This message is from: "Vanessa N Weber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Hi Lori,
Thank you for this. I know little about evaluating horses, but I know from
having bred dogs for 20 years, how different a dog can look in a photo or
video, from how it can look and feel in person. Many years ago I bought a
video converter, capable of playing and recording tapes into all the
worldwide formats available. At the time I was doing a lot of importing.
Despite the technology I was very dissapointed with some of the dogs I
received that had great looking videos.
In France, there is a process of confirmation (not  conformation), whereby a
dog is evaluated at a certain age or beyond by three judges who submit their
reports. Perhaps a questionnaire submitted by three different judges who are
recognized by the AHSA or some similar organization, along with a video
could do the trick. The questionnaire could be geared toward basic type and
movement issues that would circumvent problems of people not very familiar
with the breed. Hard to say, but as I said before, I'm not a horse judge. I
received my judging license in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels about a year
ago so I am perhaps a bit familiar with the process of judging, but
certainly not in Fjords per se.

Vanessa N Weber
Kenjockety Spaniels
(new owner of 5 Fjords)

-------Original Message-------

From: Lori Albrough
Date: 02/03/06 11:01:56
To: Fjord Horse Mailing List
Subject: Video Evaluations

This message is from: Lori Albrough <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

The video evaluation idea has a certain allure for helping to deal with
the realities of our geography. However, I think it is hard to get a
true picture of a horse from a video. I will use videos to help me
decide whether I want to go see a horse, but rarely to make a final
decision on it, unless a trusted advisor of mine has also seen the horse
in person.

Steven Wolgemuth, US long-listed dressage rider, who now helps people
find dressage horses domestically and overseas, had this to say about
evaluating a horse from a video in a recent article in Dressge Today
magazine:

"Be careful not to judge a horse too harshly when trying to evaluate his
overall quality. Videos can be the enemy of great horses and a friend to
poor-quality horses. They can make great horses look just a bit better
than average and bad horses look just a bit worse than average."

Before I read this article, I had already noticed this "averagizing"
effect of the technology, both in making a great one appear more average
and a not-so-good one appear OK, so it was interesting to have this
observation confirmed.

The other thing that video can do is make a "moment" appear to sum up a
horse. The video viewer is missing a lot of context, but can only judge
what he is seeing, whether or not it is an accurate reflection of the
true animal. As Wolgemuth says,

"A videotape can make a good or bad moment more real than it truly is.
.... A horse’s unfortunate mistake, wrong step or brilliant moment is not
a trusted normality, even if a video captured it."

Wolgemuth uses this anecdote to illustrate how much presentation can
influence perception of the horse,

"I recently reviewed a video of a beautiful, refined, light bay gelding
with long legs and light, lovely, sweeping gaits. He was being ridden in
white polo wraps on a sunny day in perfect footing in a beautiful
outdoor arena. Moments later, the tape switched to a dark brown, chubby,
short-legged, average-moving horse. To my surprise, it turned out to be
the same horse. The second part of the tape was filmed under poor
lighting in deeper, wet footing and the horse had no leg wraps.  The
difference was incredible. I was again reminded how the camera can
radically distort reality."

My experience is that "being there" allows the person who is evaluating
the horse to form a much more balanced and realistic picture of the true
animal. I already believe that there is no way that "15 minutes on the
triangle" can sum up the value of a horse, but can only give us one more
data-point about him. I would certainly not give even that much credence
to an evaluation that was purely virtual. The free-lunging vs in-hand
gait analysis definitely presents another important viewpoint, though
live-in-person would be my preference. (The free-lunging was one of my
favorite /most-useful-to-me parts of the Norwegian stallion evaluation)
Is a virtual evaluation better than nothing? Probably as an educational
tool, yes, but let's not make it into something more than it can ever be.

Lori Albrough
Moorefield Ontario


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