supports Mary's statement
that warmbloods "have been selectively bred for temperament, conformation,
movement and athletic ability for several hundred years."
But if you mean warmbloods have only been bred with 'sporting' in mind,
then yes, its not been a couple hundred years yet.
Melinda
|
1646.39 | nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah ;-) | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Jul 28 1992 16:25 | 19 |
| Hey Melinda, ya beat me to it!
Dressage was practised by the cavalry as a way to make the horses more
maneuverable during battle. Even the Spanish Riding School and the
school at Saumur originally were formed to produce war horses. There
were numerous other cavalry schools around (eventually even in the U.S.)
-- those two are simply the only the lasted.
During times of peace and prosperity, these same horses were used for
sport. Ballet performances at the Spanish Riding School, hunting,
racing and general riding.
What happened after WWII is *not* that the Europeans suddenly switched
to breeding for sport, but rather that breeding that was originally geared
towards the cavalry, farmwork and general riding was narrowed totally
to sport. Mainly because machines replaced horses on the battle field
and, in some cases (but not Kyrie's mom!), in front of the plow.
Mary
|
1646.40 | Selective READING or selective breeding? | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Tue Jul 28 1992 19:29 | 49 |
| Melinda,
Until I read your final line, I thought you had misunderstood me
completely... Yes, I do mean that the Warmbloods have not been bred as
SPORT horses until after WWII before that they were UTILITY horses.
I was trying to show that for the most part, the Warmbloods were coach
and light draft horses which could also be ridden. However, you have only
selected the bits of what I said that reinforce your interpretation!
What I said was that the Trakehner was bred for cavalry and LIGHT FARM
WORK, the Hannoveraner had been bred for ALL ROUND USES(riding,
carriage AND DRAFT), and that the Holsteiner was bred for as a heavier
version of the Hannoveraner intended for coaching and riding. In
14th century Europe, a war horse was a large lumbering beastie and not
a nimble sport horse.
Re: warmbloods having "been selectively bred for temperament,
conformation, movement and athletic ability for several hundred years."
As you point out, those are imprecise terms. One could say the same of
the Percheron or Clydesdale. My basic "beef" is that people INTERPRET
such statements to mean that the warmbloods have been bred as SPORT
horses for hundreds of years and it ain't true!
In fact, the Morgan qualifies by your definitions! The breed has been
selectively bred for temperament, conformation, movement and athletic
ability for several hundred years. It was/is an all round riding,
driving and light draft horse. It has had a registry for over 100
years. They were used as cavalry horses. Entire regiments were mounted
on Morgans during the Civil War and Morgans were BRED by the US Government
AS cavalry horses until the cavalry was completely mechanized in the late
40's or early 50's(OK OK, I know they still have a token cavlary squad for
demonstrations but besides that they're mechanized). But, I don't see you
assuming that Morgans are outstanding sport horses!
Why? Simply because it's no more true for that breed than it is for any
of the others mentioned here.
On this point of temperament, I'll repeat what an old horse farmer told
me. He said something like, "Draft breeds have a reputation for good
dispositions. It wasn't always that way. It used to be that when you
couldn't get along with a nasty old mare, you bred her and left her in
the pasture to raise foals. When the tractor came along, people only kept
the kind ones. Those nasty kinda horses went for dog meat."
One could say the same about all breeds. When machines took over the
work of the horses, the temperaments improved because people could
afford to be pickier.
|
1646.41 | get on it | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Tue Jul 28 1992 20:53 | 17 |
| Gee,
I may not have to get those books if the conversations stay as
informative as they have been. I just wish we could all be in the same
room discussing this topic.
Anyhoo,
Do you have the Addresses for the places you mentioned? Even
though they are on the East coast, if I can't find anything here that
may be my only venu.
Thanks so much
keep up the discussion, I find it very interesting
virginia
|
1646.42 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Wed Jul 29 1992 10:16 | 12 |
| Yes, John, in the 14th century the war horse (except for arabs) was a
lumbering beastie who could carrie heavy armour. But in the 4 1/2
centuries immediately following the war horse was much more like a good
sized hunter (say, an Irish). And in those 4 1/2 centuries, many of
the European war horses were trained in dressage. The schools that
exist today were originally created to produce army horses.
And in between (or maybe during) wars, the aristocracy (who were the
primary breeders and keepers of studbooks) hunted and raced. Sure
sounds like sport to me!
Mary
|
1646.43 | | BROKE::MELINDA | | Wed Jul 29 1992 12:05 | 26 |
| John,
>But, I don't see you assuming that Morgans are outstanding sport horses!
>Why? Simply because it's no more true for that breed than it is for any
>of the others mentioned here.
Right, its no more true to assume one particular example of a Morgan will
become outstanding over another particular example of one of the warmblood
breeds. (I had to reread what you said to make sure you weren't saying
that I dislike Morgans...)
I think I know why this topic is always an active one (God knows we dwelled on
it long enough off and on in the dressage notes). Many of us have had
what we consider a terrific horse who was not a warmblood. So we naturally
feel a little annoyed when people make blanket statements about how wonderful
warmbloods are. And John, I think your points are well taken about how
people back up these 'blanket statements' about warmbloods with further
blanket statements about their history, when its quite possible their
warmblood's dam wore army boots. :^)
Melinda
|
1646.44 | Bookshop pointers | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Jul 29 1992 14:34 | 3 |
| Re addresses for books shops:
See notes 374.8 for Knight Equestrian Books and 169.18 for Robin
Bledsoe's address.
|
1646.45 | Officers only need apply! ;-) | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Jul 29 1992 14:50 | 27 |
| Mary,
If you really believe that the class-oriented peoples of the
Renaissance and Baroque periods trained the common cavalry trooper and
his mount in anything more than the rudimentary skills of riding,
I've got some nice land in Florida near the Everglades for sale! ;-)
Even in the late 19th and 20th centuries, only the OFFICERS had any
extensive training in the finer points of horsemanship. You don't have
to take my word for it either! Just pick up ANY cavalry manual(even
Gordon Wright's modified version of the US Cavalry manual) and you'll
see that they taught basic skills to the common trooper. If I remember
correctly, Wright's manual says something like "diagonal aids are not
discussed in this book as their use belongs to ADVANCED equitation." I
have yet to meet a dressage rider who did not use diagonal aids.
