I'm another one that quite likes him. The toeing out in front is essential at his age. It will straighten up as his chest broadens. Avoid foals whose feet point straight forwards. Those are the ones who will end up pigeon toed as adults and please, please don't let your farrier do anything to "correct" this, it would do harm, not good. image His pasterns look the the right length for his age too. They stop growing first so have to be relatively long in a foal to compensate for this. If they look the right length in a foal they will be very short in the full grown horse.

He has a nice head, OK neck but it ties in a little low. If he was a dressage prospect I'd say keep looking but for the things you want to do he should be fine. He will find it difficult to lift his withers as the base of his neck is so low so is likely to be limited in his collecting and jumping abilities but as you aren't looking for a grand prix prospect this shouldn't put you off him. I can't see that he is over at the knee. He is in some pics but not in others so it may just be the way he is standing in some of the photos. His movement looks OK to me too. A little out of balance but with his bum being 2" higher than his front end he's allowed to be. Bless him! His pelvis is more angled that ideal. It slopes sharply downwards from croup to point of hip but appears to generate enough power and he steps well underneath himself.

Overall I think he's nice. Hope you have many years of fun with him.