Horses stance is perfect, your angle not so....try to get a little straighter to the horses barrel.
If the horse turns the head and neck to you it throws off the camera perception and makes the animal go out of proportion.
So, yes underweight but is pretty shiny which is indicative of healthy although lacking in groceries.
I see a clean throatlatch and nice shaped jowl. Wide flat forehead with a nice shaped & placed eye, nice ears and intelligent expression.
Hard to see his neck tie-in but think it is not to high or to low.
Sloping shoulder that will meld nicely into his wither/neck area once he is fully weighted out.
He is long backed but nice and straight, not dipping. In fact, if that is level ground he is built uphill not butt high which can make elevating the forehand harder to do and carry for the horse.
I can't see enough of his hind leg placement but looks pretty good what is visible at this angle.
He does appear slightly unbalanced when you place him in thirds of front, middle, hind for balancing his body image. That may be a weight thing though as he is lighter and underweight more in his butt to my eye...
He has a short somewhat steeper croup but that again may change with proper weight appearance and again be somewhat based on whether the ground is flat or sloped.
He is under-muscled but that goes with underweight too.
Horses lacking in groceries not always have good muscle mass as you need good nutrition to build balanced muscle tone.
Critiquing of horses is a opinion.
Everyone has pet peeves they like, dislike and can't stand opinion.
Some things you know you should avoid and some things can be dealt with if other parts of the horse complement a deficit.
You also must take into consideration the job the horse is being used for as some issues are a "no-go" for a jumper but more than OK for a trail horse...
A hard one for many to get past is color and pattern.
Some people will do anything and ignore everything for a color or pattern if they can't look past it...it takes a very trained eye to see a shape through some "busyness" of coat.
Recently there was a "curly" horse presented here for critique...I looked at that horse and could see some things but fairly could not get past the coat look in other areas to see good or bad...so shut my mouth and read not offered anything. He was really cute though!
So, critiquing is honestly a opinion of what you yourself like, what over years of seeing move, see standing and seeing under saddle doing a job successfully you absorb and can then pick apart as I put it a horse placed in front of you.
No horse is perfect, none that I've seen and been told that by very educated and learned professionals of horse-flesh.
You must pick and choose what you like, what you don't, what you can ignore and what you can enhance and work to correct and what you as a rider can cover and hide in flaw in the horse you present astride.
That is my take on critiquing...my opinion and some basics of what I see in the horse you presented from this one picture.
I would also guess based on the horse I see that this horse has some Thoroughbred blood in him...all assumptions. {you know what they say about assuming and assumptions right?:icon_rolleyes:}
Can't wait to read how others approach a critique and their opinions of rating importance of body parts = the total horse.
:runninghorse2:.....
jmo...
If the horse turns the head and neck to you it throws off the camera perception and makes the animal go out of proportion.
So, yes underweight but is pretty shiny which is indicative of healthy although lacking in groceries.
I see a clean throatlatch and nice shaped jowl. Wide flat forehead with a nice shaped & placed eye, nice ears and intelligent expression.
Hard to see his neck tie-in but think it is not to high or to low.
Sloping shoulder that will meld nicely into his wither/neck area once he is fully weighted out.
He is long backed but nice and straight, not dipping. In fact, if that is level ground he is built uphill not butt high which can make elevating the forehand harder to do and carry for the horse.
I can't see enough of his hind leg placement but looks pretty good what is visible at this angle.
He does appear slightly unbalanced when you place him in thirds of front, middle, hind for balancing his body image. That may be a weight thing though as he is lighter and underweight more in his butt to my eye...
He has a short somewhat steeper croup but that again may change with proper weight appearance and again be somewhat based on whether the ground is flat or sloped.
He is under-muscled but that goes with underweight too.
Horses lacking in groceries not always have good muscle mass as you need good nutrition to build balanced muscle tone.
Critiquing of horses is a opinion.
Everyone has pet peeves they like, dislike and can't stand opinion.
Some things you know you should avoid and some things can be dealt with if other parts of the horse complement a deficit.
You also must take into consideration the job the horse is being used for as some issues are a "no-go" for a jumper but more than OK for a trail horse...
A hard one for many to get past is color and pattern.
Some people will do anything and ignore everything for a color or pattern if they can't look past it...it takes a very trained eye to see a shape through some "busyness" of coat.
Recently there was a "curly" horse presented here for critique...I looked at that horse and could see some things but fairly could not get past the coat look in other areas to see good or bad...so shut my mouth and read not offered anything. He was really cute though!
So, critiquing is honestly a opinion of what you yourself like, what over years of seeing move, see standing and seeing under saddle doing a job successfully you absorb and can then pick apart as I put it a horse placed in front of you.
No horse is perfect, none that I've seen and been told that by very educated and learned professionals of horse-flesh.
You must pick and choose what you like, what you don't, what you can ignore and what you can enhance and work to correct and what you as a rider can cover and hide in flaw in the horse you present astride.
That is my take on critiquing...my opinion and some basics of what I see in the horse you presented from this one picture.
I would also guess based on the horse I see that this horse has some Thoroughbred blood in him...all assumptions. {you know what they say about assuming and assumptions right?:icon_rolleyes:}
Can't wait to read how others approach a critique and their opinions of rating importance of body parts = the total horse.
:runninghorse2:.....
jmo...