You also mention the horsemanship schools that the armys of Europe
created. True, they still exist. But, they were basically only
available to officers and occassionally sargeants from remount facilities
until recently.
In the days when the military chose the equestrian teams, did you ever
hear of them asking a trooper to ride? They were always officers. Here
in the late 20th century US that sounds absurd but it's the way it was.
John
|
1646.46 | ex | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Jul 29 1992 15:16 | 39 |
| Melinda,
That's very close to the heart of the matter! What really ticks me off
is the illogical leaps people make based on such blanket statements
about warmbloods....e.g. "Only Warmbloods are good for (substitute
your favorite equine sport) because they've been bred for it for
centuries."
It ain't true. As you point out, the Warmblood's Mama wore combat boots
or pulled a cart/plow! They were utility horses until forward thinking
breeders(mostly Germans) saw that sport riding would be the only hope of
their horses' long term survival. Therefore, they concentrated their
breeding and testing programs on suitability for sport.
To verify that these breeds were developed AS SPORT horse breeds after
WWII, all you have to do is look at one of the book references I gave.
I refer to Holsteiner Stud book VOLUME 2 which was just published in
1990. If they're just getting around to volume 2 of their stud book,
how long do you think they've been keeping good records and testing?
The TB stud book must be up to about a GILLION by now as it was founded
200 years ago. The Morgan stud book was somewhere around Volume 20 the
last time I noticed. So the myth that warmbloods have been bred for
their current type, etc for hundreds of years just doesn't withstand
scrutiny.
Don't get me wrong. I have no grudge against warmbloods. In fact, I
think those working with other breeds could learn TONS about sport
horse breeding from looking at what folks have done for warmbloods.
The only thing that bothers me about warmblood breeding is that
the aren't trying to maintain separation between the various breeds.
Trakehners are approved as Holsteiner studs, etc. I think that blurring
of identity is why most people just say "It's a warmblood" rather than
"He's a Trakehner."
My gripe is that people make crude generalizations based on a lack of
knowledge and then extend their illogic even further.
John
|
1646.47 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Jul 30 1992 11:33 | 13 |
| John,
You can keep your land! I don't argue for a moment that only officers
got dressage training.
Also, on your point about them not keeping the breeds "pure," my
understanding is that they breed for type. So if a hanoverian is born
that is built like a trakehner, moves like a trakehner and acts like a
trakehner, its a duc...er, trakehner.
I suspect at this point that we're pretty much in agreement, overall.
Mary
|
1646.48 | "Warmblood" term is older than we thought! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Tue Aug 04 1992 19:53 | 40 |
| Off and on throughout this topic, we've speculated on the origin and
vintage of the term Warmblood. Most of us thought it was of fairly
recent vintage as we had been familiar with some of the breeds now
called Warmbloods long before we ever heard the term.
Well, apparently this term has been around for 40 years or more! In the
"International Horsemanship Dictionary" taht I talked about in note 10,
I found the German terms Vollblut (for the English Thoroughbred) and
warmblut referring to a type of horse that had been crossed with the
TB. Since the book was originally published in 1955 and hasn't been
changed, this suggests that the term "warmblood" was well established
in the equine world when the author was compiling the book in the
early 50's.
While they original word could easily have described Appendix
registered Quarter Horses, it is basically the testing programs which
distinguish warmbloods from crossbreds. Some of the testing programs
are pass/fail and others are graded...sound like school? It is! Would
you rather go to a Doctor who was near the head of the class in Med
School or the one who graduated last? It's the same with the horses
some are Premium or Elite and others just approved. Which one is likely
to sire the better foals?
That's what I think we can learn from Warmbloods about producing sport
horses in other breeds!
We could also learn something from racehorse breeders. They have known for
eons that you get a higher percentage of foals that win races if you breed
to a stallion who has sired winners(especially stakes winners) and they
keep all sorts of statistics on racing performance of a stallion's get.
Similar statistics could be kept for sport stallions. Number of get
competing at various levels in the driving, dressage, jumping, etc
divisions. COmpare that number to the number of winners or average
jumping faults per class/dressage scores/3-day penalty points or
whatever to develop some meaningful stats on how a stallion's get are
performing in various sports....
Just rambling....
|
1646.49 | Rambling thoughts | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Aug 05 1992 08:39 | 32 |
| That's really interesting that the term has been around for a while.
The idea of learning something from the race horse breeders makes sense
too. But there's a big difference in the fact that the stud book for
Thoroughbreds is closed. When I used to study this sort of thing I
remember coming across the idea frequently that crossbreds -- whether
graded or not -- can not be relied on to breed true. In fact,
frequently quite the opposite. One of the "breeding theories" I've
encountered is outcrossing. The general scheme is to take two lines
that are somewhat inbred -- and which therefore tend to breed true to
type -- and cross them. The result is frequently larger, stronger,
and healthier than either line itself. Some breeders call this
"hybrid vigor" although the term hybrid is not of course strictly true.
(Except in mules...) The US cavalry used this method a lot in breeding
horses, but they did not use the resulting individuals as breeding stock,
because their offspring did not reliably pass on the wonderful
characteristics of the crossbreds. I remember the quote from somewhere
on this subject that the genetic material in the crossbreds is "all over
the map". I would guess it's harder to predict the outcome of a
warmblood match than a thoroughbred match because of this. My
stallion, for instance, a Bold Ruler grandson, was double inbred
(5 X 4 as I remember) and threw foals that were just about carbon
copies of himself when bred to two mares with Bold Ruler lines. His
other two foals were outcrosses with an Argentine bred mare who had no
ancestors in common in the past 6 generations. And both of these foals
were huge, big sturdy individuals.
But of course, this is all fun stuff to think about and wonder about,
but the old saying is true "Breed the best to the best and hope for the
best"
-ellie
|
1646.50 | my favorite stat | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Wed Aug 05 1992 10:03 | 24 |
|
Maybe like most amatures I find I can get lost in those
breeding stats in about 1 minute.
The best listing Iv'e seen is from the U.S. Trotting Association
which publishes a list of stallion stats as percents, as opposed
to numbers.
