Well, it depense what you are talking about. The breed of palomino or the color. If it is the breed palomino, than NO it isn't gaited. If it is the color, it depense what breed ot os! Hope i helped!
Welsh Cob---Answer From Horse Isle Also, any breed of horse that is gaited. These are horses bred to provide a comfortable ride because of a special gait. Usually, a gaited horse has a conformation that makes dressage difficult for it to perform.
Gaited.....They are natural at walking trotting canter and jojing....Nongainted........Have to teach them a couple
The Rocky Mountain Horse was created from a mix of easy gaited horse breeds such as the Saddlebred, Missouri Fox Trotter, Iberian horses and some English horses. Old Tobe was a rare silver dapple colored stallion that Sam Tuttle used to guide visitors through the mountains. The stallion was so calm and smooth gaited that he began to breed him to local easy gaited mares, thus creating the foundation stock of the breed. The Rocky Mountain horse is very similar to the Kentucky Mountain Saddle horse and they share a common background.
Tolter or natural tolter refers to horses that naturally are gaited. Gaited horses come in 2 different types, 3 and 5 gaited. The word tolter seems to be used in reference to the Icelandic Horse which is a 3 gaited horse.
A Paso Fino is a gaited horse.
Yes of course. Even though cutbacks are meant for saddleseat riding, the horse doesn't have to be gaited. Saddlebreds can be either 3 gaited or 5 gaited, in other words some are considered to be "gaited." As long as a horse doesn't mind a type of saddle, and it fits them comfortably, any type of saddle could technically be used on any type of horse.
This depends on if the easy gaited horse trots or not. If it does you can, if it uses another type of gait instead then no you likely should not.
Depends on what you mean by saddle horse--do you mean an easy-gaited horse like the Tennessee Walker, or any light breed of horse. Regardless, there are tons of each that didn't originate in the US.
A walking trail horse is simply a horse that you can take on trails at a walking speed. That's the literal meaning of the question; but as a trail rider and author of Basic Training for a Safe Trail Horse I would say that "walking trail horse" refers to a gaited breed of trail horse like the Tennessee Walker. TW's are the most common of walking horses, but there are many other gaited breeds that perform comfortable gaits that can be described as a "walking" gait. Many of these gaits are performed at speeds comparable to the gaits of trotting or cantering in non-gaited breeds.
Saddle breds, Morgans and Hackneys are some good 5 gaited horses.
srry but gaited horses do not need to canter they walk rack or pace or that's how we do it Kentucky