Yes. Riders in Western Pleasure, Equitation, and Dressage can compete in walk/trot classes.
If you are riding a "fast horse trot" it could be a lengthened or an extended trot. That is referring to the actual length of stride a horse is making at that trot. "Collection" is the exact opposite, basically, of a fast trot.
speed: distance: will vary depending on your horse Walk Trot Canter Gallop
Probably a halter class, or, if riding, do a walk/trot pleasure class
A non-gaited horse has 4 basic gaits. The walk, the trot, the canter and the gallop. The gallop is the fastest a horse can go.
Expirienced - eg horse riding you can walk trot canter and jump on a 2nd/3rd pony and control them accuratly
WTC is shorthand for walk, trot, canter. It means that the horse will quietly walk, trot, and canter under saddle.
A simple change is a change of legs at canter by returning to trot or walk in between. A flying change does not require a change of pace.
Walk Trot Canter Gallop
walk, trot, canter, gallop
There are 4 gaits a horse will use: Walk, Trot, Canter/Lope, and Gallop. The answer to your question is A. Skip. This is not a gait.
Skip is not a horse gait
Yes; if it's not visible at the walk, you need to trot the horse in-hand and have someone watching its feet.