From Robin LFK post >>
A basic understanding of how genes are passed must be considered before jumping to final conclusion and elimination of these horses that carry the dwarf gene. We need to treat this genetic trait the same as the HYPP in Quarter Horses by identifying the gene/s and guide breeding programs accordingly. A horse that carries the dwarf gene may also carry traits that are so necessary for the refinement and structure of proportion and conformation for the future of the miniature horse.<<
I kind of agree with Robin on this point. What if we found that the pretty head big eye, tiny muzzle was part of the dwarf genetics? There's no point in throwing the baby out with the bathwater, UNTIL there is a definitive test and we KNOW how to handle it.
I'm also of the opinion that we do NOT know for a fact that some dwarves are not the result of environmental, vaccinating at the wrong time or other causes. Not the majority of dwarves, but there is no proof that the random one that happens isn't from some other cause. Ex. what if you had a a stallion bred to the same 25 mares for 10 years (250 foals) and year eleven a dwarf is born? Are those parents carriers for all 10 previous foals? All the hundreds he's sired on other mares possible carriers? What if it was something else we don't know of was involved? Again my opinion until its
conclusive that ALL dwarves are the result of two recessive genes from carrier parents.
I've kept track for years of lines that I've seen dwarves produced from and avoid those. Some of them are extremely prominent, but I'm not interested. Saying that, I do question how prolific Bond Tiny Tim (specifically) was or if he actually sired many of the foals attributed to him. Too many of the sons/daughters of his either didn't get the dwarf gene or may not have been his actual offspring. As for the other older size reducing stallions from way back, seeing downline, you can see the lines that did and still do pop out a dwarf. There are also sons/daughters that have never. Again know your bloodlines and conformation.
One of our original Minis (Woody - he's a pet gelding) all 37.50" of him, well his sire I found out later had produced dwarves. Woody has horrible feet. Just awful and for the past two years has been a chronic founder case regardless of what diet, trimming schedule, management we keep him on. I'm actually facing the time he's likely going to be crossing the rainbow bridge in the next few weeks (his coffin bone is starting to rotate we think). I've always attributed his awful feet to that dwarfy line from his sire.
Regarding BYB - I'm the same view as Jane. Not necessarily small breeders. BYB are the callous ones that breed whatever, rarely register and sell junk and view it's got the equipment so breed it.
I do know breeders that have produced dwarves every year, and keep breeding the horses. I'm sorry I don't care how much you've spent on the stallion or mare - STOP! I won't touch a horse that I KNOW may carry dwarf genetics. There are too many out there and we don't have a way to manage/test now so why expose yourself to that knowingly.
As for your questions:
Like, would you put them on your website? On their own page for educational purposes yes. I have a
Dwarfism page (no photos, just educational info). Honestly though if it was a severe dwarf I'd have it put down at birth, minimal would go to a no breed pet home.
Would you embrace them in public in front of other mini owners/breeders or would you hide them? I would never lie about it, but I wouldn't be promoting it either. I don't promote breeding dwarves or overt conformational flaws of any kind. I love what all the therapy people do with/for Minis, but I don't promote dwarfism as a good thing ever. Heck I won't breed mares that have thyroid or require Regumate either. My choice for my program.
Would you stand up for them if somebody insulted them? Of course. Education, education, education.
Would you be honest about the number of dwarves you've produced? Yes. Zero to date. I've bought a mare that the breeder foaled out and told me (before delivery) that the mare had had a tiny palomino colt. When the horses (it was a package of a large group of horses) arrived, I was "Who's the dwarf belong to?" Definitely obviously a dwarf. The mare had been bred before delivery, had a horrible dystocia the next year (not a dwarf foal though) and was sold as a do not breed mare.
I've also had a couple (mother & daughter bred to the same stallion) that I thought were dwarves and ran them by John Eberth, he said no just bad conformation. My thoughts years back two small horses = smaller horse. Not two short horses with slightly long backs will produce a long back smaller horse. I could line up the three generation (mare>daughter>daughter) and smaller yes, exact conformation, but started looking sausagey to me! It wasn't as obvious on the 30" mare but was on the 26" one. Live and learn.
The parents of them? Geld a stallion that sired dwarves. That's automatic. The mare would be pet homed.
Whether or not you kept the foal or not? The one that came here as a 'cute pally colt' was given away to a local family as a pet.
Good topic. It's one that isn't quite as knee jerk OMG as it was 6-7 years ago. Glad we're all more enlightened, educated and can have a rational discussion now.