Irishlife
Well-Known Member
Hilly
You have echoed so much of what I feel and have said in posts further up the thread.
I had actually written a missive and went to send it and it failed Aaaarrrghh so will be cutting and pasting this one to reply.
We now have a separate stud book for Warmbloods (Warmblood Studbook of Ireland) with performance testing along continental lines and a certain number of approved stallions within that book already. Some mare family lines have been set up already.
I wonder what the take up will be as unless the Irish Horse Board hand off all the approved warmbloods in the main stud book to the new Warmblood stud book. Are we actually any further forward?.
At present using a horse with foreign bloodlines whether an Oldenburg, SF or Holstein means even if your mare has warmblood lines herself, the resulting offspring is classified as an Irish Sport Horse (ISH). If that same mare were covered with a warmblood stallion from the newly formed Warmblood studbook of Ireland, the offspring would be considered a warmblood (IWB???) and also subject to inspection, unique identifier microchip for the stud book and also a passport from Warmblood Studbook of Ireland.
So how many of us with warmblood breeding will follow this route and put our mares forward for inspection and how many will continue to use warmblood stallions approved by the Irish Horse Board? So, when is an Irish warmblood not a warmblood, when it is an Irish Sport Horse!
Because the USP of the Warmblood studbook of Ireland is Warmbloods with an Irish accent, there are percentages of draught blood (12.5%) permitted and the same for TBs etc.
It can no longer be said with the expansion of the approved foreign horses in the stud book that an ISH is guranteed to be a mix of ID and TB blood and as Hilly said everyday run of the mill warmblood crosses are plentiful abroad. We have to promote and market the versatility of the classic Irish horse with his draught power, andTB heart . By diluting or increasing the amount of blood in the cross, a horse for all seasons can be bred even show jumpers.
Nobody has mentioned Carling King yet 4th Individual Athens Olympics a pure, 8th WEG, numerous Nations Cups- Irish horse who retired sound at 16. Sired by Clover Hill, King of Diamonds dam line
Hilly took the words out of my mouth about the production of horses too. We do rush them here to get them looking sharp for the sales sometimes, but there are also a lot of bad producers and riders (as everywhere). There are also some genius producers and riders who do get the well deserved rewards. The proper production of the horse is vital and more benchmarking and performance scoring should be applied during a young horses career which all adds to his genetic potential.
It is necessary to improve the quality of the Irish Show Jumping Horse to adapt him to the requirements of todays courses but equally the quality of training and nurture and the right riders play as much of a part and too many good young horses are spoiled by over jumping to get a few points up.
An article in the Irish Field this week states Ireland needs an infusion of high-quality genetics and a selection programme in order to return the Irish horse to the top of the sport To this end apparently some international classes for 7 and 8 year olds have been added to the RDS schedule this year. This is from the RDS Breeding Expert Group that was formed after the breeders forum they hosted last October.
The article also states that the traditionalists among us will be pleased to know the thoroughbred is not considered totally redundant in the production of top class show jumping horses. They also state culling will be needed by breeders as a first step if the ISH breeder is to match steps with his continental counterpart.
Breeding is subjective, we are individuals and we know what we like. Those of us who like to think we can breed quality and have proved we can, tend to be more enlightened and examine pedigrees conformation and try to ensure the right nick with our mares and stallions.
I cannot subscribe to Eoithains view that sticking say Baloubet de Rouet on any mare is progress in breeding because of the horses genetics. It is not just about function it is about form too and there should also be attention paid to conformation of the mare and stallion and back in the pedigree if possible. A lot of random breeding develops soundness issues and that is something else we need to bear in mind. Admittedly not a lot of study has been done in Ireland on inherited traits of soundness in the ISHbut in general terms, Irish horses are sound horses whereas there is a lot of inherited soundness issues in some warmblood lines.
At the end of the day, we can choose to breed warmbloods via the Warmblood studbook of Ireland or the IHB, Draught horses (modern or traditional), TBsxIDs in varying dilutions and throw the odd Connemara to a TB for a truly underrated Irish sport horse.
I am going to Cavan Stallion Parade on Tuesday evening for a mouth watering evening of seeing the cream of Irish stallions. After this forum debate, I cant wait as I have STILL not decided on a couple of stallions yet.
