Well, mine are 'voluptuous' with a lot of 'dormant top line' hanging below them waiting to become finely tuned muscle...if that's what you mean by the f word?
S
All our 3 big ones would live on virtually nothing! The two live out mares get some hay and half a scoop lucie-bix a day, mainly because they both need supplements (arthritis for one and tendon injury for the other) and I like to give them some balancer to put my mind at reat. Gelding has more because he is worked 5 days a week, but not much more and he certainly never looks thin!
I voted naturally skinny, as he does need a lot of feed and getting fat in the summer is not something I have to worry about! However I've had him a long time now so I know what he needs and at what time of the year so I don't have a problem with him loosing weight anymore.
Q is naturally Fat & you have to watch what he eats
Whereas Spider always looks like I don't feed him when if fact he eats loads
He looks ok in the summer with loads of Dr green, but when he was ill this autumn, the weight dropped off him & I'm now trying to put it all back on again.
Missy looks poor if she's kept in on little hard feed (and when she had cellulitis she looked like a greyhound, as she usually does when she's in pain, and it's damn hard to get the weight back on her). Storm is stupidly fat and Allie is just right
Well I have a Welshie so that pretty much speaks for itself...lives off nothing! I have a constant battle all year round to keep his weight off as much as possible but it is such hard work! He is strip grazed from March through to October with year old hay to eat and no hard feed. In the summer I ride him 5 or 6 times a week for hour plus hacks all in trot and up hills and then at the weekend I will do 15 mile plus pleasure rides also all in trot and canter. I get through shoes every 3 or 4 weeks in the summer! I really can't do any more and yet still, he can put weight on and be cresty...nightmare really!
Tobago just burns off everything we feed him. He is on non-heating, weight-gain feed plus ad lib hay, but when you turn him out he just gallops and gallops until he's drenched in sweat, then catches his breath and starts galloping again.
He's done this since he was a baby - no stress involved, he's perfectly happy, just loves to hoon around. Some people say I'm lucky to have a 'self-exercising' horse. Well, yes, he keeps himself very fit, but it's jolly hard to keep any weight on him. Oh, and during the stud season he loses even more weight cos it's all too exciting.