Mrs B
Well-Known Member
... a cob.
We have various threads about the pros, cons and general fitness/abilities of said beasts, but (apart from Welsh D's, Fells, Dales etc) how do you define a cob?
I myself currently have a 15.1 skewbald. He was born in 2004, he has no papers, no breed details, nothing. I've heard him described as a cob (and despite my jibes on Shils' thread) I actually have no bias one way or another ... if they do the job, they're grand in my book.
I also have no experience or knowledge of showing classifications.
But as an experiment, where would he fit on your personal 'Cob Scale' of 1 (well-placed leg at each corner, hair like a Yettie, butt the size of Brazil) to 10 (would have a fair crack at the 3.20 at Epsom, coat like a bit of old silk, poor doer in winter)?
And more to the point, where would you put yours on a similar scale?
We have various threads about the pros, cons and general fitness/abilities of said beasts, but (apart from Welsh D's, Fells, Dales etc) how do you define a cob?
I myself currently have a 15.1 skewbald. He was born in 2004, he has no papers, no breed details, nothing. I've heard him described as a cob (and despite my jibes on Shils' thread) I actually have no bias one way or another ... if they do the job, they're grand in my book.
I also have no experience or knowledge of showing classifications.
But as an experiment, where would he fit on your personal 'Cob Scale' of 1 (well-placed leg at each corner, hair like a Yettie, butt the size of Brazil) to 10 (would have a fair crack at the 3.20 at Epsom, coat like a bit of old silk, poor doer in winter)?
And more to the point, where would you put yours on a similar scale?
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