10 October 2006 #1 L Lill Well-Known Member Joined 11 November 2005 Messages 5,673 Location Kent Visit site Anyone? Surely that would be roughly 19hh??
10 October 2006 #2 K kildalton Well-Known Member Joined 15 February 2005 Messages 1,785 Location Meon Valley, Hampshire Visit site It's exactly 19hh!
10 October 2006 #3 J JessPickle Well-Known Member Joined 18 October 2005 Messages 13,049 Visit site yeah that means exactly 19hh
10 October 2006 #4 W welshpony Well-Known Member Joined 24 August 2006 Messages 1,200 Location east anglia Visit site No idea! The only ones I know is 138 is 13.2, 148 is 14.2 and 153 is 15hh...
10 October 2006 #5 L Lill Well-Known Member Joined 11 November 2005 Messages 5,673 Location Kent Visit site LMAO So according to the BSJA website my horse has grown 3 hands?! Lol think they probably meant 163.0!! Think i should tell them? Or just leave it?!
LMAO So according to the BSJA website my horse has grown 3 hands?! Lol think they probably meant 163.0!! Think i should tell them? Or just leave it?!
10 October 2006 #6 K kildalton Well-Known Member Joined 15 February 2005 Messages 1,785 Location Meon Valley, Hampshire Visit site You divide the cms by2.54 to get to inches, and then divide by 4 to get to hands
10 October 2006 #7 Santa_Claus Well-Known Member Joined 11 November 2001 Messages 22,282 Location Wiltshire/Hampshire ish! www.katiemortimore.com often if the BSJA don't know the height they put in a huge height (eg 19h) as its obvious it is wrong. If you ring them with correct details they should be able to update it for you
often if the BSJA don't know the height they put in a huge height (eg 19h) as its obvious it is wrong. If you ring them with correct details they should be able to update it for you
10 October 2006 #8 Z Zebedee Well-Known Member Joined 8 January 2006 Messages 6,447 Visit site Well its a hairs breadth short of 76ins so.......19hh exactly!
11 October 2006 #9 T TrecPeter Well-Known Member Joined 13 September 2006 Messages 2,523 Location Geneva www.alwena.com Height in hands = cm/10.16 (would be a BIG horse!)