Before you ride check with the council where you are allowed to ride - bridleways are a given, but sometimes there are other paths that you can take. If you're ever unsure, to avoid unfriendliness, and possible prosecution (people are funny), always check with your council or whichever horse society applies to your area (e.g. UK - British Horse Society).
No, but he has ridden horses in movies.
Its ok if all the horses are not being ridden, but they will have to be ridden later.
When they're about to be ridden.
no they have always ridden horses or something
accommodation land is land that is only for the use of grazing livestock. ie: sheep, cows, horses deer etc and can not be built upon except for a sheephouse, stable or other none permanent building. i know this from experience because 5 years ago i went to buy 12 acres of accommodation land and these where the facts that i was told. i hope this answers your question or if not i hope it points you in the right general direction.
Of course you can. Draft horses can be ridden.
yes but you have to be under 65 pounds
To be ridden: Horses were originally brought to America by the Conquistadors of Spain to be ridden. In colonial America though they used to horse both to ride and as draft animals.
5500 years ago
Horses are or at least were used for pulling carriges, being ridden and farming work. There are lots of other things that horses do.
Yes, but probably not straight off the track (although there are some horses who could probably be ridden out between races). Some horses are ridden extensively as part of their pre-race training (trail ridden etc.) so may be able to be ridden sooner than another race horse with less "outdoor" experience. Each horse is different and may initially require a more skilled hand post racing or a period of letdown before retraining.
A cowboy or cowgirl that is usually responsible for looking after the saddle horses (the horses that are ridden).