Minimor
Well-Known Member
AMHR
Standard of Perfection
A. General Impression: A small, sound, well-balanced
horse which gives the impression of strength, agility
and alertness. The disposition should be eager and
friendly, not skittish.
B. Size: The American Miniature Horse must measure
not more than 34 inches at the base of the last hair on
the mane for Under Division, and not more than 38
inches for Over Division. Since the breed objective
is the smallest possible perfect horse preference in
judging shall be given to the smallest, all other factors
being equal. In no case shall a smaller horse be placed
over a larger horse with better conformation.
Priority in judging shall be in this order:
1. Soundness
2. Balance and conformity to the standard of
perfection
3. Size
C. Head: In proportion to the body; neither excessively
long nor short. The eyes should be large, alert, and
prominent with no discrimination in color. The ears
open toward the front and carried erect. The teeth
Miniature Horse
Section XIII - American Miniature Horse Registry 4
should show no signs of parrot mouth or undershot
jaw.
D. Neck: Strong and muscular, proportionate to body and
the type of horse represented.
E. Body: Well-muscled with good bone and substance,
well sprung ribs, level topline, as nearly as possible of
equal height in withers and rump, fore and hind quarters
well angulated, so that the horse in movement
shows a smooth gait.
F. Legs: Straight, clean and sound.
G. Hooves: Round and compact, trimmed as short as
practical for an unshod horse, and in good condition.
H. Color: Any color, eye color and/or marking pattern are
equally acceptable.
I. Throat-Latch: Clean and well defined, allowing ample
flexion at the poll.
J. Shoulder: Long, sloping and well-angulated, allowing
a free swinging stride and alert head/neck carriage.
Well muscled forearm.
K. Hindquarters: Long, well-muscled hip, thigh and
gaskin. Highest point of croup to be same height as
withers. Tail-set neither excessively high nor low, but
smoothly rounding off rump.
L. Disqualifications: Height in excess of 34 inches for
Under Division and 38 inches for Over Division miniatures.
Dwarfism, unsoundness; or cryptorchidism
in aged stallions. Complete or partial loss of sight in
either eye will not be a disqualification if the loss of
sight results from traumatic injury. A licensed veterinarian
must verify the deltiology of the sight loss as
traumatic and such copy must accompany the horse’s
papers.
Miniature Horse 5 Section XIII -
American Miniature Horse Registry
M. Horse shall be shown with full mane and tail (no full
roach). Mane and tail length shall be left to the decision
and discretion of the exhibitor. Thinning, pulling,
shortening, etc., of a mane and tail is permissible.
Okay….
This is directed at dreaminmini, who earlier on posted that a Shetland (at least the small enough to be AMHR Shetlands) do not fit the miniature HORSE standard of perfection. I am quite puzzled.
The ASPC/AMHR horses I have seen have very much fitted into the standard of perfection. Many of them look exactly like the AMHR horses that do not have Shetland papers. Some are more horse like than the majority of Miniatures. As I see it, many Minis still look like the “ponies” of yesterday—if you grew them up into a 15.2 hh horse would they really look like a horse—or would their “pony” proportions be very obvious. I would say the latter—you would be looking at a 15.2 hand pony rather than a horse.
Now—when you look at these two photos….
please tell me how these two do NOT fit into the standard of perfection above? Obviously the second one doesn’t fit in by virtue of size…he is a 44” Shetland….but his type is most assuredly HORSE. If he could be shrunk down to 37” he would fit the Mini horse standard perfectly. How can anyone say that the American Shetlands do not look like HORSES?
The first horse pictured—the palomino pinto—is a Shetland Pony….but he fits within AMHR size. When he is old enough…unless he has a major growth spurt…he will be able to hardship into AMHR. How would he not fit the AMHR standard of perfection? What is there about him that says “pony” rather than “horse”? He is more horse proportioned than a good many Miniatures. If I could grow him up to 15.2 he would truly look like a horse, not an oversized “pony”. He would be a very nice Miniature Horse. Will I show him AMHR? Quite possibly not. As I said before, I like showing ponies…Minis, not so much.
Renee—in an earlier thread you yourself stated that once a Shetland gets his AMHR papers, in your view he becomes a Miniature Horse. Remember that one? Yet now when we are talking about ASPC/AMHR horses, you’re saying they are different.
