TayloredEq
Well-Known Member
Yes I noticed somebody else post about their already graded stallion, but not any of the other entrants, and the reason why is because a lot of stallion owners do not post on public forums because sometimes it is better to say very little and let your horse and stock do the talking when they are in the public domain.
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I'm the other guilty party for commenting!!
What I was trying to get across then and I will say it again now (although I do feel that ultimately we are all singing the same song) is that being a stallion owner in the UK is an uphill battle.
What this thread made me feel was that rather than stand up and do something to improve the grading process in this country people were just saying it wasn't good enough.
I joined this forum because I had googled my stallions name and I happened to see that he had been commented on at the Autumn grading. I was lucky - all the comments directed at him were complimentary.
With this being my first stallion I decided to join as there appeared to be a lot of knowledgeable (sp!) people on the forum and I thought that perhaps I would be able to learn from them and pick their brains a little.
Say someone decides to google Teddy (under his proper name) I haven't tried it but I'm fairly certain this post would come up.
So what then happens...
Someone who was perhaps looking at using Teddy or another SHB(GB) stallion starts reading the thread. It's pretty long so it will take them a few minutes.
By the end of it all what is the general impression that they will get - that UK stud books do not have a thorough or good enough grading system.
That's another one lost to the European market then!!
I have not seen the horse that was at the futurity and then failed at its grading so I'm wary to comment. But I think that what people are saying is that this horse had a major conformational fault.
If this is the case then surely SHB were correct not to grade him. He may go on to have the most amazing career but I understood breeding to be about improving the quality of the horses that we breed. In order to do that the stallions have to be constantly improving and you would hope that they would be overtaken by their offspring.
So performance ability and breeding ability are 2 totally different things.
So my final comment ( I think) would be that I ask people to think when they comment. Perhaps they would be able to find a positive comment first, then offer the criticism and then offer a suggestion of improvement.
After all there is a lot of preparation and cost involved in producing and keeping a stallion. If we want to improve British Breeding then we all need to feel able to communicate. I think this forum is great for discussion and it should be a place to discuss ways forward.
Perhaps someone does need to open the eyes of the stud books. Maybe someone needs to print off this thread and the one relating to the AES and send them to the relevant people. It might be enough to get the ball rolling...