Ciss
Well-Known Member
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I think you're AMAZINGLY clever if you can judge a horse so comprehensively from one snapshot. Most experienced judges I know would want to look at a horse from several angles before condemning it out of hand (particularly if they were not familiar with the breed standard!)
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And hopefully look at it moving both loose and in hand and in all three paces if possible and look at it loose jumping and examione its pedigree and progeny as well I would think. But you only gave us one photo of each mare (you now say chance snapshots taken by a student) and deliberately did not tell us their ages or scores becuase you wanted us to guess how they did. Now you complain because that was what we did and that we did not take their ages into account. You can't have it all ways Janet <sigh>.
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Sorry but you did raise the point of condition and you must realsie that I regularly see mares of all shapes and sizes
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Actually - all I KNOW about you is your H&H username - and the fact you're prepared to declare you know FAR more about Irish Draughts than the experienced ID judges who graded these mares!
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No. I NEVER assessed them as ID mares because that is not what I assess mares for and I made that quite clear from the start. I used internationally accepted WBFSH-based criteria to show why they are not sports horse type mares -- so in a way I suppose I was assessing them as IDs as well as it seems that a good sports horse mare is most definitely (according to you) not what the ID inspectors want.
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And several of them have been assessed 3 or 4 times by 3/4 different teams (of 3) Inspectors. And - with one or two exceptions - the scoring has been remarkably consistent.
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Why do they need to be looked at more than once? What they call in Europe their fundament (physical structure / phenotype) won't change much after they are 3 years old -- or at least if it does a competent breed judge should be able to predict what the finished mature product would be -- and their genoype certainly won't change, so apart from assessing their work under saddle (not the case with any of these mares I gather) or their progeny (who should be assessed separately anyway) I cannot see the point. And there is even less point if the grading panel changes every year as consistency of approach must surely be the key to the whole method.
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I hope anyone reading this doesn't take YOUR word that my mares are cr*p (because they're not!)
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Never said they were crap, just not sports horses -- but you don't want them to be that anyway so you should have been pleased with my comments as they supported what you want to do in your breeding programme. As far as directing people as to what to think I believe that those who know me on the forum -- and perhaps even more especially those who don't -- will look at what has been illustrated and commented on by all concerned and make up their own minds based on their own breeding goals.
You can ask for no more.
I think you're AMAZINGLY clever if you can judge a horse so comprehensively from one snapshot. Most experienced judges I know would want to look at a horse from several angles before condemning it out of hand (particularly if they were not familiar with the breed standard!)
[/ QUOTE ]
And hopefully look at it moving both loose and in hand and in all three paces if possible and look at it loose jumping and examione its pedigree and progeny as well I would think. But you only gave us one photo of each mare (you now say chance snapshots taken by a student) and deliberately did not tell us their ages or scores becuase you wanted us to guess how they did. Now you complain because that was what we did and that we did not take their ages into account. You can't have it all ways Janet <sigh>.
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Sorry but you did raise the point of condition and you must realsie that I regularly see mares of all shapes and sizes
[/ QUOTE ]
[/ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Actually - all I KNOW about you is your H&H username - and the fact you're prepared to declare you know FAR more about Irish Draughts than the experienced ID judges who graded these mares!
[/ QUOTE ]
No. I NEVER assessed them as ID mares because that is not what I assess mares for and I made that quite clear from the start. I used internationally accepted WBFSH-based criteria to show why they are not sports horse type mares -- so in a way I suppose I was assessing them as IDs as well as it seems that a good sports horse mare is most definitely (according to you) not what the ID inspectors want.
[ QUOTE ]
And several of them have been assessed 3 or 4 times by 3/4 different teams (of 3) Inspectors. And - with one or two exceptions - the scoring has been remarkably consistent.
[/ QUOTE ]
Why do they need to be looked at more than once? What they call in Europe their fundament (physical structure / phenotype) won't change much after they are 3 years old -- or at least if it does a competent breed judge should be able to predict what the finished mature product would be -- and their genoype certainly won't change, so apart from assessing their work under saddle (not the case with any of these mares I gather) or their progeny (who should be assessed separately anyway) I cannot see the point. And there is even less point if the grading panel changes every year as consistency of approach must surely be the key to the whole method.
[ QUOTE ]
I hope anyone reading this doesn't take YOUR word that my mares are cr*p (because they're not!)
[/ QUOTE ]
Never said they were crap, just not sports horses -- but you don't want them to be that anyway so you should have been pleased with my comments as they supported what you want to do in your breeding programme. As far as directing people as to what to think I believe that those who know me on the forum -- and perhaps even more especially those who don't -- will look at what has been illustrated and commented on by all concerned and make up their own minds based on their own breeding goals.
You can ask for no more.