This means that the horse is listening to you and respects you, its a very good thing because the horse is showing you that he will obey and respect what you ask of it!
it means someone or something is bothering them.check withyour vet if he says it is fine. maby u r riding wrong
Horse stomp there feet when they get tried. This does not mean that your horse is mad at you.
Do you mean "what position should your feet be in when riding a horse?" If so then this is the answer: you should have your heels down and knees bent with your feet right beside the girth.
If you mean martingale, it helps teach a young horse to rein and keeps their head down so it is safer to train them, a lot like a tie down.
It means to get his horse to slow down.
Brought Down
saying the horse's legs are down may mean that the horse is lame, or that the slope of the pasterns is incorrect.
It doesn't actually mean anything, it is just a marking.
They may have tetanus. Tetanus is one of the leading causes of death and treatment is difficult. The most common sign of a horse with tetanus is having its head and neck down in an outstretched position and feeling stiff. Tetanus is a bacterial infection most often caused by a deep, dirty wound. If you suspect your horse has tetanus, call your vet right away.
It means that the butcher is selling horse meat and prepared meat products made of horse meat
The markings on a horse, on its head or legs, don't *mean* anything, anymore than the stripes on a zebra or the color of your hair.
Your head (brain) has to tell your feet what to do without looking thereThink with your head, dance with your feet (and don't get them mixed up!)Used to be a popular saying in the Liverpool area - when a person was complimented on an intelligent action or clever comment, they would reply "up here for thinking, down there for dancing, lad", often indicating their head with an extended forefinger as they said it.
If you had your head handed to you by someone, that someone figuratively cut it off with his/her words.The question was "give someone his head" not "hand someone their head." To give someone his head means to allow them to do what they want to do. The image is from horse-riding, where you loosen the reins and "give" the horse control over his head, which allows the horse to speed up as it wants to do.