Another thing is I even hear talked about and read about here on the forum is people criticizing others for bringing (GASP) that horrible "pony blood" into minis. Isn't a pony any horse under 14.2 and a mini any horse under 38"? If a mini measures out and goes over 38" doesn't he become a pony regardless of the blood flowing in his veins?
I have spent a little time on allbreedpedigree.com. Plug in a Miniature's name and see what comes up. If the horse has a pedigree that is beyond the last few generations, it will more than likely go back to registered Shetlands. My guess is that those horses that seem to "come out of nowhere" are also out of registered Shetlands or unregistered (read "not kept up") Shetland stock. Buckeroo - Shetland, Rowdy - Shetland, etc. Crossing "true miniatures" back with Shetlands is like crossing a Polled Hereford with a horned one. It's really the same breed. Yes, there is probably a rare few that have "something else" mixed in there, but come on....let's face it, it is a Shetland for the most part. It has just "evolved" as people have said here.
Do you really think that the present Arabian is just like the Arabian of the past...no way! How about the QH? You might as well put WP bloodlines in a different registry from the HUS lines from the Performance horse (reining, cutting) bloodlines! It's still the same breed but they are SO different! Western Pleasure horses have been bred to roll peanuts and go slow! More than likely you couldn't cut a cow or go over a jump with a WP-bred horse if you wanted to!
Just the same, as has been said, minis
can and
have "developed" into different breed types. I have them in my barn. Some are more low and long and other are more upheaded and ambitious! Why is one better than the other? Instead of focusing on "true miniature" style, why don't we focus on horses that are well-conformed and can move well, not "pitter-pattering", but with actual fluidity and round reach with natural knee action! Horses that can halter
AND perform! Horses that are built "uphill" instead of "downhill", so they can track up and have endurance. (Little Dutch Warmbloods would be wonderful!
)
I have a mini gelding that is fluid and round. His dam is out of unregistered stock. My guess?....Shetland. Do I care? Not a bit. He can move and has been a GREAT ambassador for the mini breed. We only show ADS shows where there are all sorts of breeds shown together, Arabs, Saddlebreds, Fjords, Haflingers, QH, Morgans, drafts, etc. The judge has to pick from all these types. A good moving horse is a good moving horse, no matter what the breed or type. When some very "big horse" people watch my gelding move, they are amazed. I have had
numerous people come up to me and say, "I don't normally like minis, but I like
this miniature." Why do they tell me that? Because he can move. He doesn't pitter-patter! In pleasure classes against big horses, he is
always in the upper ribbons!
We don't breed, so I urge you breeders to focus on horses that can
move. They can move high or low, but with roundness, fluidity, and ability to reach forward. That will do more for the promotion of the breed than anything, regardless as to whether or not you split the "big moving" horses in the driving classes.