So for a given stallion, the % of offsrping to win at 1:55
and then % to win at 2:00 is very different from the number
of foals to win at 1:55 or 2:00.
(The old standard is 2:15 but that is useless now days)
Somestimes the stats are 'distorted' alittle if a stallion bred
very few mares.
Now jumping a 3 ft fence is to broad a standard, and an Olympic
medal to narrow, but if one could determine the 'correct'
national title, this stat can give you a pretty good idea
about the 'odds' on a winning foal.
Bill
|
1646.51 | More ramblings | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Aug 05 1992 15:47 | 21 |
| Hey Bill, I glad you mentioned Standardbreds in this context. The
founders of the Standardbred Registry started performance testing over
100 years ago! They did EXACTLY the kind of thing the Warmblood breeders
have been doing since WWII(i.e. accepting for registration/breeding only
horses that meet certain criteria)
Bill probably knows this but for the rest...When the Standardbred Registry
was founded, they would accept ANY BLOODLINES as long as the individual
could trot a mile in 2:30. I think there were some other standards for
performance of offspring to register older horses but I'm not sure...But
that's how the breed got it's name. They were horses that were bred to a
standard or Standardbred.
After a while, they closed the stud book over the years a particular
type developed. What ellie said about cross-breds not breeding true is
exactly on the mark. However, the Standardbreds were predominantly
Thoroughbred stock because few other types of horse could meet the
standards. So, they breed moderately true to type and it was easier to
establish a distinctive breed.
John
|
1646.52 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu Aug 06 1992 08:55 | 19 |
| The standardbreds today are the result of a direct male line legacy
from a purely thoroughbred horse who never raced on the trot and never
had a son that did. His name was Messenger, a member of the English
Stud Book and the great grandsire of Hambletonian (which is now the
name of the race that is the harness equivalent to the Kentucky Derby).
Hambletonian had 4 sons, from which all present day trotters and pacers
decend. The origional standard for speed, was a base of 2:30 for a
mile and was adopted by the National Association of Trotting Horse
Breeders in 1879. In 1882, John H. Wallaces American Trotting Register
which preceeded the U.S. Trotting Association Sires and Dams Book
assigned numbers to stallions to provide positive identification.
Hambletonian was assigned number 10, his sire, Abdallah was number
1. Messenger was foaled in 1780, and stood stud in 1785 for a fee
of $15!!
When registering a standardbred in modern times, a blood test is
required both on the stallion, the mare when in foal, and the foal
before it is eligable to race. Thus proving that the offspring is
in fact that of its parents.
|
1646.54 | Is warmblood a negative term? | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Ist das unbedingt notwendig? | Tue Aug 11 1992 20:45 | 16 |
| Do you folks consider "warmblood" to be a derrogatory term? I noticed
during the Olympic coverage that Jay Randolph generally referred to a
horse as a "warmblood" when he said something negative. For example,
during the XC phase of 3-day he questioned the ability of the
"warmbloods" to get around the course w/ speed or to withstand the
heat. During the jumping, he said things like "This horse is a
typical coarse warmblood."
When he wanted to say something nice about a horse, it suddenly became
a Trakehner or Hannoveraner(I prefer the German spelling over
Hanoverian) or a Belgian bred or those "marvelous French-breds"
Is it common to use the term to imply something negative or is that
just his problem?
John
|
1646.55 | Wanna be a warmblood? Get famous! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Ist das unbedingt notwendig? | Tue Aug 11 1992 20:58 | 21 |
| While I'm here, did anybody notice that some horses "magically" became
warmbloods or part warmblood after they became "famous?" I refer
specifically to Canadian Beth Underhill's Monopoly and, his royal
highjumpingness, Milton.
When Beth Underhill first started showing Monopoly, he was generally
referred to as a New Zealand Thoroughbred. Later, he became a New
Zealand-bred and now he's referred to as a New Zealand-bred warmblood.
Don't ask me which breed! I don't think they've decided yet! ;-)
According to the book I read about Milton, somebody "recognized" that
his sire was actually a warmblood(I forget which breed) after Milton
became famous. Before that time, the sire was considered a common
garden variety jumper of non-descript breeding. In fact, Milton's
dam(7/8 Thoroughbred) was later sold to a continental warmblood
breeder. I'll look up the details if anybody cares.
Perhaps, these are just examples of the "duck theory" that Mary mentioned
earlier in this series!
John
|
1646.56 | Yuppy Horses. | A1VAX::GUNN | I couldn't possibly comment | Wed Aug 12 1992 12:02 | 9 |
| Re .54
I think the term "Warmblood" for horses has the same negative
implications as "BMW" has for cars. It's not the horses themselves, it
was the people who bought them. If you were terrible concerned with
your equestrian self-image, particularly in dressage circles, you just
had to be riding a "Warmblood". Sensing a buck to be made some folk
started importing German horses that had been given a quick school and
sold them to those whose credit rating exceeded their horse sense.
|
1646.57 | The Olympics coverage - What a joke!! | WAFER::CORMIER | | Wed Aug 12 1992 12:15 | 32 |
|
re: .54 (sort of)
Well, I for one, was thoroughly disgusted with the hype and bullsh*t that
was covered on NBC for the Olympics. I started watching in the beginning,
but after hearing sob story after sob story about the atheletes and their
families and that fact that they showed more shots of Summer Saunders
modeling bathing suits than of the swimming races themselves, I refused
to watch anymore. Oh, and don't get me started on the "Dream Team".
There was no competition there whatsoever. I got the feeling the only
reason those guys played was to make more money (ie; MacDonalds commercials,
etc., etc.)
Most of all, the commentators were ridiculous. I did sneak a peak at the
equestrian stuff (did they even show the dressage??). I don't understand
how the commentator could slam "Warmbloods", especially since the winning
team all rode Dutch Warmbloods (my assumption). As a fatter o' mact, I
think that a large majority of horses out there were some kind of warmblood.
Whew -> flame off -> I feel much better now.
I'm sure most of you caught more of the equestrian event than I did. How
many breeds participated that weren't warmblood?? I think the bronze ind.
medalist went to an American on a TB. Also, I noticed that many of the
horses that did quite well were mares.
/Simone
|
1646.58 | WB have their uses and place in the great scheme of things | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Wed Aug 12 1992 13:32 | 17 |
| As far as I know - Monopoly is as much a warmblood as my Anglo-Arab.
