In general, i think that Anglo-Arabs ar better, because they have a corss breed line of TB and Arab in them. Which makes them good jumpers, and have speed and stamina. On the other hand, Holsteiners have a very good jumping line of genes. They are know for there jumping ability. So therefor, Anglo-Arab takes first prize in my oppinion, and Holsteiner take the second.
Hope that helps! ☻
yes
There are stray horses that live in the wild. But, no not all horses live on farms. Not all horses are work horses (Mules are usually better). They're often used for shows (jumpers, hunters, dressage..), fox hunting, general transportation.. All sorts of things.
Answer. Well it depends on the horses background. I own alot of paint horses and 2 of my paints are GREAT JUMPERS!!!!I mean like really good. but then 1 of my paint horses can't jump for beans.lol. and the rest of my paints are average. hope that helps.
Horses of courses is a jumping term... like the track is what race horses race on, well a course is what jumpers jump on
All horses can jump, it's whether they are willing to. I heard Friesians are amazing jumpers.
They can be with the right training and rider to help them along.
Yes they are very good jumpers...They are very good show horses and many people use them for jumping competitions.
Horse racing mainly. But they can make good jumpers and dressage horses etc.
Yes. Any horse can be a good jumper if they are willing and built right. Thoroughbreds have a lean, rangy conformation and are very quick and bold. They can be quite scopey show jumpers, or brave eventing horses.
there is no best at eventing but some find heavy horses ie irish draught do very well when crossed with a throughbred there a some breeds that do better than others
kaimanawas are excellent all rounders. they make good jumpers and trekkers as they are very sure footed.
Successful racehorses, show jumpers, and other horses that have done well in competitions are the most expensive. These are generally highly trained Thoroughbreds or warmbloods (Hanovarians, Oldenburgs, etc.)