this is interesting---

Just how tall is a hand?
by Shlei


Equines are measured in units. Which unit of measure is used depends
on the association doing the registration. Some registries use inches
to determine size, since it is easier than trying to convert to hands.
A hand is four inches. The story behind this unit of measurement is
that a kind went to measure his favorite horse. Not having a device to
measuer with, he used the only thing he knew would be consistent: the
palm of his hand. Since then, the hand has been the unit of measure
for equines. The letters HH or hh after the numbers stand for Hands
High. The single letter H or H may be used, standing just for "hands".

Parts of a hand are given after the whole unit, following a decimal.
10.2 hands (can also be read as just Ten-two) means ten hands and two
more inches. (4 inches x 10 hands equals 40 inches, plus two
additional inches, so 10.2 is 42 inches tall). 10.3 would be 10 hands
and 3 inches, forty-three (43) inches. There is no such thing as 10
hands 4 inches, as 4 inches would be an additional hand. However, even
fractions of an inch can be listed, such as 10.3 ¾ hh. (Ten hands, 3
¾" inches, or Ten-three and three-quarters: just ¼" shy of a full 11
hands.)

3.3 hands - 15 inches at the withers, the smallest horse ever
documented. Too Small! But, this animal reportedly only lived to be
two years old (just short of what anyone would call mature).
4.2 hands - 18 inches.  A few Miniature foals are only 18 inches high at birth.
6 hands - 24 inches. There have been a few Miniature Horses reported
at this height (short?) in recent years.
6.1 hands - 25 inches - unverified report of the smallest known mature
Miniature Donkey
6.2 hands- 26 inches - the height of the smallest known breeding
Miniature donkeys (in the USA) and also the height of the smallest
known mule in the world (General Grant).
7 hands - 28 inches. A few Miniature donkeys this small, difficult for
females in pregnancy and birthing. Animals this small prized in some
circles, but conformation tends to suffer.  Either malproportioned in
some cases, or very tiny with weak bone.
7.2 - 30 inches. Was once being debated as the cut-off point for
breeding size in Miniature donkeys (no plans by ADMS to do this)
8 hands - 32 inches. Miniature size for horse, donkey or mule. Good
average for Miniature Donkey height.
9 hands - 36 inches - breakover point from Miniature to Small standard
for donkeys with no pedigree (Maximum height 36") . Still miniature
height for mules.
9.2 hands - 38 inches. Maximum allowable height for Miniature donkeys
with BOTH parents registered as Miniature. Still classified as
Oversized in MDR.
10 hands - 40 inches. Breakover for small standard to Standard
donkeys. (Still Miniature height for mules)
11 hands - 44 inches. Standard donkeys in this height range. Common
height for most of the Plains zebras (Grants, Damaraland, Chapmans)
12 hands - 48 inches. The breakover from Standard to Large Standard in donkeys
12.2 hands - 50 inches. The breakover from Miniature to Saddle Mules.
13 hands  - 52 inches - large Standard donkeys. Considered Pony height
in horse breeds. Top end height for zebras, only Grevy's species
usually get this tall.
13.2 hands - 54 inches - breakover from Large Standard to Mammoth
height in Jennets
14 hands -  56 inches - breakover point from Large Standard to Mammoth
for Jacks and Geldings
14.2 - 58 inches - in horses considered the line between Pony (under
14.2) and horse height. Typical size of many Mustangs, although a
recent infusion of outside blood in some herds produces larger animals
now.
15 hands - 60 inches - typical for many saddle horse breeds, mules,
and reaching the top end for Mammoth height. About average height for
Arabians and some Gaited breeds.
16 hands - 64 inches. Getting pretty large for a donkey, but a few
jacks reported close to this height. Typical range for saddle mules,
draft horses, and many saddle horse breeds.
17 hands - 68 inches. Extremely large for a donkey, they tend to "fall
apart" in conformation at this height. Commonly seen in some Draft
horse breeds, Warmbloods, and a few saddle mules.
18 hands - 72 inches. A few specimens this tall, but unusual in all
but a few breeds, mainly Warmblood or Drafters.
19 hands - 76 inches! (6 foot, 4" at the withers). Taller than most men!
19.1 hands - 77 inches high, 6 foot 5 inches at the withers. The
height of the tallest Mule in the World, according to the Guinness
Book of World Records. Apollo, (b 1977, in TN) is listed with teammate
Anak at 18.3. (75 inches)
20 hands - 80 inches.
21 hands -  84 inches
21.2 ½ hands - 86 ½ inches at the withers. Tallest horse ever
documented, a Shire gelding named Sampson (aka Mammoth with good
reason!) measured in 1850 and listed in the Guinness Book of World
Records.

How do you measure an equine?
You must use a measuring stick, with a cross-piece and preferably a
level. Stand the animal on a hard, level surface (a drive, aisle, or
sheet of plyboard). A muddy field or uneven ground won't give you an
accurate reading.
Place the level/crossbar at the withers. The stick should be straight
up-and-down and not leaning. Measure at the top of the withers (the
last hair of the mane on most equines). If you are not sure where to
measure, put a small treat like a bit of apple or carrot on the ground
in front of the animal. Look at the shoulders when they put their head
down. The part of the shoulders that sticks up HIGHEST when their head
is down is where you measure to.

If you try to measure just using a flexible tape measure you won't get
an accurate measurement. A version of using the tape used to be called
"Jackstock Measuring" and resulted in additions of fractions of an
inch to more than 2" to an animals height.

Measure three times, and average the readings if you have to. You will
find it's very hard to make an animal measure up exactly the same
every time. Remember, too, that measuring should be done when the
animals hooves are freshly trimmed, or at least of proper length. Long
toes and the addition of shoes can add to a height.

Height measurements should not be given in most cases in fractions of
anything smaller than 1/8 of an inch. A thick winter coat or a little
extra hoof can cause that much difference with ease.

-- 
yipie tie yie yo

Reply via email to