Well im pretty sure your horse would show signs of uncomfort, or if even unusual sores appear from where your saddle may be rubbing. My horse wheres a numnah and a foam saddlepad however it usually slips from underneath my saddle
Hope I could help!
- Take care
As far as I know a palomino is a colour - particularly in certain breeds. A palomino horse is just like a bay or a grey horse. Particular diets are made if the horse needs extra feeding/ concentrates/ supplements etc. And that depends on the amount of work and what the work is, the overall health (if there are any deficiencies) and what improvements need to be made - such as if the horse needs extra fat or digestible energyin its diet.Unless you are talking about a particular 'palomino' breed which needs specific nutrition (and even so the horse wouldn't be on a 'diet') there is no specific 'diet' for a 'palomino horse'.
it depends on what size your horse is and how much room it needs
By telling your horse to canter...but your horse needs to know how to canter and needs lots of practise, and he also needs to know the command "canter". after he/she gets what you want, practise going from a trot to a canter. soon enough your horse will be transitioning smoothly! good luck!
I don't know a whole lot about a horse's basic stallrequirements, but I do know that for a full size horse, the stall needs to be around 10'x10'.
yes they can but the horse needs to be a foal (if thats how you spell it) an baby horse
as long as you love horses, it shouldn't matter. but be in mind that you should be finacally prepared to take care of the horse and you should have enought time to put in with the horse. You should know about the horse's needs
You mean a bareback pad? Personal choice.. I find it more comfy to ride with one. Depends on if the horse has bumpy gates.
soh he is looking to know some thing extra, he needs, or he think some more to have sex.
newspaper for padding and i don't know what else
Thats an objective question, Hulk is better know to people who read comics, LeBron James is known to sports fans. Both of them have been featured outside their spheres of influence. {| id="ezSearchBarTABLE" class="ezui-corner-all" style="background-color: #ffe; border: 2px solid #555; padding: 1px; z-index: 9999999; display: block; vertical-align: bottom" |- style="padding: 0" | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 2px" | | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 2px" | | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 0px" | |- style="padding: 0" | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 2px" | | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 0px" | |- style="padding: 0" | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 2px" | | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 2px" | | style="padding: 0; padding-right: 0px" | |} +1[[#|close]] [[#|close]][[#|pin]][[#|pin]][[#|search]][[#|minimize]][[#|forward]][[#|back]][[#|ViewText]][[#|]][[#|]][[#|zoomout]][[#|zoomin]][[#|zoomin]] {| id="ezSearchBar" style="border: 0; display: none; vertical-align: bottom; padding-bottom: 2px" | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | | style="padding-right: 4px" | |}
That depends on the horse. If your horse knows you, loves you and will follow you through fire, the horse will be easy to train. However, if the horse does NOT know you, and you do not spend time with the horse and give it the love it needs, it will be very difficult to train that horse. I know that sometimes, you will get a horse that was once abused, but you will have to gain his/her trust back before it will let you ride it. Love is the best training method when it comes to animals. (horses, dogs, etc.)
It really depends on your farrier, and your horses needs. If your horse needs a shoe on all 4 hooves, it will definitely be more expensive than if your horse just needs a trim and no shoes. . . My horse gets her hooves trimmed, plus 2 shoes on her front hooves. This is usually $50-$55. My friend's horse only gets a trim, so her farrier bill is usually $30-$35. I know a horse that needs all 4 shoes, so his farrier bill is usually $75. It really depends on your farrier though, some are cheaper than others.