Because it has a tail on one side and a head on the other side, like a penny!
No never, not even if going through a narrow gap, always walk to one side so the horse doesnt bolt and trample you. absolutely not, you don't want to lead directly in front of the horse, but you don't want to lead right behind the horse either. you should lead the horse from your right, so the horse does does not feel intimidated. When going through a small gap, it is nice to be able to lunge the horse in a small half circle through the gate, yield his hind quarters and then walk through, so that you both don't have to swish through. It's safer to do it this way.
Loping is a three beat gate. Essentially an easy (relaxed, slow) canter.
yes it will
If you are talking about standardbred racing, yes. If a thoroughbred is scratched his slot in the starting gate will remain empty.
That question is absolutely ridiculous, If your looking for a horse you look at the gate of the horses strides, the age, expirience, the width, the length from the withers to the hip...and everything else NOT A COLOR THAT LOOKS GOOD WITH BLONDES! i completely argree, wat is with u???
Do you mean the starting gate? It is like a loading stall. The groom leads the horse in, with the jockey mounted, then the groom closes the gate. There the horse waits for the starting gate to swing open. Things trainers hate are when a horse leans on the back or front gate. This can set the jockey of balance.
The starting gate.
My horse sprained her ankle, coming out of the gate.
Walk on the left side of the horse with a halter and a leadrope on it. Put you right hand on the leadrope about a foot from its face and hold the end with you left hand so the horse doesn't trip. Walk at a steady pace and stay up by its head. If the horse pulls or spooks, stop it, talk to it, and then continue walking. Answer Lunge your horse at a walk in a small circle through the gate, then have the horse turn his hindquarters and wait for you to come through the gate after him. Then after closing the opening lead the horse away from the pasture.
The mongrel was able to get through the gate through the sills.
4th
Iron Horse
No never, not even if going through a narrow gap, always walk to one side so the horse doesnt bolt and trample you. absolutely not, you don't want to lead directly in front of the horse, but you don't want to lead right behind the horse either. you should lead the horse from your right, so the horse does does not feel intimidated. When going through a small gap, it is nice to be able to lunge the horse in a small half circle through the gate, yield his hind quarters and then walk through, so that you both don't have to swish through. It's safer to do it this way.
He went through the attic AND GATE then. The AND GATE could be used as a physical gate.
Most firefighting equipment can get through the gate if there is a fire. Should some quipment not fit, gate opening will be made larger. It depends on the gate. Many gate installers are aware of fire regulations and will not install the gate if the equipment can't fit through.
the boss
you never tie a horse to something unstable in case it falls over,if it falls over it could scare of hurt the horse. Instead,if your going to tie the horse to something, tie it to a very stable fence.You should never tie it to a gate incase the gate swings open.