lope
A western canter is often referred to as a lope. It is a three-beat gait that is commonly used in Western-style riding disciplines.
Western Riding terms for Canter is "lope"!
Nothing really, western riders usually refer to "lope" as a canter, and English riders refer to it as a "canter." But, I'm a western rider and I use canter, not lope, but it doesn't really matter.
collected canter, or in western terms, a lope Andalusiangirl
In western it is, in English it is known as canter
Yes, a lope is a western term for a canter. It is slower and has 4 beats
the gaits of a non gaited horse include 4 major, and all together 7, including English style gaits, and western style gaits. the major ones are walk, trot, canter, gallop. the picky ones are (from slowest to fastest) walk, jog[western], sitting trot[in between kinda bumpy, but not bad], posting trot, lope[western], canter[English or all round], and gallop. usuall in a western style like western pleasure u wouldn't gallop, but u would do a very slow (depending on the horse), very comfortable (again depending) jog. so i guess ur answer is called a jog. any non-gaited horse can do it.
yes, that is the correct way to ask a horse for canter in English riding and western both. to ask a horse for canter or lope, you sit deep in the saddle, use only outide leg and inside rein and if you ask right, your horse should canter.
a skip. the horses main gaits are walk, trot, canter, and gallop for English horses, but walk, job, lope, and gallop for western
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Western horseback riding is a specific discipline within equestrian sports. The style is characterized by a large, wide saddle with a moderately prominent cantle and a horn; the stirrups are set lower as compared to English riding styles. The horse's gait should be slow and smooth - there is no posting at the trot in Western riding, and the canter is slower and called a lope.
The Western and Roper style cowboys differ in the shaft, heel and toe of the boot. The Western style boot has a taller shaft than the Roper style boot. The Western style boot's heel is taller and more angled than the Roper style boot. Lastly, the Western style toe is narrower and more pointed than the Roper style boot.