NativePonyLover
Well-Known Member
Thank you! We have made breeds for certain purposes. While there is always going to be exceptions to this, it's generally the norm to pick a breed best suited for what you want to do.
Ditto this too.
Although slightly off topic, it demonstrates that it is wise to pick a horse that is probably better suited to the lifestyle/expectations you want it to have.
I had a ISH (very TB like though) as a student through college & university, until he was sadly PTS after an accident. Fast forward approx. two years & I was back in the buyers market (having loaned in the interim) only this time I work 38-40 hours a week, don't get university holidays & generally didn't have the same excess of time to pander to another wimpy TB's every needs.
So I bought a native pony - I knew I needed something that could cope if I got the weather forecast wrong & it poured down with rain instead of being bright & sunny and I was unable to just 'pop back' to change rugs or bring in, that my family could help out with (as Mum is a teacher, she often turns out & mucks out for me in her holidays - but couldn't be expected to cope with taking off stable wraps, putting on turn out boots or mud fever lotions or potions or lead a 16hh fire-snorting, dancing sideways horse because it's a windy day and in another county I'm sure a paper bag rustled somewhere), that could cope if work deadlines meant I couldn't ride for a week - but could ride every day the week after.
I'm not saying ALL TB's are wimpy, need lots of rugging & inappropriate for non-horsey family members to handle & there are probably tonnes on people on here with TBs living out, unrugged that their granny & two year old child learnt to ride on. But generally speaking, I had better chances of finding something suitably low maintenance that wasn't a TB.
I still love TB's - but native ponies were designed to be hardier & generally speaking lower maintence. Just as I love cobs & think they can make ' top' amauters horses, they generally speaking don't tend to make GP dressage horses or 4* event horses. It's not 'cobist' - just the norm.