POA DOES recognize horses that are over height. They are allowed to be used as breeding stock, just not shown.
The folks that complained about not being able to exhibit their solid Appies were some big money people who spent a fortune on thousands of dollars to so-and-sos racing QH stud fee and oh darn, got a solid horse that couldnt race. Big breeders were losing big money... So the rules were changed not because the majority of the members wanted it to (hmmm reminds me of a recent meeting that passed a change in where Minis were to be measured) and the solids were allowed to compete. If I wanted a horse that looked like a QH, then I would have bought one. When I opened the Appaloosa breed magazine and thought I was reading a QH magazine by the pics... that was enough for me. We had been using them for work horses, showing, competing and breeding for a few years, but I did not like the direction they were heading, and do not like what I see of many today. The breed has been ruined, in my opinion, by too much outcrossing to horses that do not resemble, nor carry the same genetics as another Appy. AND are allowed to outcross to horses that <gasp> carry PINTO/PAINT genes, which is NOT allowed in the Appy world.
The QH registry worked since 1940 to make it's 'breed' solid colored too, and for years refused to recognize Pintos or Paints that had two registered QH parents as a QH, but that certainly changed, so why will the Minis be any different? Color, height, it doesnt matter why the horse is being excluded. If both parents are registered in that breed registry, how can it be excluded, if the registry is saying it's a 'breed'? Any registry for that matter.... If I breed a guinea pig to a guinea pig, is the offspring not a guinea pig, regardless of color, size or hair type?
I think this is going to create some issues, personally...........
The folks that complained about not being able to exhibit their solid Appies were some big money people who spent a fortune on thousands of dollars to so-and-sos racing QH stud fee and oh darn, got a solid horse that couldnt race. Big breeders were losing big money... So the rules were changed not because the majority of the members wanted it to (hmmm reminds me of a recent meeting that passed a change in where Minis were to be measured) and the solids were allowed to compete. If I wanted a horse that looked like a QH, then I would have bought one. When I opened the Appaloosa breed magazine and thought I was reading a QH magazine by the pics... that was enough for me. We had been using them for work horses, showing, competing and breeding for a few years, but I did not like the direction they were heading, and do not like what I see of many today. The breed has been ruined, in my opinion, by too much outcrossing to horses that do not resemble, nor carry the same genetics as another Appy. AND are allowed to outcross to horses that <gasp> carry PINTO/PAINT genes, which is NOT allowed in the Appy world.
The QH registry worked since 1940 to make it's 'breed' solid colored too, and for years refused to recognize Pintos or Paints that had two registered QH parents as a QH, but that certainly changed, so why will the Minis be any different? Color, height, it doesnt matter why the horse is being excluded. If both parents are registered in that breed registry, how can it be excluded, if the registry is saying it's a 'breed'? Any registry for that matter.... If I breed a guinea pig to a guinea pig, is the offspring not a guinea pig, regardless of color, size or hair type?
I think this is going to create some issues, personally...........
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