after time it can be
Hard rocky soil.
hard soil- is hard on the tendons and can cause bone damage, making horses lame sticky or muddy soil- can also cause damage to the tendons or ligiments and can also cause bone damage, making horses lame
Yes
Too hard of soil can bruise a horses feet and legs, rocks can make a horse misstep, mud can be slippery. Too soft of dirt can cause a horse to work too hard or slip.
yes Soil that is used for plant growth (the dark brown soil with white bits in) is bad if your horse consumes it. its easy to avoid if u dont try and grow flowers in your horses feild!
hard on your joints and bones
it had very rich soil
mixed soil is bad ..... i don't know the rest It dependes on how you are using the soil If you are talking of riding on? Standing for long periods? If you are riding a jumping course on the soil? This info would be helpful to answering you question.
A clicking noise usually worse on hard cornerning
The best way to know for sure is to remove the driveshaft and move the joints. If the are hard to move or are binding then they are bad. usually if you have a hard clunk going in gear or the car makes a squeaking noise that to points to the u-joints the vehicle vibrates like hell !!!
Pizza is not bad for horses, however, there are much cheaper ways of feeding horses.
Is it an automatic or manual if it's an automatic you may have a bad u joints and same for manual, as well as synchronizing gears may cause it to be hard to shift. Otherwise i'd say it's your u-joints