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RideCamp@endurance.net
Re: What is an endurance horse?
I live in Birmingham UK, which is the second bigest
city in England. I keep my horse about 8 miles from the town center in a funny
bit of shrinking green belt ( ie. supposeldy protected from building on the
fields yet two best close open riding spaces have just been granted planning
permission). Very lucky to manage to keep a horse in this area and box up to a
local 300 acre park to keep him fit at the weekends.
Personally whilst I would agree that a purpose bred
enduracne horse should theroetically do better there are plenty that get no
where and yet on paper and confirmation wise they are ideal. In fact the same
goes for TBs. I went to newmarket last friday to the national horse racing
museum and belive me when you talk to the people there the attrition rate for
failed TBs in training is horrendous.
Either way I feel its a somewhat academic argument
as most people I know start with a horse they bought for other sports/leisure
get hooked on endurance and then see how it goes. Theres few rich enough/hard
hearted enough to discard a well loved friend to 'upgrade'.
Having said all that there are certain blood lines
over here which are proving themselves as consistent Er producers Tarim (a top
Er horse in his on right) by Luachim who was by Achim, some of the polish /Belka
line horses bred by Bidissden Stud and a line called the Y line . Just to prove
I can be sad about pedigrees!
I take my metaphorical hat of though to any
horse breeder aiming to produce a performance horse though, as if the USA is
anything like the Uk its nigh on impossible for them to recoup even a fraction
of the costs involved and many 'ideal' purchasers turn out to be complete
jerks.
Tamara
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, April 24, 2000 3:38
PM
Subject: RC: What is an endurance
horse?
Tamara wrote:
Personally, and within
reason, I dont think its the horses type/pedigree/cost that matters its its
guts and heart that counts and I guess you can only test that by the suck it
and see method!
I like that - "suck it and see method"!!
Tamara, sorry I'm not sure where you live, could you fill me in?
Using the Ididerod dogsled race as an example, one can see that almost
any breed can compete (Paul heard of someone with a team of Dalmation
crosses), however certain breeds predominate because they were bred to do long
distances like that *and the odds are that those dog teams will do well at the
job*. Looking at thoroughbred racing, one sees that certain bloodlines
predominate because they win more and again, people choose them because the
odds are better for winning with those bloodlines. You start with
something someone has already shown does the job and try to improve on
that. Why reinvent the wheel?
The issue here is not
how many horses are winners because they break the mold (e.g. draft crosses,
free, rescue or whatever horses doing well in endurance "in spite of..."), but
what is the mold from which they are breaking? And how can that be
improved? Lif
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