NECK. 



223 



is that the racer, chaser, and hunter should be hght in 

 the head, neck and shoulders. 



The neck, with respect to its contour, is designated 

 high-crested (or convex, Fig. 312), straight (Figs. 275 

 and 277), or ewe-necked (concave. Fig. 307), as the 

 case may be. The contour varies a good deal ac- 

 cording to the manner the animal holds his head, 

 and should be judged by the form it assumes when the 

 horse stands in an oi'dinary manner at attention (p. 79), 



Photo hit'\ 



V\ii. 312. — Ardenne Stallion. 



[.i. LH;i.rnN, I'AHIS 



with the line of its face at an angle of about 60° to the 

 ground. Some horses, especially coarse bred entires, have 

 a very high and thick crest (Fig. 312), from an excessive 

 amount of fat having been deposited above the suspensory 

 ligament of the head and neck. Such a formation, from 

 overloading the fore - hand, is a marked defect in any 

 kind of saddle-horse. A slight convexity of crest in a lean 

 though fairly muscular neck, as in Fig. 309, is a beauty. 



