
The Justin Morgan Horse
The
beauty of the Morgan horse lifts the heart. The breed exists solely
because it pleases people. It is their heritage.
The Morgan is easily recognized by his
proud carriage, upright graceful neck, and distinctive head with
expressive eyes. Deep bodied and compact, the Morgan has strongly
muscled quarters.
The intelligence, willingness, zest for life, and good
sense of the Morgan is blended with soundness of limb, athleticism, and
stamina. In addition, Morgan thriftiness and longevity have made this
breed a good bargain for more than 200 years - easy to love and
affordable to own.
The Morgan horse is free moving and calm under
western tack or elegant and aristocratic ridden in English style. A
tractable temperament allows the Morgan to excel when driving in single
or multiple hitches. Companionable and comfortable on a quiet pleasure
ride anywhere open skies beckon, working as a sensible partner in a long
day of ranch work or endurance riding, waiting alert and ready to enter
a show ring, or performing in formal riding disciplines, the Morgan is a
versatile horse within a versatile breed. The Morgan horse agreeably
adapts to his owner's life style. This first American breed can be found
worldwide.
Reliable, loyal, tireless, and versatile, a
Morgan becomes one with people of all ages and walks of life, sharing
the mutual enjoyment in every equine pastime.
Standard of
Perfection for Morgan Horses
Correct Morgan type and conformation should
be considered not only during In-Hand classes but also in performance
classes where rules indicate that type and conformation are to be
considered. The Standard is also used to evaluate Morgan type and
conformation outside of the show ring.
- Type is the ideal or
standard of perfection for the breed. A Morgan is distinctive for
its stamina and vigor, personality and eagerness and strong natural
way of moving.
- Conformation is the
degree of perfection of the component parts and their relationship
to each other.
- The head should
be expressive with broad forehead; large prominent eyes; with
straight or slightly dished short face; firm fine lips; large
nostrils and well-rounded jowls. The ears should be short and
shapely, set rather wide apart and carried alertly. Mares may
have a slightly longer ear.
- The throatlatch
is slightly deeper than other breeds and should be refined
sufficiently to allow proper flexion at the poll and normal
respiration.
- The neck should
come out on top of an extremely well-angulated shoulder with
depth from top of withers to point of shoulder. It should be
relatively fine in relation to sex. It should be slightly arched
and should blend with the withers and back. The top line of the
neck should be considerably longer than the bottom line. The
stallion should have more crest than the mare or gelding. An
animal gelded late in life may resemble the stallion more
closely.
- The withers
should be well defined and extend into the back in proportion to
the angulation of the shoulder.
- The body should
be compact with a short back, close coupling, broad loins, deep
flank, well-sprung ribs, croup long and well muscled with tail
attached high, carried gracefully and straight. A weak, low, or
long back is a severe fault. The Morgan horse should not be
higher at the croup than at the withers.
- The stifle should
be placed well forward and low in the flank area.
- The legs should
be straight and sound with short cannons, flat bone, and an
appearance of over-all substance with refinement. The forearm
should be relatively long in proportion to the cannon. The
pasterns should have sufficient length and angulation to provide
a light, springy step.
- The structure of the rear
legs is of extreme importance to the selection of a
long-lasting equine athlete. Any sign of poor angulation of the
hocks, sickle hocks or cow hocks must be considered a severe
fault. Lack of proper flexion of the hock is cause for very
close examination of the entire structure of the rear legs and
should not be tolerated in breeding stock or show ring winners.
- The feet should
be in proportion to the size of the horse, round, open at heel,
with concave sole and hoof of dense structure.
- Viewed from the front, the
chest should be well developed. The front legs should
be perpendicular to the ground and closely attached to the body.
- Viewed from the side, the
top line represents a gentle curve from the poll to the
back, giving the impression of the neck sitting on top of the
withers rather than in front of them, continuing to a short,
straight back and a relatively level croup rounding into a well
muscled thigh. The tail should be attached high and carried
well-arched. At maturity the croup should NOT be higher than the
withers. The under line should be long and the body deep through
the heart girth and flanks. The extreme angulation of the
shoulder results in the arm being a little more vertical than in
other breeds, placing the front legs slightly farther forward on
the body. The front legs should be straight and perpendicular to
the ground. The rear cannons should be perpendicular to the
ground when points of hocks and buttocks are in the same
vertical lines.
- Viewed from the rear, the
croup should be well rounded, thighs and gaskins
well-muscled. Legs should be straight. The gaskin should be
relatively long in relation to the cannon. The Morgan should
portray good spring of rib and well-rounded buttocks. Slab-sided
individuals should be faulted.
- The height ranges
from 14.1 to 15.2 hands, with some individuals under or over.
- Horses must be serviceably
sound-i.e. must not show evidence of lameness, broken
wind or complete loss of sight in either eye.
- Stallions two years old
and over must have all the fully developed physical
characteristics of a stallion. Mature stallions must be
masculine in appearance. Mares must be feminine in appearance.
- Coat or eye color
shall have no bearing when judging Morgan horses.
- Brands, including
freeze brands, shall not be discriminated against in any class.
- Other distinctive attributes
of the Morgan horse are his presence and personality. These include:
- Animation
- Stamina
- Vigor
- Alertness
- Adaptability
- Attitude
- Tractability
- Correct way of going for
In-Hand classes:
It is imperative that height of action should not take precedence
over correct way of going. Emphasis shall be on type and
conformation with consideration given to horse's ability to move
correctly on the lead.
- The walk should
be rapid, flat-footed, with a four-beat cadence, and elastic,
with the accent on flexion in the pastern.
- The trot should
be a two-beat, diagonal gait, animated, elastic, square, and
collected. The rear action should be in balance with the front.
- Posing horses must
stand squarely on all four feet with the front legs perpendicular to
the ground. Rear legs may be placed slightly back. Judge must ask
exhibitor to move hind legs up under horse for inspection.
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