Having stood about 3 feet away for a VET check it does not show the obvious
"traits" (perceived or whatever) of a WB, but stranger things have been
foaled.
Traditionally, the french ride Anglos on their show jumping team (or a
variation there of). I have a hard time thinking them of Anglo's has
they are quite large.
As for WB in eventing - they are few and far between at the top levels.
I've come across a few part WBs with a considerable amount of other
stuff. While no one doubts their athleteism (sp.), at the top they
just don't have the speed. Even at Preliminary events - in the
steeplechase section you are expected to go 600-650 metres/min. about
(22 mph)
Linda
|
1646.59 | Canadian Thoroughbred | CSOA1::HUNT_L | | Mon Aug 17 1992 19:00 | 4 |
| After reading all of these discussions about warmbloods, I would like
to ask an additional question. Is a Canadian Thoroughbred a warmblood.
Actually what is a Canadian Thoroughbred? I supposedly own one and I
don't really understand the definition of the breed. z
|
1646.60 | Probably a Thoroughbred | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Ist das unbedingt notwendig? | Mon Aug 17 1992 19:55 | 23 |
| I don't think so. From your description, it sounds like your horse is a
Thoroughbred that happened to be bred/foaled in Canada. The
Thoroughbred was originally developed in England and the horses were
registered in "The General Stud Book". In the 200 years since the
foundation of that registry, the Thoroughbred has spread throughout the
world. Most countries which breed Thoroughbreds have one or more
societies which maintain pedigrees on Thoroughbreds bred/foaled there.
For the most part, these societies/associations honor each others
records so that they can breed/compete in other countries as
Thoroughbreds.
Over the years, the Thoroughbreds in each country developed different
characteristics according to what local breeders valued. With the
innovation of air travel, those international differences have been
reduced to some extent because Irish Thoroughbred mares can be sent to
American Thoroughbred stallions while American Thoroughbred mares are
sent to England, etc. In fact, I recently read that some American
Thoroughbred stallions were standing a "second" season to serve mares
from Australia and New Zealand which have their Spring reversed from
ours because they're in the Southern Hemisphere
BTW, the most famous Canadian Thoroughbred of all time is Northern
Dancer.
|
1646.61 | totally off the subject | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Mon Aug 17 1992 20:58 | 4 |
|
I foaled a mare who was a Northern Dancer daughter. She was HUGE
and the sweetest thing on four hoves.
|
1646.62 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Aug 18 1992 11:21 | 8 |
| The Canadian thoroughbreds I've seen are excellent -- they generally
have more substance and are a little quieter than their southern
siblings. (Unless you go far enough south -- Brazilian thoroughbreds
also have quieter temperaments and more substance.)
Are they warmbloods? No. Thoroughbreds are classified as hotbloods.
Mary
|
1646.63 | Canadian Warmblood - 57 variations there of | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Tue Aug 25 1992 13:32 | 16 |
| Canadian TB are as -3 said. They are registered with the Canadian
Jockey Club.
There is a discussion at the moment what consitutes a Canadian
Warmblood. As yet, nothing is written in stone. It is like a Canadian
Hunter (that is disappearing and the Canadian Warmblood is to take its
place or at least that is the current thinking.) At the moment it is
very political and it is safe to say if your horse is any sort/part
warmblood and passes some criteria (of which there is much discussion)
it COULD be a Canadian warmblood. The bottom line is no one knows. I
have been involved in some evaluations (as an observer) I haven't
figured anything out yet either - soup to nuts has passed. They are
also thinking of bringing in the 100 day test (or variation there of)
for stallions who are "passed" through the selection.
Linda
|
1646.64 | Canadian Sport Horse | CGOOA::LMILLER | hasten slowly | Wed Aug 26 1992 12:50 | 6 |
| Instead of Canadian Warmblood read Canadian Sport horse. Oops!
The one thing we are fighting is minimum height restrictions - which
I hope are out. It used to be 16 hh minimum - but this ruled out some
Anglo Arabs, Running Quarter horses etc., who were performing outside of
their "world" and winning top open championships. So we'll see.
|
1646.65 | Quack! QUACK! Yet another "duck" | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Ist das unbedingt notwendig? | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:20 | 26 |
| Maybe we ought to rename this topic to be "What is NOT a Warmblood?"
-;)
Last week, I got some propaganda ...er I mean... promotional material
from a group called Morgan International Sport Horse Record. It's
headed up by the owner of one of the Morgan stallions that I mentioned
in Note 10.634 that had gone to the 1991 100 day stallion testing for
Warmbloods.
The Morgan International Sport Horse Record is encouraging people to
send their Morgan stallions AND NOW MARES to the warmblood keurings.
There promotional material says that 6 Morgan mares were sent to
the 1992 American Hanoverian Society Inspection Keuring as guests of
the society. The Morgan mares were inspected by the same jury of
licensed sport horse inspectors from Germany that inspected the
Hanoverians. All the Morgan mares received scores which would have put
them in the Hanoverian Mare Book. In fact, 3 of them received Premium
ratings! That's pretty good when you consider that these are smallish
mares(14.2 H to 15.2 H) when compared to those the Germans are used to
looking at!
I guess this is another example of Mary's "duck test" in an earlier reply.
Anyway, I think it's a good idea that those interested in breeding
sport horses send their stock to organized evaluations such as these.
|
1646.66 | Cleveland Bays are warmbloods! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Ist das unbedingt notwendig? | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:01 | 46 |
| I REALLY think that we need a topic with a title something like "If
it's on TV, it's probably wrong!" especially when it comes to
Warmbloods.
On a recent horse magazine format show, they did a segment on Cleveland
Bays in England. While they were showing some really handsome stallions
being shown in a conformation class, the host did a "voice-over" saying
that the Cleveland Bay was based on Thoroughbred and Oldenburg stock
blah, blah blah....
Well, that didn't sound right to me. One of our former noters (Diana
Hewson) taught me a bit about Cleveland Bays when we worked together.
So, I dug up a book ("Cleveland Bay Horses" by Anthony Dent) and read
about about the history of the Cleveland Bay breed.
