Yes, as long as the horse is a good confident well practiced horse.
None. The tallest jump was 8ft, I believe. A house would have to be that many ft high for that, and the horse who jumped that is dead. His name was King's Own. His breed was unknown.
here is a video explaining the worlds biggest horse jump! (see related link)
well my 11 yr old mustang geling can jump a 5 ft high round pen fence with ease! It's amazing!
if your horse refuses the jump, you turn the horse around in a circle, then go a little ways away from the jump, (but not too far giving the horse time to think about how to get away with going over the jump) and then (if the jump is not too large) trot your horse over the jump giving it leg pressure up to the jump to coax it to jump. (its easier to trot over the jump than canter when your horse doesn't want to jump it) if your horse refuses a jump during a show, this will count down points but if your horse refuses a few times you are disqualified. hope that helps!
yes any breed or type of horse can jump, how well they jump depends on how well the horse was trained.
The record for the Horse high jump stands at 8 ft 1¼ in (2.47 m), and was achieved by Captain Morales riding Huaso, in Chile on 5 February 1949. In horse racing terms, The Chair is the biggest fence in the Grand National. It is a 6 foot fence with a 5 foot 2 inch ditch. Of course, it all depends on the horse.
Spooking does not matter hoe high a horse can jump. If a horse has jumped over fences and has been trained you will be able to have your horse jump higher in competition.
approximately about maybe 4 m probably? i guess hope this helps
Your first want to get your horse to lunge. After that, you want to start lunging him over poles. after that you can raise it to a small x-jump or a SMALL vertical. Keep doing that and slowly raise it higher and higher. Once he gets to about 1 ft. , you could start riding him over them.
Yes, the rider would most likely be disqualified. The horse and rider get penalized 2 points for knocking a rail down and 4 points for a refusal of the jump. If the horse refuses the jump twice you are also disqualified.
When a horse scopes out a jump, it just means that the horse is looking at the jump trying to get a good idea of how tall/long it is and where they have to take off in order to be able to clear the jump.
No one could give a straight answer to this. Ever horse is different, so every horse jumps a different hieght. For example, my Oldenburg can jump an average of 5-6 feet. He is my show horse. On the other hand, my Quarter Horse can only jump a max of 3 ft. You see, all horse breeds have a different standard. :)