| General Character:
A quality pony with adequate bone and substance, hardy and active with real pony character of miniature, riding or cob type up to and including 14.2 hh.
Breed Characteristics:
All ponies must display some or all of the following:
- White sclera around the eye.
- Mottled skin - this part-dark, part-pink skin is usually most evident around the genitals, lips, muzzle, eyes and inside the ears.
- Striped hooves.
Colour:
The Inheritance Of The Spotted Coat Pattern is not completely understood and it is difficult to predict the markings of any unborn foal even from the same mating's carried out year from year. All spotted ponies (except genuine genetic Fewspots) are heterozygous and carry a solid colour gene and a spotted gene. Consequently, even if both parents are loudly marked, they can still both throw their solid coloured gene into the mating and the subsequent foal may then be born solid coloured (no spots). Theoretically, from four mating's between the same spotted stallion and mare, you have a 25% chance of breeding a Fewspot, a 50% chance of breeding a spotted of some kind and a 25% chance of breeding a solid coloured foal.
The only exception to this is if one of the parents is a "genuine" Fewspot as both of their genes are spotted so their foal will almost certainly inherit a spotted coat pattern.
Head:
Full of quality and true pony character. Big bold eyes, set well apart. Ears should be well placed, small, neat and in proportion to the head. Prominent pen nostrils. Clean well defined throat. A coarse head and roman nose is discouraged.
Neck:
Should have good length and be well carried. Moderately lean in mares but inclined to be more cresty in stallions. Slightly heavier neck is allowable in the cob type.
Shoulders:
Good strong, sloping and well laid back. Withers should be well defined but not 'knifey'.
Forelegs:
Should be square and true. Not tied-in at the elbow. Long strong forearms with well developed knee. Short flat bone below the knee. Pasterns of proportionate length and slope. Well shaped dense hooves. The cob type should have a greater abundance of bone without coarseness and a moderate quantity of fine feather when in the rough.
Hindquarters:
Lengthy, strong, well muscled, not ragged or dropping with well set on tail.
Hind Legs:
Well let down hocks, large flat clean bone, prominent points. The hock not to be set behind a line from the point of quarter to fetlock joint. No sickle or cow hocks. Pasterns to be of proportionate length and slope. Hooves well shaped and dense.
Action:
Low, straight, from the shoulder. Free flowing. Hocks well flexed with straight action coming well under the body. The cob type may show more knee action.
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