TENNESSEE
WALKING HORSE CEF RULES
PART I: GENERAL
SECTION 1: Registration, Protests
a. Horses to be shown in this division must be registered with one of
the following Registries: The Canadian Registry For The Tennessee Walking
Horse, and/or The International Walking Horse Registry (Tennessee) WHOA
and/or Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders' and Exhibitors' Association.
Horses under one year of age must be eligible for, and registration
applied for with any of the above mentioned Registries. Any horse one
year or older must have been issued a Registration Certificate by ONE
of the above registries before it is eligible to compete in any class.
Horses must be entered under their full registered name and number.
b. Entries must be serviceably sound and in good condition.
c. Horses must wear natural mane and natural, unset, ungingered tail.
Braids and ribbons, neatly attached at the forelock and top of the mane
are mandatory for all English classes requiring Saddle Suit attire.
(optional in Breeding and Halter classes)
d. Form and movement should be the result of selective breeding and
good training. The use of pads, any device between hoof and shoe, chains,
rollers, weighted bellboots, or other artificial devices attached to
the hooves or legs are prohibited in the show ring, and on the show
grounds before, during or after a show. The show committee shall bar
violators from further participation for the remainder of the show.
Violators shall forfeit all entry fees and winnings for the entire show.
e. Any evidence of soring, tenderness, or unsoundness will result in
disqualification of horse, trainer, exhibitor, and owner from continued
participation in the show. All entry fees and winnings will be forfeited.
f. A PROTEST made in writing and accompanied by a deposit of $50.00
cash or certified cheque may be made by an officiating judge, an exhibitor
or his authorized agent. It must be addressed to the Horse Show Committee,
and filed within forty-eight. hours of the holding of the class. Sec
CEF RULES, Chapter 10, Part II.
g. A protest regarding shoes to be handled IMMEDIATELY. A shoe may be
protested by an exhibitor or his agent or a Show Official and must be
accompanied by $50. cash or certified cheque. If a shoe is protested
the owner may:
1. elect to withdraw the entry and forfeit all entry fees and winnings
of the protested entry for the entire show. in which event the protest
shall be withdrawn and the fee refunded.
2. have the shoe removed in the presence of the Steward and a Show Official
so that it can be examined immediately. If the shoe shows any evidence
of tampering or exceeding the limits, the entry shall be disqualified
for the balance of the show and all entry fees and winnings of the entry
for the entire show shall be forfeited. Removal and replacement of any
protested shoe is the sole responsibility of the owner of the entry;
however, if the protest is not upheld, the protester must pay $25 to
the owner to defray the cost of removal and replacement of the shoe.
h. No abuse of horses will be tolerated. Any person reported to show
management as abusing a horse with a whip or other such device, whether
it be in the stabling area, trailer area, hitching ring or show ring
shall be liable for disciplinary action. Such action may vary from warning,
to expulsion from the show, to suspension from a number of shows, to
a report to the CEF and Ethical Practice Review Board.
i. In the event that there is a failure to have a rule to cover a situation
or where a rule is contradictory or ambiguous, the Steward or Judge
or Show Committee shall refer to the currant CEF General Rules and handbook
for guidance.
SECTION 2: TYPE AND CONFORMATION
a.TYPE: A Tennessee Walking Horse is distinctive for its' movement ÿ
a natural, loose, smooth ground covering gait. IT SHOULD MOVE FORWARD
FREELY AND EXHIBIT LOOSENESS FROM TAIL TO POLL WHILE IN A FLATFOOT WALK
OR A RUNNING WALK MAINTAINING EVENNESS, HEAD NOD, AND OVERSTRIDE. The
disposition is gentle, accepting and intelligent.
b.CONFORMATION: The Tennessee Walking Horse should have an overall impression
of balance with legs, neck, back, and head in proportion to the size
and shape of the body. The slope of the croup should be equal and opposite
to the slope of the shoulder forming a trapezoid shape with the top
line and bottom line of the horse. HEAD: There should be an intelligent
look, neat head, well shaped and pointed ears, clean wide set and alert
eyes, and a tapered muzzle. NECK: The neck should be always be in proportion
to the body size gracefully rising from the shoulder. SHOULDER: The
shoulders should be muscular and well sloping for maximum roach. BACK:
The back should be short with good coupling at the loins. BODY: The
animal should be well ribbed, full in flank and of good proportion and
width in chest, i.e. not so wide or narrow as to impede free shoulder
movement. CROUP: The croup should be generally sloping tending to drop
off quickly with the tail carried high. HIPS: The hips should be well
muscled and this development will usually extend wall down toward the
hocks. HOCKS: The back legs should be strong and sound. with the hocks
sturdy and well curved. Because TWH are designed to move wall under
themselves, greater angulation of the rear legs is acceptable (may be
slightly sickle hocked). There should be length from the hip to the
hock. LEGS: Legs are straight and sound with short cannon bones and
sloping pasterns of good length. Lag should appear flat with good definition
of tendons. FEET: Feet should be in proportion to the size of the horse.
COLOUR:The horse may be of any colour or combination of colours. SIZE:
The mature horse may range in size from 14.2 hand to 16.2 hands with
some horses slightly over or under.
SECTION 3: SHOEING
a. Horses may be shown barefoot or shod. If shod, the shoes must conform
to either of the following categories. The description is the MAXIMUM
allowed in each category. It is to be recognized that shoes of less
size than those described below are allowable, but within each category
the maximum measurements must NOT be exceeded.
LIGHT-SHOD: The Light shoe must be no wider then 3/4 inch, no thicker
then 3/8 inch, with the exception of the caulk which must be no thicker
then 3/4 inch, and the turnback shall not exceed one inch. The shoe
is not to extend beyond the toe of the hoof. The shoe is not to extend
beyond the bulb of the heel when a perpendicular line is drawn from
the bulb of the horse's heel to the ground. No additional weight shall
be allowed on or in the hoof, other then the shoe and nails. Barefoot
horses MAY compete in this category. Heavy shod horses MAY NOT compete
in this category.
HEAVY SHOD: The Heavy shoe must not exceed 1/2 inch in thickness or
1 1/2 inches in width: with no bare plate or other weight inside the
shoe. The caulk must not exceed a one (1) inch turnback and the shoe
must not extend more then 1/4 inch beyond the hoof at the toe. The heel
of the shoe must not extend beyond the bulb of the horse's heel when
a perpendicular line is drawn from the bulb of the horse's heel to the
ground. No additional weight shall be allowed on or in the hoof, other
then the shoe and nails. Barefoot or Light shod horses MAY compete in
this category.
b. Each class description must specify the category of shoeing that
is allowed, e.g. TWH Plantation Pleasure ÿ Light Shod or TWH Plantation
Pleasure- Heavy Shod. An individual show may specify some classes for
the barefoot horse.
c. The shoes on every horse entered will be measured by the Ring Steward,
a Veterinarian, or a qualified person so designated by show management
before each horse will be allowed to show. Such measurements and examination
of the shoes would ideally occur before each class, but must occur at
least ONCE during each four hour show period. It is the option of the
show committee to examine the shoes of the first, second, and third
place horse after each class. This regulation and the procedure to be
used must be stated in the prize list for each show. At the same time
the horse will be checked for to general soundness, soreness, or tenderness.
d. Any infraction of the shoeing regulations will result in the barring
of that horse, owner, trainer and exhibitor from continued participation
in the show. All entry fees and prizes won will be forfeited.
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