There was NO Thoroughbred or Oldenburg stock in the basic makeup of the
breed. In fact, the breed has had a CLOSED stud book for over 100
years! The Cleveland Bay ancestors were mostly a breed called the
Chapman Horses bred in Yorkshire since medieval times(i.e. at least
since the 1200's and probably earlier!). The Chapman Horses were cold
blooded pack horses(remember that chapman means peddler..in those days,
I think it meant merchant or dealer too); Bay with black legs ; strong
and durable but also active and quick. Around 1600, Andalusian and Barb
stallions were used creating a warmblood breed. The type was set and was
breeding true before the TB type had been established. The Chapman
Horses became known as Cleveland Bays when a society was formed and
a stud book established in 1884.
In the days of the English mail coach, the Chapman Horses were found to
be a bit too slow for coaching service on the roads. The Chapman Horses
were crossed with TB's to produce the Yorkshire Coach Horse which was
typically at least 3/4's Chapman.
With Oldenburgs, it was in fact the other way round according to this
book. Mr Dent sites evidence that MANY Chapman Horses/Cleveland Bays
as well as Yorkshire Coach Horses were exported to Germany especially
to the Oldenburg region where they were valued as improvers of the
local stock.
After WW I when the Cleveland Bay population was depeleted from service
in the war, the stud book was re-opened to admit Cleveland Bays of
proveable pedigree which had not been registered earlier. At that time,
they also admitted SOME Yorkshire Coach Horses with predominantly
Cleveland Bay pedigrees which showed Cleveland Bay type.
John
|
1646.67 | Good definition of Warmblood | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Ist das unbedingt notwendig? | Wed Sep 09 1992 17:42 | 51 |
| In the book on Cleveland Bays that I mentioned in Note 1646.66, the
author, Anthony Dent, gives an excellent definition of the term warmblood.
That definition is quoted and expanded in the foreword by Alexander
McKay-Smith. I'll quote that whole section of the foreword. Explanatory
comments enclosed in [] are mine.
My apologies for any typographical errors. Please remember that these are the
comments of Mr Alexander MacKay-Smith not John's! (In other words, direct all
flames in his direction!) Alexander MacKay-Smith should not be confused with
his son Dr Matthew MacKay-Smith(who is medical editor of EQUUS). Alexander
MacKay-Smith is a retired editor of "The Chronicle of The Horse", a breed
historian and, I believe, an artist/art historian.
"He[referring to Mr Dent] begins: 'Cleveland Bays belong to a group of breeds
known in many European countries as warm-blooded: by which is meant having
their origins in a cross of hot-blooded Oriental or Mediterranean stocks(Arab,
Barb, Turk, Andalusian, Thoroughbred) on the cold-blooded Northern European
horse, such cross, however, being(frequently) of long standing.' Present day
European warm-bloods illustrated by the German strains(Trakehner,
Hannoveraner, Holsteiner, etc); of France (Selle Francais); of
Poland(Wielkopoliska); of Hungary(Kisber, Mezlohegyes, Gidran); and of
Russia(Budjonny, Don, Kirghiz). European warm-bloods were cultivated during
the 19th-century cheifly for military purposes, as officers' chargers, as
troopers mounts and as artillery horses. Since the armies of their respective
countries have become mechanized, however, the European warm-blood breeders
have accordingly revised their goals and are now producing horses, not for
war, but for sport. To achieve these ends, they have not hesitated to bring
in outside blood; close up crosses of Thoroughbred and Arab sires appear in
the majority of present-day warm-blood pedigrees. So widespread has the use
of Thoroughbred outcrosses become that a group of West German breeders with
the backing of that country's largest periodical(Reiter Revue) proposes to
join all their warm-blood strains under a single Stud Book(as the French have
already done) and under a title such as "German Saddle Horse". This practise
of using outside blood has unquestionably produced many excellent individuals.
At the same time, however, it has produced a decidedly mixed genetic
background. A breeder who buys a stallion wants him to be prepotent - to
reproduce himself as to type, temperament, soundness and performance.
Stallions of the present European warm-blood breeds cannot be relied upon to
reproduce themselves solely on the basis of registration in their respective
Stud Books - because of mixed ancestry their prepotence is not a breed
characteristic, but can only be established for individual stallions through
several crops of observable foals.
British breeders, however, have a far different point of view. Because they
consider prepotence essential to any breed of livestock, for the past
hundred years and more they have maintained Stud Books closed to outside
strains. The first volume of the Cleveland Bay Stud Book was published in
1883, and no outside blood has been admitted since. Consequently, if a
Cleveland Bay stud colt meets the buyer's requirements as to conformation and
way of moving, the fact that it is registered in the Stud Book will virtually
assure its prepotence - ita ability to reproduce itself in its foals."
|
1646.68 | Some Breed Must Do This Already? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Thu Sep 10 1992 08:34 | 9 |
| Reminds me of something I've wondered about for a while -- why not use
both methods? i.e. close the stud book, but also require testing or
some other sort of certification for registration. Then the
not-so-good representatives of the breed would be weeded out, but the
genetic pool would be concentrated by further breeding of approved
stock, instead of diluted by admitting outside stock. Are there any
breeds that do this?
-ellie
|
1646.69 | | XLIB::PAANANEN | Another Warp Speed Weekend | Wed Dec 09 1992 13:13 | 46 |
|
RE: Previous discussion of color in Warmbloods
Article: 13174
Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
Path: engage.pko.dec.com!nntpd.lkg.dec.com!news.crl.dec.com!deccrl!caen!uunet!scorn!helen
From: [email protected] (Helen Dilworth)
Subject: Re: Dutch Warmblood Pintos
Organization: The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 04:07:25 GMT
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
References: <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected] (News admin)
Lines: 30
In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (Sonya Paetzel) writes:
>
>I was skimming thru a magazine today (a breeding issue) and
>came across a breed of horse I have never seen before...
> a Dutch Warmblood Tobiano Pinto. He's absolutely gorgeous!
>His name is DOMINO and he is black with white pinto markings.
>I was just wondering if anyone knows about these Dutch
>Warmblood/Pinto crosses. Are they very common?
