Incredible incredible horse

[QUOTE=Two Simple;2043905]
So its okay to ride a 3 year old hard if you are riding him in the discipline he was bread for?? Ooooooh-kay.[/QUOTE]

Oh Two Simple, why do you make this sooooo complicated? :confused: Quaterback (not Quarterman, my bad) was BRED (not bread, although he looks delicious) to move like this. It is EASY for him. He is NOT working hard. He is not being ridden hard.

Our 5 year old (he’ll turn 6 in Feb.) is learning changes. It is EASY for him. All of the work, up to now has been easy for him so he has come along quickly. BUT, always, we pay a lot of attention to what the horses tell us. If you are a decent horseman, and these Europeans haven’t accomplished what they have by not being good horsemen, you let the horse tell you what they are ready for.

O - K

Everybody has their own opinion.:winkgrin:

Sabine got banned? Bummer!!! :frowning:

Yeah, bummer, considering who else is allowed to blather on in supreme ignorance.

[QUOTE=Two Simple;2043316]
I would be very interested to get a copy of this study. Can you tell me the group that conducted it, and where I might get copies? Thanks![/QUOTE]

You could probably find it yourself faster on medline. It will take me years to find that journal. It was race horses, specifically dealing with a question about bucked shins, but the results were that ligament and bone density and thickness were increased in horses in work versus those stalled. Granted, there was no ā€œturnoutā€ group, since racing TBs are rarely housed that way. I believe it was a UPenn study, and I heard a talk referring to it (and then pulled the copy) back in 1996, so the date is prior to that.

That sounds interesting, I will try to find it. Thanks! I’d be more interested in a study comparing 24/7 turnout to 5 days a week riding to stalled 24/7 with just brief turnouts to blow steam. Because if the study did deal with stalled horses, then it makes sens they see more development in the ridden horses. I don’t believe in stalling and that’s one reason why. Because I think the horse develops better while turned out.

[QUOTE=Daydream Believer;2043356]
Here is something a bit more scientific for those who advocate that working a horse this age like this is OK. I am almost certain the studies that Pony Fixer is talking about were done on race horses and discussed building bone density and did not really focus on the latest part of the horse to mature…their spine and backs…and was not really about sport horses in general or horses asked to work like dressage horses are.

http://www.equinestudies.org/knowledge_base/ranger.html[/QUOTE]

I don’t disagree with all of what this article says. However, if it ain’t referrenced and in a peer-reviewed journal, it ain’t a ā€œstudyā€ (not that you said it was). There is no way, from that article, to find from where all her ā€œevidenceā€ stems.

TS–those studies largely don’t exist for several reasons. One, money. Who wants to study that and pay for it–food companies? Fencing or stabling companies? Second, controls. You can’t control for how much exercise a pastured horse gets. Mine, he can almost stay fit outside. His buddy is a pasture potato. Third, the study was terminal. They euthanized all the horses to cut up the legs and measure the bone/ligament size, density, etc.

My point is not that horses SHOULD or SHOULD NOT be backed at a certain age. It’s just that, like most of life, it is highly variable and specific to the case at hand. BUT, because you decide to back a particular horse at a particular age for a particular reason does not inherently cause them to have issues down the road. Actually, I should not have said inherently. ;-p Genetics probably plays a large role in long term soundness, more so than when first backed. A summit synopsis was just published this week regarding making racing safer for TBs. Seems we have more horses than 50 years ago, the same # of starts, so therefore each horse is racing less. However, breakdowns are occurring at a higher rate. Two factors greatly considered–genetics (breeding for faster, not sounder) and toe grabs (hopefully greater than 4 mm soon to be banned).

There was an article in Equus not too long ago (3-6 months) about this issue.

Found this old thread on Quaterback. I did love this stallion when he first appeared. Such a WOW mover. Looks like some of his get have been approved, I’m just wondering why he doesn’t appear to have had any show career.

I found this about him–not sure how old it is: http://www.hwfarm.com/Stallions/urls/quaterback.htm

Anyone have something sired by him? Something doing really well?

I have a friend that has a Qarterback son, gelding, that they are not sure if they are going to do dressage or jumpers with but he seems like a good guy

Good to know! Thanks, ivy62!

I loooove Qredit. And his offspring. Qredit won his stallion test with good scores both in dressage and jumping, and of course temperament.

My understanding is Quaterback DID do GP work, but I don’t know if in competition or just showing the movements in stallion shows. Of course it’s easier for a US-based horse where we can search the websites we know for show scores. :slight_smile:

Alissa Pitts is showing Quintessential Hit this one seems to be doing well.

http://www.alyssapitts.com/quintessential-hit/

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lvxhf_3guow

Very cool. I really liked him when he first hit the scene and was hoping that he, or his babies, would do really well. I did see Qredit on the Hilltop site and was thinking he looked a lot like his dad (body-wise). He was on the cover of COTH at one point, I think.

Old old thread, but Judy Yancey has a good article on Quarterback re his versatility on her webpage.

[QUOTE=Velvet;8878513]
Very cool. I really liked him when he first hit the scene and was hoping that he, or his babies, would do really well. I did see Qredit on the Hilltop site and was thinking he looked a lot like his dad (body-wise). He was on the cover of COTH at one point, I think.[/QUOTE]

While Qredit doesn’t spend as much time floating above the ground, I think he’s the nicer horse. I think Judy bred well and improved on Quaterback’s weaknesses while keeping his strengths.

Is Qredit doing much competing?

Yes, Qredit is competing at I-1 and PSG in 2016 with scores in the high 60s and 70s:

http://www.centerlinescores.com/Horse/Details/1075748