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HorseSense HorseManShip

*Training  of all breeds Specializing in Gaited Horses.
*Experienced teaching horsemanship lessons for people of all abilities.
*Experienced horse hauling.
*Available to travel to your home.
*Workbook for young people
*Training manuals including Gaited Horses and Saddle Fit.
*Short story about Bucky, the miracle mini.
Visit HorseSense HorseManship website. Located in Central Alberta.  www.horsesensedk.com
*Training  of all breeds Specializing in Gaited Horses.
*Experienced teaching horsemanship lessons for people of all abilities.
*Experienced horse hauling.
*Available to travel to your home.
*Workbook for young people
*Training manuals including Gaited Horses and Saddle Fit.
*Short story about Bucky, the miracle mini.
Visit HorseSense HorseManship website. Located in Central Alberta.  www.horsesensedk.com

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Gaited Horses

Ambling Gaits of Horses

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

There are a significant number of four-beat intermediate gaits. Though there are differences in gaited rmhfootfall patterns and speed, historically they were once grouped together and collectively referred to as the “amble.” Today, especially in the United States, horses that are able to do an ambling gait are referred to as “gaited.”

All ambling gaits are faster than a walk but usually slower than a canter. They are smoother for a rider than either a trot or a pace and most can be sustained for relatively long periods of time, making them particularly desirable for trail riding and other tasks where a rider must spend long periods of time in the saddle.

There are two basic types: lateral, wherein the front and hind feet on the same side move in sequence, and diagonal, where the front and hind feet on opposite sides move in sequence.

Not all horses can perform an ambling gait. However, many breeds can be trained to produce them, and there are several breeds of horses who inherit the ability to perform these gaits either naturally from birth or with a minimal amount of training.

The major ambling gaits include:

  • The fox trot is most often associated with the Missouri Foxtrotter breed, but is also seen under different names in other gaited breeds. The fox trot is a four-beat diagonal gait in which the front foot of the diagonal pair lands before the hind.
  • gaited peruvian“Paso” gaits include a range of smooth intermediate lateral ambling gaits characteristic of the Peruvian Pasoand Paso Fino. The Paso Fino’s speed variations are called (from slowest to fastest) the paso fino, paso corto, and paso largo. The Peruvian Paso has a lateral gait known as the “Paso Llano,” which is characterized by an elongated and lateral motion of the front shoulder known as “Termino.”
  • The rack or racking is a lateral gait most commonly associated with the Five-Gaited American Saddlebred. In the rack, the speed is increased to be approximately that of the pace, but it is a four-beat gait with equal intervals between each beat.
  • The Running Walk, a four-beat lateral gait with footfalls in the same sequence as the regular walk, but characterized by greater speed and smoothness. It is a distinctive natural gait of the Tennessee Walking Horse.
  • The slow gait is a general term for several slightly different lateral gaits that follow the same general footfall pattern in that lateral pairs of legs move forward in sequence, but the rhythm and collection of the movements are different. Terms for various slow gaits include the stepping pace and singlefoot.gaited rocky
  • The Tölt (also, less correctly, Tolt) is a gait that is often described as being unique to the Icelandic Horse. In its pure form, the footfalls are the same as in rack, but the Icelandic horse is bred for more freedom and liquidity of movement. Some breeds of horses that are related to the Icelandic horse, living in the Faroe Islands and Norway, also tölt.
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