I don't know how common they are, but several of the warmblood breeds
have considerably more "color" in their gene pools than one might expect
in "English style" breeds. On a visit to Flyinge, the "national"
Swedish Warmblood stud, I was suprised to see that one of the mares
was a pinto and another was a palomino! One of my Swedish foals, out of
solid parents, has a white spot on his belly that is big enough that
he could technically qualify as a pinto. Also, stockings that reach way
above the knee/hock are not uncommon.
Both Domino and another pinto, Art Deco, are full bred Dutch
Warmbloods, NOT Warmblood/Pinto crosses. Domino and Art Deco are both
by the same stallion, Samber. I don't know anything about Samber's
coloring, but it sure makes you think he might be a pinto, doesn't it?
Does anyone else know more about this?
Helen Dilworth
Trilogy Farm
Swedish Warmbloods
|
1646.70 | Nothing new in coat color! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Speak softly;Carry a big CARROT! | Wed Dec 09 1992 13:40 | 18 |
| I'm not an expert on the genetics of color in spotted horses but I do
know a couple things: 1) genes for pinto type coat patterns are recessive
to solid coat color genes 2) piebald(black & white) and skewbald(other
colors with white spots) coats originated in Europe NOT in the US and
therefore the recessive genes MUST appear in the gene pools of various
European breeds. For example, "The Pie" in 'National Velvet' is short for
"The Piebald" and there are MANY Renaissance era paintings of court
dressage horses which are piebald or skewbald. So the coat type has
obviously been known in England/Europe for a very long time.
So, it's entirely possible that you could breed a solid colored
stallion to a solid colored mare and get a piebald or skewbald foal IF
both parents carried the recessive genes.
FWIW, despite the fact that the Appaloosa breed was developed by the
Nez Pierce tribe here in the great NW, the Appy type coat patterns are
also found in European and even Chinese breeds which are much older
than the Appy breed.
|
1646.71 | Another warmblood book & a source | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Speak softly;Carry a BIG carrot! | Fri Dec 11 1992 17:10 | 18 |
| We got a "new" catalog from a dressage specialty tack shop in CA.
While thumbing through it, I noticed a couple books on warmbloods. One
of them is an addition to the earlier list:
The Warmblood Guide Book by Charlene Strickland. $35
"The most complete look at the European warmblood yet. Three parts
discuss the historical background of the breeds, details of European
breeding controls and selection and enjoyment of individual horse(how to
find and buy)."
They also carry some of the books from the earlier list including:
The International Warmblood Horse" $39.95
The Trakehner $23.95
The Hanoverian $29.95
They have a toll-free number so if you want to see their catalog, they
are:
Dressage Extensions
(800)541-3708
|
1646.72 | Flashy mounts for European courtiers! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Speak softly;Carry a BIG carrot! | Mon Dec 14 1992 13:33 | 31 |
| After I entered .70 on spotted horses appearing in Europe long before
the American breeds were developed, I looked through some books featuring
old paintings as a sanity check. Here's what I found:
A 1727 painting of Lipizzaner mares. Although the modern Lipizzaner are
usually born brown and later turn gary/white, the 1727 painting shows a
variety of colors; the standard browns, bays, grays and chestnuts as well
as less common coats like:
1. A palomino
2. A piebald
3. A grulla
A book entitled "The Classical Riding School" which is collection of
paintings from the mid-1700's showing advanced dressage movements
including piaffe, passage and "airs above the ground". The paintings
were done by Baron d'Eisenberg(a court riding master for the Hapsburgs)
for the 10th English Earl of Pembroke. They are still displayed in the
Earl's family home, Wilton House. These paintings include horses with
the following unusual coat colors:
1. piebald
2. skewbald
3. Appy "leopard" type spots on a white horse
4. Appy "blanket" type coat pattern.
In those 250+ year-old paintings, one can see the genetic basis for all the
flashy colors(palomino, dun, buckskin, pinto/paint, Appy, etc) which are
popular in the US. What makes you think European courtiers(who were
OBSESSED with looking good and making impressions) liked flashy mounts any
less than modern day Americans?
John
|
1646.73 | Newfoundland Warmblood | MR4SRV::MSHAMEL | Marsha Shamel | Mon May 10 1993 09:56 | 28 |
| You have to have a sense of humor about this horse thing...
Last summer I bought a three year old pinto. His breeding was 'warmblood/quarterhorse'
His head is rather large, as is he (16-2). His coloring is chestnut, two white rear
socks, one front white stocking, one white front leg. A white stripe goes from the
white leg over the withers to the other leg. He has a black mane and tail with a
white streak thru his mane where the white strip goes over the withers. A very
sriking boy! His name is California Dreamin' (CD for short, and sometimes Moose)
Now to the story...
We were at Weston this weekend. Took him over Saturday during the horse show to
get him used to the noise and other horses. Several people stopped to comment on him
with the most common question being "what kind of horse is he?"
On Sunday, we went over to compete in the dressage competition. (introductory test 1)
and the questions started all over. When I said 'warmblood/quarterhorse', everyone
wanted to know 'what kind of warmblood'? That got out of hand.
So my buddies and I got together and suggested several types of warmbloods - Persian,
Russian, Canadian, Yugoslavian, etc (just cause every country seems to be coming up
with there own type of warmblood). But the winner:
Newfoundland Warmblood
The funny thing is - some people bought it!
By the way, we won the blue ribbon in our competition!
|
1646.74 | What type?....similar story | NOBOZO::GOODNOW | | Mon May 10 1993 18:49 | 14 |
|
I have a friend with a Quarter Horse that she shows in Dressage.
She was at a show once and had just had a particularly nice test. A
woman who had been watching came up to her and raved about how nice
the horse was. "What a gorgeous mare! What type of warmblood is
she? Swedish?"
To which my friend replied, "Nope. Texas."
(It was pretty funny at the time, anyways...)
Amy
|
1646.75 | Yet another :-) | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | When in doubt, cop out! | Mon May 10 1993 20:44 | 8 |
| I saw a similar incident at a show once about 8 years ago. The guy parked
next to us had a Canadaian horse. I forget what the breed is called but
it's one that was developed in Canada.
