News2 mins ago
A horse's pedigree . . .
9 Answers
I am waiting for a delivery and am getting fed up. To waste time I went to wiki for a look around.
I found a story about a horse and it shows its pedigree. ( I know nothing about horses) This question may be silly, but -
Is the first column the horse's parents
second its siblings
and
then offspring?
http://en.wikipedia.o..._%28horse%29#Pedigree
Family trees confuse me too !
I found a story about a horse and it shows its pedigree. ( I know nothing about horses) This question may be silly, but -
Is the first column the horse's parents
second its siblings
and
then offspring?
http://en.wikipedia.o..._%28horse%29#Pedigree
Family trees confuse me too !
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by wolf63. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Reading from left, for a standard pedigree: The horse's parents (sire, father, first, dam second) then each parent's parents (its grandparents) then each grandparent's parents, and so on.
Family trees for horses exist too and are used a lot in racing. One form starts with the name of a great horse, such as a Nijinksy, whose descendants have been very successful. it simply traces the line of his principal descendants down to the present. The purpose is usually to show that owner's horse is directly descended from a great one and has other close relatives which have been winners. Racing conveniently forgets descendants that win nothing (and there always plenty of those, whatever their sire achieved) .
Family trees for horses exist too and are used a lot in racing. One form starts with the name of a great horse, such as a Nijinksy, whose descendants have been very successful. it simply traces the line of his principal descendants down to the present. The purpose is usually to show that owner's horse is directly descended from a great one and has other close relatives which have been winners. Racing conveniently forgets descendants that win nothing (and there always plenty of those, whatever their sire achieved) .