These should go over both front hooves/pastern areas to keep your horse from "overreaching" or clipping it's front hooves with it's rear ones. Also, some of these problems can be corrected by a good farrier, after he/she observes the horses gait.
This depends entirely upon the type of riding pants and the boots themselves. 'Boot cut' style pants are meant to go over the boot, while a more tightly fitting style of pants would go inside the boot. Also short boots tend to be worn under the pant leg and taller boots over the leg.
When you break your leg. Then, you go, to the dct. and then liike give you that.
When mounting a horse you put your left foot in the left stirrup and swing your right leg over the cantle and the horse's rump.
no it should not be numb
Dear Horse rider, To get your horse into canter, in the corner of the ring you go into sitting trot and bring your inside leg back and kick (also helps if you kick with your outside leg so the horse doesn't lean in). I f it doesn't work keep trying in each of the corners, remember, give clear signals so the horse knows what to do.
gaiters
Zara Phillips was not at the Beijing Olympics because her horse toy town pulled a ligament in his leg and she didn't have another horse fit enough to go.
it's probably bruised but go see a docter
Maybe you should try skinny jeans because it gives you a cute but kinda flirty look
The signals to ask a horse to leg yield are: look in the direction you want to go, shift weight to outside seat bone, apply pressure from the inside leg slightly behind the girth. If the horse heads diagonally inside of sideways, you can use a leading inside rein (drawing the inside rein out from the horses neck) to tilt his head slightly to the inside.
Because if you use only one leg your horse will go sideways using both legs means your horse goes forward xxx
Use your legs and reins to steer the horse in the direction you want to go. Apply leg pressure on the side you want the horse to move towards and use the reins to guide their head in that direction. Be persistent and consistent in your cues until the horse responds appropriately.