Is there a definate age horses stop growing?

Foxymumma

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As the title goes.. is there such an age when a youngster will stop growing?! or does it vary with different breeds? :o ... Ive never actually read anything on the subject before and its never come up in conversation until today when someone mentioned to me that Irish horses dont stop growing till theyre 7?!! :eek: or were they pulling my leg? lol :rolleyes:
 
I don't believe there is!! I think some breeds mature later than others.

ie Cobs seems to reach their mature height much younger than say a connemara pony...... Irish Draughts also seem to be later maturing...Or is that just my experience?
 
I have known a couple of TB's & a Trak finish at 6yrs. Below is an extract from Sally White

"
Thoroughbred racehorses are asked to carry a jockey at high speed, for long distances, in one of the most strenuous equine sports there is, at the age of two. Yet Lipizzaner stallions in Vienna, who carry out leaps and pirouettes requiring the greatest of suppleness and concentration, are left in their fields until they reach the age of five. Which is right?
The debate over what age to start riding a young horse is a fierce one in the horsey world, and it raises tempers faster than you can say "physically mature". Which is what the whole debate hinges on - for opinions differ widely as to when a horse is sufficiently developed enough to take the weight of a human being.

As your horse grows, his bones and joints get stronger through the fusion of his growth plates - flexible areas which, at birth, are separated by a layer of crushable cartilage and allow the horse's bones to lengthen and grow. There's a widely-held belief that these growth plates only exist in a horse's knee: but in fact, there are growth plates almost everywhere that a horse has joints. They are all weak points, and unable to bear much weight, until they fuse - that is, the cartilage disappears and they join together in one strong unit. So the horse's strength - his physical maturity - is determined by when this turning point is reached. This happens at differing rates in different areas of the body - and some growth plates in a horse's body have still not fused by the time he is six.

Here's what's happening to your horse's skeletal structure at different times in its life, as outlined by the celebrated vet and conformation specialist, Dr Deb Bennett (who runs the Equestrian Training website):


At the age of 1 year:
the horse's pasterns have fused

At 18 months:
his cannon bones are mature

At 30 months (2.5 yrs):
he now has stronger - but not entirely mature - knees (the small bones have fused), and his fetlock joints are mature

At 3 years:
the weight-bearing area at the base of the knees is fused, as well as his hindleg between hock and stifle

At 3-and-a-half:
the highest part of his foreleg, the humerus, is fused, as are parts of his femur, the area of his hindleg between stifle and hip

At 4 years:
the shoulder is fused, and the hocks and pelvis are now mature

At 5-and-a-half:
the growth plates over the centrum, which allows the spine to flex, become fused
 
Cleveland Bays can grow until they are 6 yo - they are slow maturing. I breed Shagya Arabs, at the foundation stud in Hungary, males are backed at four, but the females are broken to harness first and backed a year later.

In France young horses are expected to enter competition, inc. dressage from 3 yo. I personally think this is shocking but it makes life difficult for breeders like myself who have slow maturing breeds.

I would hesitate to buy a horse which had competed under saddle at 3.
 
Thanks for your replys, I guess it is really just a waiting game then to see how each individual horse/pony grows!
My mare is a ISH (IDxTB) she currently stands at 17hh as a 4yr old! her parents are 17.1 and 16.2.. yet alot of people have told me she will keep growing till shes around 7yrs old! scary prospect! :eek:
 
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