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Are Tennessee Walkers skinny?

13K views 18 replies 11 participants last post by  Corporal  
#1 ·
My half-Tennessee Walker is quite a skinny horse. My father says when he owned TWHs, they were all pretty skinny. So, I was just wondering, are they naturally skinny or what? Haha, just a random question.
 
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#2 ·
Nope. I have owned many TWH's and TWH crosses and I owned a TWH that I bought as a 19yo. He was heavy and an easy keeper. He developed Cushings bc of it.
Any horse can be a hard keeper, but TWH's are outcrossed enough that they shouldn't be.
 
#3 ·
I would say from personal experience there are more walkers out there on the narrow side than wide (not skinny or fat). Always figured they've been purposely breed that way as a narrow horse is easier to straddle than wide horses. But, the wide ones I've seen have been every bit as wide as a quarter horse.
 
#4 ·
Well I would say their body style would more closely resemble a TB or Warmblood before a stocky QH or Paint, however my TWH would have never been considered skinny nor would any healthy TWH I have ever seen.

Like mentioned above, within the breed there are individual animals that fall to either side of the scale.
 
#5 ·
I have heard that the old school "plantation" TWH's are thicker but I don't know if that is correct. I've always been a stock breed person so I haven't been around many TWHs.

That being said, my aunt has two and her gelding is very thick, he is as thick as any quarter horse. Her mare is tall and narrow, but not thin. When I rode her it was completely different from my short stocky QH!
 
#7 ·
I have heard that the old school "plantation" TWH's are thicker but I don't know if that is correct. I've always been a stock breed person so I haven't been around many TWHs.

That being said, my aunt has two and her gelding is very thick, he is as thick as any quarter horse. Her mare is tall and narrow, but not thin. When I rode her it was completely different from my short stocky QH!
Old school TWH should have thick, heavy bones but still can still be built on the narrow side.
 
#8 ·
Ours are very easy keepers-- not skinny at all.. walkers tend to not have any topline when sitting around in pasture undermuscled-- theyre already a narrow backed horse so they might appear 'skinny'.

Ours are out of the Mery Go Boy lines-- about 14.1 not skinny- very correct straight legs- straight backed-(not down or uphill) our mare is 16 and she stays fat on just orchard grass hay.. very hardy breed of horse.



When did you last worm your horse?
 
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#9 ·
Ditto the other posters.

I have one TWH that is long/lanky and very athletic. Until he was around ten, he burned up calories standing still and I always had trouble "covering" his hip bones. Now that he's 19, sadly he doesn't have that problem anymore; he needs to lose about 50 pounds:-|

The other two have always looked like QH's and both of them have metabolic issues.

Years ago, I was on a trail ride with my eldest TWH, and somebody asked me how I taught that Quarter Horse to gait:shock:
 
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#10 ·
The first one you described sounds just like my Zanzibar's Lightning Prince! Ah!
 
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#12 ·
So, it turns out my uncle (Zanzi's previous owner) has never wormed him. He's almost 4, and he's never been wormed... What should we do?
 
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#14 ·
Okay -- Thank you! I can't believe he's never been wormed! :-(
 
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#16 ·
I second getting the vet involved since he's four and hasn't been wormed yet:)

Way Back In The Old Days, worming a horse consisted of taking the paper off a cigarette and giving the horse the tobacco -- once a year in the Spring:)

If your uncle smokes, that may be how your horse was wormed:-p
 
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#19 ·
I heard about doing this from an old timer, in the late 1980's. I forget to mention that there are Percheron genes in TWH's, hence the heavier types with a big barrel and good sized leg bones and feet. About 20 years ago they started to breed a leaner line of TWH's. Not my personal preference, and I wouldn't buy one that looked like that.
 
#18 ·
I've seen both types of walker! I've known long, lean, leggy things that had to have grain poured on them to keep hip bones from showing. These are mostly "new" type walkers from GGC lines. A lot of the walkers I met on the CTR/endurance circuit tend to be "hard keepers."

"Foundation" walkers tend to keep weight more easily. "Air ferns," I call them. They just need air and grass to stay fat!

Here's my 1/4 walker during competition season. (Running around the barn. :lol:) The rest of her is foundation SSH. She doesn't get "skinny," even in tip-top shape. She does lose a lot of weight during actual rides, however. But training doesn't take a huge bite out of her.
 

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