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Re: [RC] [RC] cow hocked horses - Chris A

ditto on what the others ahve said
 
I have a babson bred gelding who was terribly cowhocked when i got him. I spent a summer riding him up and down steep hills, and that boy got himself a butt and is a lot less cowhocked now. and what he's got now lends him to having a nice rolling gait.
 


D'Arcy Demianoff-Thompson <cest.mon.virage@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
If this colt is from the Khemosabi lines you need to make sure that his front legs are straight, that his pasterns are not too short, and that there is a good 45 degree angle off of the cannon bone.  You will want to check to see if there is a slightly turned out knee.  Whichis now affectionately called the 'Khemosabi knee' and lends to a club foot condition.  Kathy Mayeda's comment about the gaskins developing with help to straighten the 'cow hock' condition.  An old breeder once told that some of the 'cow hock' in arabs was important for them to move well in sandy conditions.  I don't know if that is true or not. 
 
If you get this horse will you be gelding him?
 
D'Arcy
 

--
D'Arcy L. Demianoff-Thompson
cest.mon.virage@xxxxxxxxx

"Never doubt that a small group of committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

-Margaret Mead



There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as if everything is. - Albert Einstein, physicist

Chris Anton
Skype: Chris A


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Replies
Re: [RC] [RC] cow hocked horses, D'Arcy Demianoff-Thompson