- The Horse Forum
A forum community dedicated to horse owners and enthusiasts Come join the discussion about breeding, grooming, reviews, health, behavior, housing, adopting, care, classifieds, and more!
- Horse Transport Company Recommendations
Hi everyone, I'm making a cross-country move (2,300 miles, ~34 hours driving) and have been looking into various horse transport companies My mare has done well in a trailer when hauled short distances, but she is far from a seasoned traveler However, she tends to have a fairly calm demeanor
- Horse dare contest - The Horse Forum
Horse riding is a dare that you dont fall of, that you can jump an obstacle without knocking the pole down, The dare to make those tight upturns around the barrels without knocking them down
- Basics of horse conformation. - The Horse Forum
An upright horse shoulder conformation is best for gaited or park showing, parade horses, and activities requiring a quick burst of speed, like roping or Quarter Horse racing Laid Back Sloping shoulder:
- Cant Saddle My Horse - The Horse Forum
Drilling usually doesn't help a horse learn faster, and can lead to frustration for both horse and trainer Break everything down into tiny steps rather than having a huge goal When the horse truly accepts the small parts, you'll reach the big goal
- Toe callus - The Horse Forum
This horse is the biggest health train wreck I have ever owned He is a gentle sweet loving horse but, as the saying goes, "if he had a duck it would drown" :-| A Good Horseman Doesn't Have To Tell Anyone; The Horse Already Knows I can’t ride 'em n slide 'em I have to lead 'em n feed 'em Thnx cowchick77
- Who has used Adequan? - The Horse Forum
The vet is recommending we start Moonshine on Adequan A couple of things so people don't start making assumptions and then basing their responses off that: I am aware that this is a intramuscular injectable that needs to be administered every several days, and I am comfortable doing that The
- Split mane - The Horse Forum
The old horsemen knew that a horse who developed unevenly in the womb was most likely going to be a difficult—and often, temperamental—horse to train The old-timers also called overly thick, double-fall manes ‘stud manes’, which was supposed to denote a horse of strong-willed or otherwise difficult character
|