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Clydesdale
 The Clydesdale is a breed of heavy draft horse developed in and deriving its
name from the district in Scotland where it was founded. Its type was evolved by
the farmers of Lanarkshire, through which the River Clyde flows. The old name
for Lanarkshire is Clydesdale.
It was bred to meet not only the agricultural needs of these farmers, but the
demands of commerce for the coal fields of Lanarkshire and for all the types of
heavy haulage on the streets of Glasgow. The breed soon acquired more than a
local reputation, and in time, the breed spread throughout the whole of Scotland
and northern England.
The district system of hiring stallions was an early feature of Scottish
agriculture and did much to standardize and fix the type of the breed. The
records of these hiring societies go back in some cases to 1837. The Clydesdale
Horse Society was formed in 1877 and has been an active force in promoting the
breed not only in Great Britain but throughout the world. The Clydesdale alone,
of the British breeds of heavy draft, has enjoyed a steady export trade to all
parts of the world. The most active trade has been to commonwealth countries and
the United States. Today the Clydesdale is virtually the only draft breed in its
native Scotland and New Zealand. It holds a commanding lead in Australia and is
popular, though not the numerical leader, in Canada and the United States.
The Clydesdale is a very active horse. He is not bred for action, like the
Hackney, but he must have action. A Clydesdale judge uses the word "action" with
a difference. A Hackney judge using the word means high-stepping movement; a
Clydesdale judge means high lifting of the feet, not scuffling along, but the
foot at every step must be lifted clean off the ground, and the inside of every
shoe be made plain to the man standing behind. Action for the Clydesdale judge
also means "close" movement. The forelegs must be planted well under the
shoulders - not on the outside like the legs of a bulldog - and the legs must be
plumb and, so to speak, hang straight from the shoulder to the fetlock joint.
There must be no openness at the knees, and no inclination to knock the knees
together. In like manner, the hind legs must be planted closely together with
the points of the hocks turned inwards rather than outwards; the thighs must
come well down to the hocks, and the shanks from the hock joint to the fetlock
joint must be plumb and straight. "Sickle" hocks are a very bad fault, as they
lead to loss of leverage.
A Clydesdale judge begins to estimate the merits of a horse by examining his
feet. These must be open and round, not thin and flat. The hoof heads must be
wide and springy, with no suspicion of hardness that may lead to the formation
of sidebone or ringbone. The pasterns must be long, and set out at an angle of
45 degrees from the hoof head to the fetlock joint. Too long a pastern is very
objectionable, but very seldom seen.
A Clydesdale should have a nice open forehead (broad between the eyes), a flat
(neither Roman-nosed nor "dished") profile, a wide muzzle, large nostrils, a
bright, clear, intelligent eye, a big ear, and a well-arched long neck springing
out of an oblique shoulder with high withers. His back should be short and his
ribs well sprung from the backbone, like the hoops of a barrel. His quarters
should be long, and his thighs well packed with muscle and sinew. He should have
broad, clean, sharply developed hocks, and big knees, broad in front. The
impression created by a thoroughly well-built typical Clydesdale is that of
strength and activity, with a minimum of superfluous tissue. The idea is not
grossness and bulk, but quality and weight.
As in all breeds of livestock, the Clydesdale has gone through several changes
of emphasis, over the years, to meet the demands of the times. In the 20's and
30's the demand was for a more compact horse; of late, it has been for a taller, hitchier horse. Most of the horses range in size from 16.2 to 18 hands and weigh
between 1600 and 1800 lbs. Some of the mature stallions and geldings are taller
and will weigh up to 2200 lbs. With the changes in the size and type of horse
wanted, the Clydesdale emphasis on underpinning has remained paramount.
The most common color in the Clydesdale breed is bay. Black, brown, and chestnut
are also seen with roans (solid body color with white hairs throughout the coat)
in all of the colors. The preferred markings are four white socks to the knees
and hocks, and a well-defined blaze or bald face. The show ring does not
discriminate on color with light roans and horses with dark legs being
considered equally with horses of the more solid colors and traditional
markings. The increased popularity of big hitches has directed more attention to
color in recent years and the stabilization of color patterns.
For anyone desiring an active yet tractable, intelligent, stylish yet
serviceable draft animal for work, show, or simple pleasure - the Clydesdale
merits his or her most serious consideration.
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