1 / 22

Common Breeds of Horses

Common Breeds of Horses. What exactly is a breed?. Group of horses with a common ancestry that breed true to produce common characteristics recognized breeds have an association with a studbook and breeding records color breed: registry may just require color or conformation standards

aimon
Télécharger la présentation

Common Breeds of Horses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Common Breeds of Horses

  2. What exactly is a breed? • Group of horses with a common ancestry that breed true to produce common characteristics • recognized breeds have an association with a studbook and breeding records • color breed: registry may just require color or conformation standards • Palominos, appaloosas, paints, buckskins

  3. Classification/horse type • Light horse: 12-17.2 hands, 900-1400lbs • Draft horse: 14.2-17.2 hands, 1400+lbs • Pony: 14.2 or less hands, 500-900 lbs • light horses tend to have three natural gaits • subclass of light horses = gaited horses

  4. Quarter Horse • Virginia • Run ¼ mile races • Since have become multi-purpose • Maintain conformation for working cattle • Large semitendinosus, steep croup, wide chest • AQHA • Appendix = TB x QH (both registered)

  5. Thoroughbred • England, 3 foundation sires • Selected for running, also used for hunter/jumper, dressage, 3-day events • Long smooth muscles, short cannon, long forearm, sloping shoulders • Jockey club

  6. Arabian • Oldest breed • Selected for endurance • Large nostrils, curved neck, dished face, smaller slight stature • Anglo-Arab = TB x Arab

  7. Standardbred • U.S. • Trotters and pacers, harness racing • Run mile in standard time –2:30, now 1:50 • Ancestry traces to Hambletonian 10 • Longer body, more muscled vs. TB, solid legs and strong shoulders, calm disposition

  8. American Saddlebred • Kentucky • Short back, flat croup, long arched neck, long pasterns • Riding, driving, hunting, jumping, parades • 3 gaited = walk, trot, canter (clipped mane) • 5 gaited = add slow gait and rack (full mane)

  9. Tennessee Walking Horse • Tennessee • Plantation work • Easy gliding gait • Ability to do running walk

  10. Tennessee Walker: thick neck, heavier boned, shorter back, longer underline vs. topline, hind legs under body Saddlebred: tall, narrow boned, long back, delicate looking, fine chiseled head and neck

  11. Trakehner Hanoverian Swedish Warmblood Westpahlian

More Related