Just as it sounds. Usually thought of as 4-6 horse steps.
The length of a sea horse varies with the species. On average, a large sea horse is about 4 to about 11 inches in length including the tail.
The average length of a galloping stride of a horse is approximately 20-25 feet. This can vary depending on the size and breed of the horse.
it varies so much, there could never be one number. every single horse is different
Horses can be both big and small, so it's an impossible question to answer.
The average horse head measures around 22-24 inches from poll to muzzle, but hey, who's got time to whip out a measuring tape and check? Just remember, it's not the size of the horse head that matters, it's how you use it...for grooming and feeding, of course.
A length used in Horse Racing is the length of 1 horse. Say a horse won by one length then the horse that came second would be in line with the end of the winning horse, if it won by two lengths then another horse could fit into the winning gap. A length is 1/5th of a second as horse racing is measured in 5th's of a second.
If you are talking about horse racing, then one length is how long a horse is, but there is no real measurement of a 'length'. A regular horse size is 100 inches, or about 12-15 feet.
The length of a horse.
1.5meters
One horse length. This question is on HOWRSE.com.
It means it won by the length of a horse.
The length of a sea horse varies with the species. On average, a large sea horse is about 4 to about 11 inches in length including the tail.
By 'Kentucky Horse Race' I'll assume you mean Kentucky Derby as there are hundreds of races in Kentucky. The Derby is a mile and one fourth in length.
You must be one or two horses away from the other horse/s, it depends on their relationship. (Whether they like each other or not.) You must be one or two horses far away from the other horse/s. You should be at least one horse length. at least one horse length, it depends on if the like each other
you should be another horse length apart which means that it should be you then 6-8 feet between you and the other horse It is safest to be out of kicking distance (at least 1 horse length) from the other horse. However, I don't exactly do that.. My friend's horse and mine are best friends and throw fits if they can't be RIGHT next to each other.
The length of a sea horse varies with the species. On average, a large sea horse is about 4 to about 11 inches in length including the tail.
It actually depends on the track condition of the day you cant get an exact timing unless you've clocked it but the approximate distance is 5 lengths in one second so if your horse was one length behind, an average guess would be approximately 1m 53.20sec