Depending on the horse and carriage about 15 to 20 mph.
more likely is that the winner will be the horese as the lion can go FAST BUT FOR ONLY SHORT BURSTS where as the horse can go fast for longer periods of time more likely is that the winner will be the horese as the lion can go FAST BUT FOR ONLY SHORT BURSTS where as the horse can go fast for longer periods of time
Impossible to answer this question without knowing the coefficient of drag of the boat it is attached to.
Well the most commonly used gait to travel long distances is the trot, which has an average speed of 4 to 7 MPH. That means it would take 37.5 to 21.4 hours to travel that distance without stopping, however the horses will need to rest so a more likely time frame would be 3 to 4 days.
Depending on the breed of the horse you can go to the official breed websites but you have to be a member on it. For example like the American Quarter Horse Association you would go to their home page. And if your horse is a Thoroughbred race horse you can go to pedigreequery.com and you can type the name of the horse and just pick the one with the right country and there you go.
To break a horse to drive, start by desensitizing it to the harness and equipment. Introduce the horse to the bit and reins gradually, and teach it verbal commands from the ground before hitching it to a cart or carriage. Begin with short, positive training sessions to build trust and confidence before progressing to longer drives. Work on steering, stopping, and responding to commands until the horse is comfortable and responsive to driving cues.
Knowing how long it would take to traveling to Yorkshire from London on a horse carriage really canÕt be answered. It all depends on how fast the horse goes or how fast the carriage can go. The average pace a horse and carriage can is six to ten miles an hour.
How long it takes to go 40 miles in a horse drawn carriage will depend on how fast the horse is. The weight of the carriage and occupants will also impact the speed of the horse. A horse drawn carriage usually averages about 5 miles per hour so it would take 8 hours to go 40 miles.
A horse can only run about 30 miles an hour. So, if the horse pulls a carriage it can only go as fast as the horse can go. The speed would be about 30 miles an hour.
The horse and carriage are obsolete as modes of transportation, so this idiom means that something has become obsolete or passed out of common usage.
Usually, they go on the foreheads of carriage horses, or to decorate the carriages or carts, or the leathers attaching the horses.
The answer to this is: the carriage is only as fast as the horse. Walk: Roughly 3-4 MPH. A pleasure show horse can go as slow as 2 mph. Gaited horses-- who do not trot-- can do a 'running walk' as fast as 15 mph. Trot: The trot is roughly 8-10 MPH. Again, a shorter striding horse could trot slower, and a horse with a long stride could move faster. Harness Racing (Trot/Pace): 20-35 MPH Canter/Lope: 10-17 MPH. Gallop - 20-45 MPH NOTE 1: It is generally considered bad form for any horse in harness to canter, lope, or gallop while hitched to a vehicle, as it is dangerous and ill-advised. NOTE 2: Many horse-drawn vehicles are referred to as "carriages" when in fact, they are not. Hearses, wagons, sulkies, carts etc all have different functions and are built to go at different speeds.
You should never let your horse go fast.
As fast as a bike.
23.436294 mph depending on the type of horse and train!
Just as fast as any other horse! Not as fast as a thourobred or a quarter horse but pretty fast!
As fast as the horse pulling it. The locomotive, powered by steam, does not get invented until the 19th century.
Fast as heck. Most 14 fosters have a 10 to 15 horse and go around 15mph. A 35 horse would probly get it going over 30 mph.