RE: [RC] Standardbreds and Part Standardbreds in Endurance - Mcgann, BarbaraFascinating, and rings absolutely true for all three types. Thanks!! Barb -----Original Message----- From: Lynne Glazer [mailto:anyone@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, November 16, 2004 1:33 PM To: Mcgann, Barbara Cc: ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [RC] Standardbreds and Part Standardbreds in Endurance My friend Marge Piwowarski wrote this post in 2000 to RC, our friend she's referring to is Sue Whitmore in England. It's related to how the different horses evolved. I had TWHs before having Arabs, taught handicapped riding on TWHs mostly for 7 years and believe Sue's opinion rings true. --- She is far into the origins and dispersal of the equine family millenia ago and says the reason it works for horses is that there are ancestral types, (plains runner, bog trotter, mountain gaiter) with three distinct types of heads, naturally selected for, according to the niche these forerunners of our present day mounts occupied. The following examples aren't complete, but are approximate. The plains runners used their eyes and noses to warn of predators, they outran them. They are the quickest to take flight and the "spookiest" of prototypes. (Guess whose decendants most of you are riding). The bog trotters used their noses and ears as early warning systems, they couldn't see far in their niche. They were larger than most of their predators and less worried about them. They relied on size and power. Their descendants are the cold blooded breeds. Calm, less likely to mind confinement, sorta pushy as a result of their size and wtrength. The mountain gaiters had to be sure footed but most of all had to be horses who evaluated a situation before reacting. Their niche did away with those who took headlong flight, the terrain killed them before the predator got there. Their descendants usually "spook in place", will run only after formulating a plan and will stop and face their predator as soon as the terrain favors them. They aren't opposed to a fight when they have a terrain advantage, their descendants became the war horses of the middle ages and their strains are found today in the Iberian and gaited horses. Their big, roman nosed heads were (and are) useful as balancing devices over rough and steep terrain, mountain climates are cold, their nasal design warmed the air better than the hot blooded plains runners had a need for. If one looks at head shapes as a genetic characteristic of the ancient prototypes and think about the sort of mental characteristics which best ensured survival, this "phrenology" stuff doesn't seem so much like pseudo science. Head shape and mind are not always linked but most often they are. (Before any of you Ayrab folk start telling me about your horse's desert ancestors, remember that horses did not evolve in the desert. They have been there for a few centuries because man took them there, left to their own devices, they won't live wild in the Sahara. Their forerunners were plains runners.) Marge (give me a bucket haid with a roman nose on a pacing horse) On Nov 16, 2004, at 11:25 AM, Mcgann, Barbara wrote: Lynn, Not sure I know what you mean by "gaited horse mind"....can you explain that a little more? Barb McGann =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net. Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp Ride Long and Ride Safe!! =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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