A woman rode up on her horse and asked the guy what the horse's
breeding was. He told her. She said, "Oh! I meant who are his sire and
dam! I thought he was Westphalian. My horse is Westphalian and I thought
I was finally getting to the point where I could recognize the breed."
|
1646.76 | | POWDML::MANDILE | I found my spurs | Tue May 11 1993 10:22 | 6 |
| I get this all the time. I have been asked why I ride a
warmblood/dressage horse in western classes, why I ride a
thoroughbred in Gymkhana, why I ride a hunter in trail.....etc. etc.
Answering that he is a Reg. QH goes right over their heads....
|
1646.77 | To much attention... | MR4SRV::MSHAMEL | Marsha Shamel | Tue May 11 1993 15:27 | 8 |
| Maybe people should quit trying to pigeon-hole breeds to a particular type of
work and just enjoy what the horse is doing.....
My horse is young and has the potential(?) for dressage, eventing, and even
driving! What he ends up doing will be what I enjoy...not what he supposedly
was bred for.
I love having an all-purpose horse - warmblood or quarterhorse or whatever!
|
1646.78 | | LEVADE::DAVIDSON | | Tue May 11 1993 16:33 | 15 |
|
I have an American TB off the track... at various times people have asked
if he is a
- Trakener (sp?)
- Arabian
- Lippizan (Ask Amy G., she was riding his 'airs above the ground' at
the time...)
and most recently, if he was a Pinto!
(He's a very light flea-bitten grey with a steel grey 'continent'?
on his left haunches.)
I agree with .-1... appreciate the athelete! (Though knowing the breeds
one prefers helps when its time to look for ones next partner.)
-Caroline
|
1646.79 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Wed May 12 1993 10:56 | 9 |
| I have a case of this, too! A Standardbred mare (off the track). I have
had to argue with people at times to convince them she is not a
Thoroughbred....she's small, only 15 hh, and lightly built, everyone
comments on my 'small but cute TB'. One woman even told me "she can't
be a Standardbred, because she canters" and when I told her I had
retrained her and that she rarely if ever paces anymore, her comment
was "well, maybe she USED to be a Standardbred then"....liked I'd
changed her breeding by making her a riding horse! :-)
|
1646.80 | American cheeze� | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Wed May 12 1993 13:28 | 8 |
| -.2 And American TB? Is this used as a breed description now? I know
some call different types of TB's English. Is there a difference? Or
is it only the pedigree?
Virginia (Who's 21 year old TB track mare has never been mistaken for
anything than what she is, an old craby broodmare.)
|
1646.81 | Depends on Which Stud Book... | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Wed May 12 1993 13:33 | 8 |
| I've heard a lot of people use the term American Thoroughbred. I guess
that, technically, if your TB is registered through the American Jockey
Club, it's an American Thoroughbred. But it also tends to mean the
compact, more muscley, sprinter-type of Thoroughbred bred in the US,
rather than the more rangey type bred, say, in Ireland or the UK. At
least that;s how I've heard people in those places use it...
-ellie
|
1646.82 | Oh. | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Wed May 12 1993 16:35 | 1 |
|
|
1646.83 | | LEVADE::DAVIDSON | | Fri May 14 1993 10:10 | 26 |
| > <<< Note 1646.81 by INGOT::ROBERTS >>>
> -< Depends on Which Stud Book... >-
>
> I've heard a lot of people use the term American Thoroughbred. I guess
> that, technically, if your TB is registered through the American Jockey
> Club, it's an American Thoroughbred. But it also tends to mean the
> compact, more muscley, sprinter-type of Thoroughbred bred in the US,
> rather than the more rangey type bred, say, in Ireland or the UK. At
> least that;s how I've heard people in those places use it...
>
> -ellie
Sprinter? Compact and muscley?? Not my guy! ;-) Definitely long backed.
I've encountered many a TB which do not fit that description (compact and
muscley) and many which do. One of the reasons for specifying American TB
is that I've met a few folks who specify *where* a particular TB was bred:
Canada, England, Ireland, etc. I guess part of the surprise my TB receives
is that he's a 'local' product.
-Caroline
P.S. Personally, I'd expect an Irish TB to have more substance than an
American TB... not sure why, but I just do...
|
1646.84 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Fri May 14 1993 11:00 | 6 |
| Caroline, that's my understanding to...that Irish, Canadian and South
American thoroughbreds have more substance and also quieter
temperaments. American thoroughbreds (at least in the past) tended to
be lighter built and hotter.
mary
|
1646.85 | American = HOT | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Fri May 14 1993 11:12 | 4 |
| The picture that I carry in my head is that American TB's are HOT. They are
realtively fine-boned and can be a real handful. I picture Canadian TB's
to have a bit more substance, and be less of a handful to ride. English
and Irish TB's I tend to picture as 'coarser' versions of the canadian-bred.
|
1646.86 | not so HOT... how 'bout exuberent??! | LEVADE::DAVIDSON | | Fri May 14 1993 11:30 | 18 |
|
re: American TB = HOT
(Sorry, ;-) I can't resist!!)
I'll agree that my TB started out HOT... Now without sweetfeed (it
went *straight to his head*), he's silly, exuberent, bouncy, a show off,
and (surprise, surprise!) laid back.
He isn't a beginners horse by any stretch of the imagination, and one
must have a sence of humor to appreciate his antics. But, he's no longer
*HOT* (thank goodness).
Obviously, breeding, raising, and previous life-experiences affect a
horses personality... I'm sure we've all encountered the exception to every
generality. Funny, but the more TBs I encounter, the more I find that are
laid-back, silly horses...
-Caroline
|
1646.87 | Mine's not so 'hot', either.. | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Fri May 14 1993 12:15 | 12 |
| I agree with Caroline, my TB is anything BUT hot. True, he has few
'mental deficiencies' (doesn't crosstie, hates trailers and stall
confinement), but they can be dealt with. He's fine for anyone except
a rank beginner, one of the most laid back, easy to ride horses I've
come across, will jump whatever he's pointed at, never rush or stop,
real nice, quiet kinda guy. My Stdbrd mare on the other hand, is
a real little witch under strangers, Im about the only one whose ever
been on her and enjoyed myself, and from what I've heard, Stdbrds have
a reputation as being 'quiet". :-) My opinion is that temperment is
far more a matter of the individual horse and his/her past experiences
than the breed. Just my two cents.
|
1646.88 | Not Hot in California. | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Fri May 14 1993 12:37 | 17 |
| ok ok ok OK.
