The location is a bit hard to describe. To see a diagram of where the stifle is located, follow this link. http://img.quamut.com/chart/7321/34_horse_anatomy.jpg (look at the tail end of the URL, it says horse_anatomy.jpg This is how you know it's a legitimate link to a picture of a horse and not a bad site.) Hope this helps! Happy trails!
A horse's stifle is equal to the knee of a human.
The animal with a second thigh called a gaskin is a horse. The gaskin is the part of the hind leg in a horse that extends from above the hock to the stifle joint. It is an important muscle group for the horse's movement and strength.
The horse's gaskin is part of its hind leg, located between the stifle (knee) and hock joints. It is a muscle group that helps power the horse's movement, particularly in activities like jumping or pushing off the ground.
It is the muscle on the upper part of a horses hind leg, above the hock.
It depends on wich part you are talking about. there are three. The feltlock, the pastern, and the ergot.
The stifle on a horse is the equivalent of a human knee.
A horse's stifle is equal to the knee of a human.
The noun stifle is the rear 'knee joint' of a horse.
knee
The stifle is the femoro-tibial joint, which in humans is commonly called the knee.
The knee.
The stifle of a horse is anatomically equivalent to the knee of a human - it is a hinge joint consisting of the distal femur, proximal tibia, proximal fibula and the patella (kneecap).
The stifle is a joint in the hind leg that works much like a human knee. It's found at the front of the hind leg near the flank.
Stifle (Stifle Joint) Underlying the stifle area is the stifle joint formed between the large hip bone (femur) which is equivalent to our thigh bone and the tibia, equivalent to our shin bone. The stifle joint somewhat resembles a human knee.
The snaffle is a type of bit. A similar word is stifle, which is a hind leg joint in the horse.
The animal with a second thigh called a gaskin is a horse. The gaskin is the part of the hind leg in a horse that extends from above the hock to the stifle joint. It is an important muscle group for the horse's movement and strength.
Gaskins is the lower part of a horse's thigh between the hock and the stifle.