Standard of Perfection
A. General Impression: A small, sound, well-balanced
horse which gives the impression of strength, agility
and alertness. The disposition should be eager and
friendly, not skittish.
B. Size: The American Miniature Horse must measure
not more than 34 inches at the base of the last hair on
the mane for Under Division, and not more than 38
inches for Over Division. Since the breed objective
is the smallest possible perfect horse preference in
judging shall be given to the smallest, all other factors
being equal. In no case shall a smaller horse be placed
over a larger horse with better conformation.
Priority in judging shall be in this order:
1. Soundness
2. Balance and conformity to the standard of
perfection
3. Size
C. Head: In proportion to the body; neither excessively
long nor short. The eyes should be large, alert, and
prominent with no discrimination in color. The ears
open toward the front and carried erect. The teeth
Miniature Horse
Section XIII - American Miniature Horse Registry 4
should show no signs of parrot mouth or undershot
jaw.
D. Neck: Strong and muscular, proportionate to body and
the type of horse represented.
E. Body: Well-muscled with good bone and substance,
well sprung ribs, level topline, as nearly as possible of
equal height in withers and rump, fore and hind quarters
well angulated, so that the horse in movement
shows a smooth gait.
F. Legs: Straight, clean and sound.
G. Hooves: Round and compact, trimmed as short as
practical for an unshod horse, and in good condition.
H. Color: Any color, eye color and/or marking pattern are
equally acceptable.
I. Throat-Latch: Clean and well defined, allowing ample
flexion at the poll.
J. Shoulder: Long, sloping and well-angulated, allowing
a free swinging stride and alert head/neck carriage.
Well muscled forearm.
K. Hindquarters: Long, well-muscled hip, thigh and
gaskin. Highest point of croup to be same height as
withers. Tail-set neither excessively high nor low, but
smoothly rounding off rump.
L. Disqualifications: Height in excess of 34 inches for
Under Division and 38 inches for Over Division miniatures.
Dwarfism, unsoundness; or cryptorchidism
in aged stallions. Complete or partial loss of sight in
either eye will not be a disqualification if the loss of
sight results from traumatic injury. A licensed veterinarian
must verify the deltiology of the sight loss as
traumatic and such copy must accompany the horse’s
papers.
Miniature Horse 5 Section XIII -
American Miniature Horse Registry
M. Horse shall be shown with full mane and tail (no full
roach). Mane and tail length shall be left to the decision
and discretion of the exhibitor. Thinning, pulling,
shortening, etc., of a mane and tail is permissible.
Okay….
This is directed at dreaminmini, who earlier on posted that a Shetland (at least the small enough to be AMHR Shetlands) do not fit the miniature HORSE standard of perfection. I am quite puzzled.
The ASPC/AMHR horses I have seen have very much fitted into the standard of perfection. Many of them look exactly like the AMHR horses that do not have Shetland papers. Some are more horse like than the majority of Miniatures. As I see it, many Minis still look like the “ponies” of yesterday—if you grew them up into a 15.2 hh horse would they really look like a horse—or would their “pony” proportions be very obvious. I would say the latter—you would be looking at a 15.2 hand pony rather than a horse.
Now—when you look at these two photos….
please tell me how these two do NOT fit into the standard of perfection above? Obviously the second one doesn’t fit in by virtue of size…he is a 44” Shetland….but his type is most assuredly HORSE. If he could be shrunk down to 37” he would fit the Mini horse standard perfectly. How can anyone say that the American Shetlands do not look like HORSES?
The first horse pictured—the palomino pinto—is a Shetland Pony….but he fits within AMHR size. When he is old enough…unless he has a major growth spurt…he will be able to hardship into AMHR. How would he not fit the AMHR standard of perfection? What is there about him that says “pony” rather than “horse”? He is more horse proportioned than a good many Miniatures. If I could grow him up to 15.2 he would truly look like a horse, not an oversized “pony”. He would be a very nice Miniature Horse. Will I show him AMHR? Quite possibly not. As I said before, I like showing ponies…Minis, not so much.
Renee—in an earlier thread you yourself stated that once a Shetland gets his AMHR papers, in your view he becomes a Miniature Horse. Remember that one? Yet now when we are talking about ASPC/AMHR horses, you’re saying they are different.