The Jockey Club has established Tattoo Identification Services, a free resource to help owners identify tattooed but unknown Thoroughbreds in their possession.
For legible tattoos, an owner can use a free tattoo lookup feature available from The Jockey Club's website, www.jockeyclub.com, and the Registry homepage, www.registry.jockeyclub.com.
For illegible tattoos or partial tattoos, customer service representatives at Registration Services at (800) 444-8521 will assist in providing free research of a Thoroughbred's identity using the information contained in The Jockey Club's database, including color, markings, and photographs.
Information on procuring identification from illegible or partial tattoos as well as tips for reading lip tattoos and a list of frequently asked questions is available at www.registry.jockeyclub.com.
No, they just have to be a Thoroughbred
No, every thoroughbred registered gets a tattoo. If one doesnt get a tattoo it is not in the book.
A Thoroughbred is a registered breed, while a Thoroughbred X (literally 'Thoroughbred cross') is a mixed breed with Thoroughbred blood present.
It is not difficult to find the history of your horse. But your horse must be registered to find it. If in fact your horse is registered, you can look up your horse's pedigree on the internet. But if you horse is not registered, I am sorry but I do not know how to help you.
He was a registered blood bay Thoroughbred colt.
This depends on what you mean by Thoroughbred Paint. Thoroughbreds and Paints are two separate breeds. You can however have Thoroughbreds with pinto markings, but they are not Paints. You can also have Paint horses registered as appendix if they have one Thoroughbred parent.
A thoroughbred horse is a pure bred horse. All thoroughbred pedigrees for horses today can be traced back to three stallions. Answer2: As stated above a Thoroughbred is a purebred with three main foundation stallions. It also has a closed stud book which means you must use breeding stock that is already registered. Unlike some breeds you cannot breed up to a Thoroughbred.
A quick internet search says 16 hands.
If registered yes, a TB/QH cross is called an Appendix Quarter Horse. They have their own association.
The acronym 'JC' refers to the Jockey Club, which is the registration database for Thoroughbred horses. As the name suggests, the Jockey Club's primary interest is in promoting and developing the Thoroughbred as a racehorse, but any registered Thoroughbred will be a JC horse, whether they showjump, trail ride, race, whatever. Hope that helps! :) You can check out the JC at jockeyclub.com
The acronym 'JC' refers to the Jockey Club, which is the registration database for Thoroughbred horses. As the name suggests, the Jockey Club's primary interest is in promoting and developing the Thoroughbred as a racehorse, but any registered Thoroughbred will be a JC horse, whether they showjump, trail ride, race, whatever. Hope that helps! :) You can check out the JC at jockeyclub.com
Depending on where the Caste certificate was applied for and registered, is where one might start to look. One may obtain it over the net by contacting the same place they registered with.