Happy Sunday everyone .
You have echoed so much of what I feel and have said in posts further up the thread.
I had actually written a missive and went to send it and it failed Aaaarrrghh so will be cutting and pasting this one to reply.
We now have a separate stud book for Warmbloods (Warmblood Studbook of Ireland) with performance testing along continental lines and a certain number of approved stallions within that book already. Some mare family lines have been set up already.
I wonder what the take up will be as unless the Irish Horse Board hand off all the approved warmbloods in the main stud book to the new Warmblood stud book. Are we actually any further forward?.
At present using a horse with foreign bloodlines whether an Oldenburg, SF or Holstein means even if your mare has warmblood lines herself, the resulting offspring is classified as an Irish Sport Horse (ISH). If that same mare were covered with a warmblood stallion from the newly formed Warmblood studbook of Ireland, the offspring would be considered a warmblood (IWB???) and also subject to inspection, unique identifier microchip for the stud book and also a passport from Warmblood Studbook of Ireland.
So how many of us with warmblood breeding will follow this route and put our mares forward for inspection and how many will continue to use warmblood stallions approved by the Irish Horse Board? So, when is an Irish warmblood not a warmblood, when it is an Irish Sport Horse!
Because the USP of the Warmblood studbook of Ireland is Warmbloods with an Irish accent, there are percentages of draught blood (12.5%) permitted and the same for TBs etc.
It can no longer be said with the expansion of the approved foreign horses in the stud book that an ISH is guranteed to be a mix of ID and TB blood and as Hilly said everyday run of the mill warmblood crosses are plentiful abroad. We have to promote and market the versatility of the classic Irish horse with his draught power, andTB heart . By diluting or increasing the amount of blood in the cross, a horse for all seasons can be bred even show jumpers.
Nobody has mentioned Carling King yet 4th Individual Athens Olympics a pure, 8th WEG, numerous Nations Cups- Irish horse who retired sound at 16. Sired by Clover Hill, King of Diamonds dam line
Hilly took the words out of my mouth about the production of horses too. We do rush them here to get them looking sharp for the sales sometimes, but there are also a lot of bad producers and riders (as everywhere). There are also some genius producers and riders who do get the well deserved rewards. The proper production of the horse is vital and more benchmarking and performance scoring should be applied during a young horses career which all adds to his genetic potential.
It is necessary to improve the quality of the Irish Show Jumping Horse to adapt him to the requirements of todays courses but equally the quality of training and nurture and the right riders play as much of a part and too many good young horses are spoiled by over jumping to get a few points up.
An article in the Irish Field this week states Ireland needs an infusion of high-quality genetics and a selection programme in order to return the Irish horse to the top of the sport To this end apparently some international classes for 7 and 8 year olds have been added to the RDS schedule this year. This is from the RDS Breeding Expert Group that was formed after the breeders forum they hosted last October.
The article also states that the traditionalists among us will be pleased to know the thoroughbred is not considered totally redundant in the production of top class show jumping horses. They also state culling will be needed by breeders as a first step if the ISH breeder is to match steps with his continental counterpart.
Breeding is subjective, we are individuals and we know what we like. Those of us who like to think we can breed quality and have proved we can, tend to be more enlightened and examine pedigrees conformation and try to ensure the right nick with our mares and stallions.
I cannot subscribe to Eoithains view that sticking say Baloubet de Rouet on any mare is progress in breeding because of the horses genetics. It is not just about function it is about form too and there should also be attention paid to conformation of the mare and stallion and back in the pedigree if possible. A lot of random breeding develops soundness issues and that is something else we need to bear in mind. Admittedly not a lot of study has been done in Ireland on inherited traits of soundness in the ISHbut in general terms, Irish horses are sound horses whereas there is a lot of inherited soundness issues in some warmblood lines.
At the end of the day, we can choose to breed warmbloods via the Warmblood studbook of Ireland or the IHB, Draught horses (modern or traditional), TBsxIDs in varying dilutions and throw the odd Connemara to a TB for a truly underrated Irish sport horse.
I am going to Cavan Stallion Parade on Tuesday evening for a mouth watering evening of seeing the cream of Irish stallions. After this forum debate, I cant wait as I have STILL not decided on a couple of stallions yet.
Happy Sunday everyone .