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Pennsylvania Tenn. Walker / thoroughbred 6
mo old
Question: My tb mare foaled on may 20,2000.
I have a beautiful bay filly. Sire is a ten
walker/spotted saddle horse. I still am not able to tell if my filly
is gaiting. Is there
anything particular to look. This is my first experience with any type
of gaited breed. I
realize that she might not have inherited the gait but would like more
info.
From Panelists Annette
If she is gaiting, she won't be trotting when in an intermediate speed,
is
the best way I can put it. You will hear more than two footfalls when
they
are in an intermediate speed. If what you see and hear at the intermediate
speed is the trot, then there is no gait present. If you hear more
than two
footfalls, but it looks like she's trotting, then she is doing a foxtrot.
However, by 6 months old, most gaited babies (with the exception of
very
strongly gaited youngsters) will be trotting or at least foxtrotting
in an
intermediate speed, anyway. The best time to see gait is at birth.
In cross
breeds, though, it is not uncommon to see gait at birth, and then they
loose
it in a few weeks or months, and never gait again. The other place
to see it
is when they are coming down out of a canter or gallop, then you will
see
gaited youngsters take a bunch of steps in gait before dropping to
a walk.
As they come out of the canter, there is a rotation from the front
to back
of the horse as they go into gait.
Gaitedness in offspring is distributed more or less on a bell curve.
The
chances that this filly will gait enough to be called gaited are 25%
or
less. More likely she may have a strong walk, and even some weak foxtrot,
but the odds would be against her having any more than that, if that.
The
Thoroughbred is first a galloper, then a trotter. They are the strongest
trotting horses in the world. They are therefore the least desirable
to
cross with gaited if what you want is gait in the foal.
The best trainer for this type of horse would be a Saddlebred trainer.
They
are familiar with the riding, bitting, trimming and shoeing techniques
to
get trotty horses to slow gait and rack. The same techniques applied
to this
filly when under saddle, the use of the double reined double bit, shoeing
on
the rear not the front, perhaps with a slightly weighted shoe, saddle
set as
far back as it can go without catching on the point of the hip, rider
weight
to the rear, hands up, head of horse up and nose tucked, back hollowed,
shoulders stiffened, are the techniques for asking a trotty horse to
give
the slow gait and the rack based "saddling" gaits, the stepped rack
and half
rack. Even if she does gait, though, it is likely to be as the Saddlebreds
today do, for short distances, and not over the distance time and terrain
that can be maintained by a quality fully gaited horse.
Annette. |