Well when the horse was a baby you should have kept a halter on a few days after he was born to get used to it. If you did not do that than you can get a halter and put it on loose so that it is not hurting him/her but tight enough so they cant rip it off. when the horse gets used to that then you can clip a lead rope to his halter and ask for a walk and it will take time but if the horse is still a baby it will take less time then a matured horse
You should not pull a horse around with anything. You can LEAD a horse with a halter.
lead rope and a halter(halter goes on the head and a lead rope attaches to a loop on the bottom of the halter
No, you should not. The horse can get caught of something in the pasture or pen, and also if the halter is too tight it can rub bare spots on the horses face, and if left on too long and too tight it the skin can start to grow over the halter. If the horse is hard too catch, you need to practice catching the horse so it wouldn't be a problem, however the halter should not be kept on the horse loose on pasture.
A halter
halter traing is ground work, and teaching a young horse to lead on a halter.
Halters are the most used horse tack! Before you do anything with horses, you should know about it. Halters are how you lead the horse. You use a halter whenever you lead a horse or tie it up. The lead rope attaches to the halter and is what you hold and tie it with.
To walk a horse, you would use a halter and lead rope. : )
The D shaped, metal ring on the side of a horse's halter.
The most famous Quarterhorse halter horse is probably "Impressive"
If you are leading (walking) a horse around, then a halter. If you are riding him, a bridle.
A halter and lead rope. The halter is a device that is strapped onto the horse's head, and then the lead rope can be attached and detached to the halter. The lead rope allows more room between you and your horse while leading for safely reasons.