Something none of them mentioned is how they are reared, I always feel our horses have an advantage because of the undulating terrain with many natural obstacles such as streams/rocks/holes/overhanging branches etc they grow up with. They have to learn to think for themselves which a young horse in a flat field really doesn't.
I think this is a HUGE - and oft ignored - part of the equation, not only for eventing but for sound, strong horses in general. Way back when, before AI, it was much more common for horses to be raised in age appropriate groups in large areas. Now so many spend their whole lives in flat, manicured paddocks with only an older horse or two for company. In my personal experience it's just doesn't produce the same general result.
I'm most interested in knowing what, specifically, the temperament tests were. I do know that temperament marks in studbook approvals don't necessarily follow what the average rider would consider a "nice horse" and would be curious to know how they evaluated in this case.
Also, the comment on pedigree is interesting but, in my experience, doesn't mean much. Lots of top comp riders profess to not care at all about a horse's breeding but they obviously care very much about the result. I think saying it's not important says more about what they know about the subject and why not? No one is going to know everything - they know how to ride 4* horses, not necessarily how to make one in the first place. Especially if their main criteria is "cheap".![]()
I went to a William Fox-Pitt demo a while ago and he for one VERY MUCH cared about how his horses are bred... He showed 3 of his horses at various points of training and recited their full pedigree. He also said at least twice during the demo that his favourite sire was Primitive Rising...
Very interesting article!Especially about temperment being the most important thing. But that kind of contradicts what most of the top event sires produce- Primative Rising, Criminal Law, Java Tiger, Rock King, Catherston horses, Fleetwater Opposition- all known producers of tricky/difficult offspring.
I think the article needs to convey exactly what they mean by good temperment? Maybe the survey was only done on Irish event riders not british & they wouldnt put up with this kind of temperment that the brits put up with? Who knows, thats probably just a gross generalisation.
Temperament and quirks seem to go hand in hand with the top performers but when you look at the 4* cross-country tracks these horses jump, maybe the odd quirk can be forgiven in these brave athletes.
Perhaps two reasons why temperament is cited as so important:
1. Saleability. When so few horses make the top international grade, most are sold on. A sane horse is always more saleable than a similarly talented but more temperamental character.
2. Time. Any athlete has a certain shelf life and naturally, eventers wont want to battle tempermental young horses at the risk of a broken limb, or worse. Injuries = time and money particularly when riders are making a living from their sport. So older, 'ready to go' horses are a more commerical option which could also explain why unbroken/more high-risk youngstock are down the list.
I also wonder wether british 4 star riders would cite movement higher up on the priority list since Ireland have never really been competitive in dressage phases. I think that british eventers really want that 'wow so flash' horse with super movement, and spend a very long time looking for them.
That is not to say that Irish-bred horses cant move.Look at Ringwood Cockatoo's dressage scores! Employing the likes of Bettina Hoy and her dressage trainers might work wonders quicker than breeding that 'problem' out by producing flashy movers but at the risk of losing the gallop and fifth leg.
The obvious temptation is there, particularly for young event horse class specialists, to produce big-moving horses but should dressage be what eventing is all about? A producer of one of the best event horses in the world this year - Irish-bred- said she would not have entered him for any of the young event horse series as a youngster because his movement wasn't spectacular enough at that stage - horses for courses.
So it's a similar analogy to the choice facing TB NH breeders; to breed a precocious hurdler/two-mile chaser or the much longer road to aim for breeding a Gold Cup winner. Two totally different types, two viable markets and the same for the event scene; commercial young event horse types or potential 4* stores.
Riders are another factor as the riders of yore learned stickability by the seat of their jodphurs in rough-and-tumble pony days or the hunting field. Tommy Brennan's swift response to one earnest breeders question as to how to breed another Murphy Himself was 'Breed another Ian Stark!'. For some 'X Factor generation' riders who may not have the time, skill or experience of producing young horses, a flashy mover may seem almost like a short cut to good dressage scores. How many of the flashy movers and young event horse class/championship winners progress to and then remain at 4* level is another debate entirely.
Would love to know exactly what this test is that they do on the 3 year olds, I want to do it with mine.
According to the references in this 38-page report, this refers to the study by Visser, E.K Van Reenen, C.G, Engel, B, Schilder M.B.H, Barneveld, A & Blokhuis, H.J. (2003). The association between performance in showjumping and personality traits earlier in life. Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 82, 279 - 295. Good luck with that.![]()
I think HenryHorn has a really valid point about youngster upbringing, I totally believe that its the way that they should all be raised for long term toughness, soundness and athleticsm.
This ties in with what Vere Philips said in H&H recently about Irish horses although maybe a tad of a sweeping statement to say all Irish-bred youngsters are reared 'knee-deep in mud'. Sure, there's still some scruffy yards around with scruffier inmates and their 'whatever you'd like them to be by, Sir' owners but deal with them at your own risk.![]()
Irish horses are definitely not mollycoddled though and that independence as youngsters helps them develop into the quick-thinking, fifth-legged free spirits. Youngsters here are well-handled until weaned, then spend their winters in a 25-acre 'equine playground' beside a mainline railway. If they don't turn into cross-country machines after their youth has been spent playing as a herd over ditches, tree trunks and banks in all kinds of ground conditions, at least they will be champion trainspotters.![]()
Think there should be another study- on how the top four star event horses were brought up from foals.
Here here Hilly *stands back and claps*
maybe this "early start" training will become the wave of the future . . .
Anyone else seeing a market opening for Horsey WII games for couch potato, cotton-wool-clad 'eventer babies'![]()
It does beg the question though, how many small breeders/single foal owners here go out of their way to give their foals an active upbringing, in a large "imperfect" area, with age appropriate companions? Not just potential 4* prospects but any horse that is supposed to grow up to be an athlete?
Or how about Poll-ates for Foal(ates)?
Me.
He's out 24/7 in a stable herd with five other youngsters (aged 1-3) and our 20 & 25yo TBs to keep them in line. I particularly wanted him to have the robust rough and tumble childhood that our others didn't have. It's something I couldn't have given him on my own land so I've been very lucky to find somewhere that can let him be a babypony out with other babyponies.