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Wooden Horse
The Greeks his soldiers in a wooden horse (Trojan horse) and gave it to the Trojans as a gift to get Helen back.
Bamboo Harvester , the horse that also played as Mister Ed , was trained by Les Hilton .
I saw the movie many years ago when I was in Summer camp. It was not a Western and not generally about the Cavalry arm. I don"t recall such an incident, maybe he simply tied the animal up at a barn or the equivalent of a garage or coach-house.
The cricket term hat trick appeared first in British print in 1858. It refers to one player scoring three times in a row. In cricket jargon, one bowler takes three wickets with three balls in a row. That player was then permitted to pass around his hat and collect a few modest "rewards" such as pennies. So runs one story. Another says the cricket club bought the hat-tricking player a new hat. There are many versions of how the hat trick became connected to soccer, hockey, etc. most of which don't have supporting evidence.
Practice
in the Trojan war the greek's pretended they had given up their siege of troy and pretended to go home, leaving a giant wooden horse behind as a supposed trophy but they hid greek warriors in the wooden horse so they were taken into the city with the horse. At night the greek warriors climbed ut of the horse, opened the city gates for the rest of the greek army that had now returned and they slaughtered the trojans in their beds.
Preforming tricks on and around the horse while the horse is at a canter.
Odysseus.
The cast of Lucille Mulhall and Trick Horse - 1905 includes: Lucille Mulhall as herself
Turn cartwheels
I am guessing either the African Grey Parrot (very smart), a chimp, or a horse. It's the horse right? Maybe it's a trick question and its us humans!
The trick is the person doing the trick noes your age ...bet you dint think off that
No one played the Trojan horse against the Athenians. They are greek
It is a famous story from Greek myth/history in the Bronze Age or thereabouts. Greeks and Trojans were at war for many years. Greeks made the Trojan horse as a trick - filled it with warriors, then left it as a 'gift' at Troy's impregnable gates & pretended to withdraw. The Trojans fell for it, the warriors poured out, and Troy was destroyed.
The whole point was to trick the romans, I think...
If it is a simple trick like bowing or give-me-your-hoof you demostrate the trick a couple of times over a duration of days presenting the carrot at first, doing the trick, then feeding him/her the carrot, or any other treat, as a bribe. Then, if you think you are ready, present a carrot to the horse, watch the trick and then feed. It may no happen straight away but after a month or two, you the horse will become fluent at the trick. Also, it depends on the horse. More intellegent horses such as Arabs and Lipanzzers will be able to pick it up far more quickly than a cob or a likkle shetland. Tempermental horses like particually moody throughbreds won't have any of it, and will inevibley kick you with annoyance (as I found out) so I wouldn't try it while the horse is still a stallion/in season, unless you do want to be trampled. Good luck.