stormox
Well-Known Member
I was looking through some old H&H the other day, 1960/70 vintage. One thing that struck me was- in the older ones there often wasn't even a phone number, just an address!! Some had phone numbers, others had 'box numbers' for people to write to.
The other thing I noticed is that types of horses have really changed.
The adverts were in height order, the biggest at the top. The biggest horses were rarely over 16.1 or maybe 16.2hh. There was certainly nothing over 17hh!
There were adverts for 'butty cobs' 'lovely blood horses' and 'lively hunters'
Hardly any skewbalds or other coloureds, only in ponies. (I can remember when it was seriously frowned on to take a coloured horse on the hunting field!)
Horses werent identified by breed as they are now, like ISH, Friesan, TB etc, they were advertised more by type (MW, ladies hunter, blood etc).
I think this is a good way of looking at horses, I am beginning to think people are putting too much emphasis on the breed and not enough on the individual horse. There is a lot of 'stereotyping'- I have seen lots of threads where people say they want a 'coloured cob' because they are quiet. Not so- some can be seriously awkward and self willed. I have a TB, my own friend who happily jumps 1.10 classes said to me 'how can anyone want a TB? The very word strikes fear into my heart'..... shes never ridden one!
Theres good and not good in all breeds- are we categorising too much now, especially since passports showing breeds came in? I know of many a TB that was sold in the old days as a hunter, and performed that job perfectly.
The other thing I noticed is that types of horses have really changed.
The adverts were in height order, the biggest at the top. The biggest horses were rarely over 16.1 or maybe 16.2hh. There was certainly nothing over 17hh!
There were adverts for 'butty cobs' 'lovely blood horses' and 'lively hunters'
Hardly any skewbalds or other coloureds, only in ponies. (I can remember when it was seriously frowned on to take a coloured horse on the hunting field!)
Horses werent identified by breed as they are now, like ISH, Friesan, TB etc, they were advertised more by type (MW, ladies hunter, blood etc).
I think this is a good way of looking at horses, I am beginning to think people are putting too much emphasis on the breed and not enough on the individual horse. There is a lot of 'stereotyping'- I have seen lots of threads where people say they want a 'coloured cob' because they are quiet. Not so- some can be seriously awkward and self willed. I have a TB, my own friend who happily jumps 1.10 classes said to me 'how can anyone want a TB? The very word strikes fear into my heart'..... shes never ridden one!
Theres good and not good in all breeds- are we categorising too much now, especially since passports showing breeds came in? I know of many a TB that was sold in the old days as a hunter, and performed that job perfectly.