warmblood event stallions

a warmblood is not a true breed and therefore brings with it too many unpredictable variations.

i prefer hotbloods and their crosses, ie hotblood to hotblood, and i know which i would prefer to put my faith in to get me out of trouble and it would`nt be a wb!
 
a warmblood is not a true breed and therefore brings with it too many unpredictable variations.

i prefer hotbloods and their crosses, ie hotblood to hotblood, and i know which i would prefer to put my faith in to get me out of trouble and it would`nt be a wb!

Interesting discussion....

I don't have as much experience in this field as others, but have only in the last few years 'accidentally' came in contact with the Trakehner. I have found them to be quick, intelligent and certainly not stupid. I would trust a good one. Of course they are classified as a WB.

BUT then when you look through the bloodlines (as I certainly have with the broodmare I had on loan) and others you soon find going back in time lots of TB and Arabs. Then when i continued, I went right back to the TB 'foundation sires' (darley Arabian, B Turk et al). So that breed is probably one of the closer ones to the TB I guess. I haven't studied this in great detail, it's just a quick observation to share. I don't know much about other WB societies.

Interesting like I say...

* sorry OP that doesn't help you answer your Q !
 
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the traks are considered the hotblood of wb`s i believe.

and also lived in herds not on very confined stud farms, and not really sure but always thought they were not bred as commercial competition horses originally but for other purposes where stamina and soundness and braveness were a priority, it would be interesting to see how old the stud book is.
 
perhaps they were military, and bred in the days when horses were transport, and dare i say it, by people who knew a thing or two about how to breed a proper horse.

i knew a stud in france that had a stallion by the trak abdullah the olympic horse who was a machine over fences and they always said `he was cold in the head` which possibly meant he was calm and sane or not hot so to speak.
 
If the op is looking at warmblood stallions, Amour G has been very popular with owners of TB mares looking to breed top sport horses. His progeny are now out winning county level ridden and in hand sports horse classes at county level. One breeder in particular, a vet with a top Newmarket practice, has come back for a full sibling to her filly out of her TB mare. A four year old also out of a TB mare, is with a top amateur event rider and alteady winning arena eventing and dressage classes.
 
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