My mare is 21 years old and raced untill she was 5, was bred untill she
was about 17, then was a backyard pet for 1 year, then was bought by a
cowboy who bowed her on his first outing and was going to send her to
the meat man. We took her for free and got some background info on
her.(That's how I know all of this) If anything she is a California,
American TB. She was born, trained and bred in Hemet California. She
is not HOT either. I wouldn't trust too many people to ride her (It
just aint her thing) but my son will run around her, under her, pull
her tail, drive his matchbox cars over her hooves and pull at her
muzzle. She just takes it.
On the other hand, we have a 5 year old QH that jumps when the
automatic waterer comes on. Go figure!
Virginia
|
1646.89 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Fri May 14 1993 13:01 | 9 |
| Age and experience make a big difference! However, the last few notes
are why I qualified my comment that American thoroughbreds with "in the
past." They are actually my favorite breed to work with, partly because,
handled quietly and with sensitivity, my experience is they will give
you everything they've got to give. (And partly because I grew up
riding thoroughbreds, including re-schooling young horses off the
track.)
mary
|
1646.90 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Fri May 14 1993 13:37 | 6 |
| perhaps I should have qualified my earlier comments as generalizations,
and not necessarily my convictions. I would not be surprised if they are the
stereotypes held by the 'uneducated'.
I myself am the owner of a quarterhorse that tends to break stereotypes, right
Caroline??
|
1646.91 | American Thoroughbreds, continued | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Fri May 14 1993 13:38 | 21 |
| IN describing the American thoroughbred type, I didn't mean to imply
that they were particularly sturdy. But in racing circles, the sort of
horse that is close coupled, with very muscley quarters, often a
somewhat short neck is sometimes referred to as the "American type".
Irish Thoroughbreds, for instance, are quite different from this --
generally with longer backs, longer necks, etc. For those of you into
"dosage" analysis, these sprinter types of thoroughbreds often have
dosages over 5, and even up into the 20's. My stallion is of this
type, and has a dosage index of 7 -- definitely a sprinter type. But,
on the other hand he's not what I'd call light or fine either, having
9-inch bone. But it's the body type that I was referring to. It's
particularly frequent in the Bold Ruler line, which was prevalent in
many of the top race horses around Secretariat's (Bold Ruler, out of
Somethingroyal) era. My stallion (a gelding now) is by a Bold Ruler
son, and he himself looks like a carbon copy of Bold Ruler. This is a
nice, balanced conformation for a dressage horse or hunter, but not
the optimum for long-distance races, so they say.
-ellie
|
1646.92 | More thoughts | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | When in doubt, cop out! | Fri May 14 1993 16:05 | 26 |
| Ellie's absolutely right is her description of the American vs Irish
Thoroughbreds and in her characterization of a sprinter vs a stayer.
In fact, one the "strikes" against Secretariat being a Triple Crown
winner was the fact that he WAS sired by Bold Ruler who was himself
more of a sprinter type. Secretariat had the bulky compact build of
a sprinter too so folks questioned his ability to go a distance.
I remember reading an article somewhere that reported a study of the
muscle tissue differences between sprinters and stayers. The really
have different muscle fiber types AND the fibers behave differently!
The inheritance of the muscle fiber type is genetic. The sprinter
muscle type has cells of shorter broader shape and fires quickly. The
stayer muscle type has cells of a long lean shape and fires slowly.
This explains some of the difference in appearance between American
Thoroughbreds which are bred emphasizing SPEED at fairly short
distances and the English/Irish Thoroughbreds which are bred to run
longer than their American cousins.
The sprinter muscle type also seems a logical explanation of the
original, bulky, compact shape of the ultimate sprinter, the American
Quarter Horse.
BTW, Secretariat had inherited BOTH muscle fiber types! His
dam.Somethingroyal, was by the ultimate stayer and producer of stayers,
Princequillo.
|
1646.93 | More on the "sport" breeding debate | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Tue Aug 09 1994 15:41 | 50 |
| Here's another one I've been meaning to cross post for months! Not
intended to rekindle the Warmblood debate but it does indicate that I
was not talking through my hat when I said that Holsteiners, Oldenburgs
etc had only become "sport" horses since WW II...
From: [email protected] (Kyle Karnosh)
Date: Tue, 15 Mar 1994 21:37:44 GMT
In rec.equestrian, [email protected] (Denise R Kim-Kusner) writes:
> To be a calvary horse I would think the animal would have to be a
> superb athlete.So I disagree with Germans breeding for sport
> horses only after WWII.Paraphrasing from Edward's "Ultimate Horse
> Book"( which is a grt book used in conformation and breeds class
> at U.Mass.) In 1732,Wilhelm I of Prussia founded the Trakehner stud.
> It quickly established a reputation for elegant coach horses...within
> 50 years,the emphsis shifted to producing army chargers and remounts.
> of quality unsurpassed in Europe. By 1913 most Trakehner stallions
> were throughbred.Actually,Wilhelm found the Royal Trakehner Stud
> Administration....The Order of Teutonic Knights established the
> Trakehnen studs.I think Dent might have gotten some of his
> dates wrong? drk
I think the confusion here comes from lumping the Trakehner together with
the other German warmbloods. My understanding ( I'm sure someone will
correct me if I'm wrong:-)) is that while the Trakehner Stud was mainly
supplying Calvary horses, most of the other Germany warmblood breeds were
producing more of a coach horse, one that could do farm work during the
week, pull the coach and be a pleasure horse at local shows during the
weekend. Part of the stallion testing used to be measuring the horse's
feed effeciency, which is important for a work horse. After WWII, farming
became highly mechanized and there was no longer a market for work
horses. At this point the breeders changed their breeding goal to produce
what we now call a sporthorse. If you look at photos of the warmblood
stallions from that period, you can see that the type was changed quite
drastically in a relatively short period of time. The Trakehner, to my
knowledge, was never bred as a work horse, but always as a calvary or
riding horse, which gave the breed a significant advantage when the
horse market changed. Unfortunately, the majority of the breed was lost
in WWII ( but that's another story).
My 2 cents:-)
Kyle Karnosh
Con Brio Farms
Quality Warmblood Sporthorses
Gilroy, CA
|