Caol Ila
Well-Known Member
As a total digression on this thread, do you know of any genetic issues in Highlands? PSSM, EMS, that sort of thing? Would really like to avoid that.
Do you mean the Rare Breed Survival Trust? (RBST)Is there a rare breed group in the UK or EU? There is one in the USA and it covers all types of livestock and lists breeds under several different categories such as recovering to critical. My dream is to win the lottery, ha, and start a rare breed breeding program.
I don't know about the UK but there is a scheme in Ireland where farmers can apply to get subsidies for breeding native farm animals. Horses are classed as agricultural so connies, Irish draughts and Kerry bog are included as they are native equine species. Perhaps something similar could be done for native UK horses.It didn't really address the elephant in the room, though. How can you preserve a breed when the market for that breed is tiny? Very few people use horses to pull heavy sh1t nowadays, which is what drafts excel at. The mechanization of transport and agriculture is a pretty insurmountable problem. All the heavy drafts are in similar boats -- Shires, Belgians, Percherons, Suffolk Punch, etc. Breeders ultimately need to be able to sell horses, after all, but the horse market has increasingly turned to pets and sporthorses. Drafts aren't ideal as either. A few enthusiasts will buy Shires and Clydes as happy hackers and low level competition horses, but most of us don't actually want an 18hh draft. I sure don't. Given the horses I see at my yard and others, no one else does, either.
I want to see those breeds preserved as much as anybody, but it's going to take a lot more than some breeders hanging out at the SECC in Glasgow and importing a few horses from the US. You need to be able to breed *enough* horses to increase the gene pool. Unless someone is subsizing the breeders, someone has to be keen to buy the horses.
There was a lot of controversy when they started crossing the warmbloods en mass and registering them as ish. Some people argued that they should be classified in a separate stud book.Exactly in Ireland they almost got into bother with the ID , when then the Irish developed the passion for using warmblood mares ,and stallions (but it was the mares that was the issue ) because that’s where the market for very expensive stock took them .
They fell a bit out of love with the traditional type of NH Tb they crossed the mares to as well for a while .
Alot of ID a and crossed TB / ID mares got parted with however being Irish they where quick enough to see the mistake and now the traditional ID cross something they market separately .
The Irish breeders where very fast to see the trap they where walking into and protected the ID and no other country has been anywhere as successful they have in doing this .
They had a head start because the ID has been a true dual purpose breed for long time .When I was a child lots of farmers still had a heavy mare in the field that they sent to the local TB stallion and there where many many heavy type traditional Tb plus all sorts about .
I have an ID crossed Clydesdale atm Blue the cob although I am not convinced there’s not some section D in there as well .
There’s no doubt he’s a nice horse and you could sell him one like him every week but few people breed these type of horses commercially any more in the UK but there would be a demand for them but would people pay a commercial rate for them I don’t know .
Re. the riding having watched the pre judging ridden champs at equifeast a few years ago (yes the ground did vibrate) the shires and clydes seemed to do a much better, flashier job of it with some going very nicely indeed. The suffolks always look uncomfortably wide to me, I don't think I would manage to ride one.
Clydie mum Pure Arab Dad best pony club eventer that walked the earth
View attachment 62492
You get used to it after your second ride.