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- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!phobos!lbm
- From: lbm@avs.com (Linda B. Merims)
- Subject: Re: Retraining a gated Morgan
- References: <Bxx9CC.7sr@Novell.COM>
- Sender: nobody@ctr.columbia.edu
- Organization: Advanced Visual Systems Inc.
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 00:27:27 GMT
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- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.002727.2027@sol.ctr.columbia.edu>
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-
- A fair number of Morgans turn up with a pronounced tendancy
- to be "lateral-gaited". Overwhelmingly, this means that they
- pace. Racking, slow-gait, fox trot, singlefoot, etc. almost
- never appear, except as a pace gone off-balance (going downhill,
- for example).
-
- Unfortunately, lateral-gaitedness is anathema in the Morgan show ring.
- I don't have any experience trying to get a confirmed pacer to
- trot. I have seen a few show horses who seem to trot most of
- the time, but occasionally fall into a pace. (Hopefully when
- the judge isn't looking.) Does he ever trot? As you have
- probably deduced if you've gone to many Morgan shows, a strong
- trot is EVERYTHING. Pacers will not be pinned.
-
- Pacing will show up in almost any Morgan line. These horses
- were originally bred as harness horses in the 19th century.
- A pacer was no great crime. (Early modern standardbreds often
- came from Hambletonian crossed on Morgan mares of Black Hawk
- extraction.) The saddlebred blood (Upwey Benn Peavine and Bennington's
- dam) may have also reinforced an existing tendancy to pace.
-
- A few lines do tend to show it more than others.
- A lot of the old Government horses (1930s-1950s) were comfirmed pacers
- (Glady, Mentor, and more recently Trophy.) It is definitly heritable,
- although not 100% predictably so. (Glady, for example, produced some
- of the strongest trotting Morgans in history--Meade, for example.)
- The pacers in the family trees sort of get treated like the
- cousin-who-went-wrong-that-nobody-mentions. Some sires get
- known for producing pacers (Trophy, and one of the Helicon horses).
- It doesn't do their reputation any good. Nobody breeds FOR pacers
- anymore.
-
- If I knew where you were, I could refer you to some local (Morgan-type)
- trainers who might be able to give you a more informed opinion.
-
- In the meantime, be glad he's a love and think of him as "historic genes
- incarnate"!
-
- Linda B. Merims
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