Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Friday, July 17, 2009
Saddle Fit for High Withered Horse

My friend has tried fourteen different saddles on her high-withered Missouri Fox Trotter during the five years she has owned this eight-year-old gelding. She has tried a Corrector pad, but it sawed on his withers.
Right now, she is tryng a Wintech Australian-style saddle with Cair panels and adjustable gullet, with a supracor pad. I rode him with it today and it left an even sweat pattern, but another friend suggested that the saddle was bridging. Certainly the horse was happier than the last time I rode him with a Tucker High Plains Endurance saddle. That time he was fussy and rung his tail quite a bit.
She wanted me to ask if anyone on the list had dealt with a horse with a back similar to this.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Weight Changes Gait

Elephant gaits are generally limited to different speeds of the walk; slow, medium, and faster. Their gait can be similar to a running walk or a saddle rack.
Except... if the weight is removed... such as in swimming... elephants are able to move diagonally similar to the trot of the horse.
Many gaited horses show only a trot at liberty; but when carrying a rider, the additional weight brings out an intermediate gait such as fox trot, running walk, saddle rack, rack, stepping pace, or pace.
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Natural Gait Paso Fino

Posted by the owner of the horse: I bought this horse from a man who buys horses at auctions and resells most of them to slaughter houses. He told me he bought him at an auction in Oregon in November, he is now happily living with me in Washington. He is a very well trained gaited gelding who was obviously loved at one point in his life. I would love to learn more about him. I named him Little Guy, he is a sweetheart. If this horse looks familiar and you think you may know him, please contact me.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Friday, June 12, 2009
Student Wins Public Speaking Contest with Speech About Soring

Emily Woolley is a Mount Si High School (Snoqualmie, WA) graduating senior, who joined 4H eight years ago with her horse named Red. In 2006, she won the Washington state 4H Equine Public Speaking Contest with a speech about soring.
"It’s prevalent in the gaited horse industry when people use chemical means, so they have a more flashy gait," Woolley said. "They put chemicals on their horse’s legs and on the bottom of the feet and add pads to the feet, so when the horses hoof hits the ground, it hurts and they lift their leg higher."
Congratulations to Emily, who is also class valedictorian!
Link to original article: Snovalley Star
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Friday, May 22, 2009
Monday, May 4, 2009
Confidential Soring Interviews
From the recent FOSH conference, confidential soring interviews with those who sore Tennessee Walking Horses.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
What Gait / What Breed of Horse
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Level 3 Parelli with Gaited Paso Horse
What Is Gait?

WHAT IS GAIT AND WHAT PRODUCES A GAITED HORSE?
By Eldon Eadie
Ask a hundred different people and you will likely get a hundred different answers: Some will say that gait is mainly over stride, head nod, and evenly timed hoof beats. Others will say that it is termino, brio (fire), and the inability to trot. Some will say that a horse has to be loose moving in order to gait. Others will say that a horse has to be tight.
Some will say that it is mainly the result of training, others will emphasize conformation, or bone structure, or breeding (genetics), or disposition, or shoeing, or hoof angle, or the type of bit used, or the degree of collection, or the conditioning of the horse, or the attitude of the rider, or the skill of the rider, or the brand of scootin' juice (soring), or the type of action devices used, or the number of World Grand Champions on its pedigree.
The one common denominator between all breeds of gaited horses and all types within those breeds is that gait is the ability of the horse to maintain an evenly timed hoofbeat at an increase of speed. Whether you call it the tolt or the running walk is irrelevant.
Gait is the programming in the horse's brain that makes it possible to hold an evenly timed footfall at an increase of speed. All of the above factors contribute to the quality of gait in different ways.
Each breed has a different standard with different definitions of gait that emphasize various aspects of gait, but in all cases a horse that breaks with an increase of speed, in a clear sharp transition from a walk to a trot or pace, is un-gaited.
A horse that holds an even timed footfall (or drifts slightly) is gaited. Take a look at your average Quarter Horse or Thoroughbred. With an increase of speed the horse will shift gears in a very distinct transition from a walk to a trot. When you see this type of activity in a gaited breed, you are not looking at gait. Even if the horse shifts in a clear transition to the pace, it is still not showing gait.
Most well gaited horses are capable of this kind of clear transition at times but what you want to see is a slow drift from a walk to a middle gait somewhere between a trot and a pace or better yet, no drift at all. A strong gaited horse will just continue to walk with any increase in speed. It may not be winging (termino) or it may not be nodding, but if it is doing an even gait at speed, without action devices or scootin' juice, it is strong gaited.
This brings us to the two main aspects of gait. One is the programming of the brain of the horse. This aspect is mainly determined by genetics but can be influenced very significantly by training and some of the other factors mentioned above. This aspect gives the horse the ability to maintain an even gait at speed.
The other aspect of gait is the bone structure of the horse (conformation). This aspect is also mainly determined by genetics but can be very significantly enhanced by action devices and other methods. It is the conformation of the horse that gives it the head nod and over stride that is very much a part of the running walk.
If you are breeding natural gaited horses, you need to be very careful about both aspects of gait. You need the natural ability to maintain an even gait at speed and you need good conformation of movement (bone structure).
Friday, April 10, 2009
Rack and Pace

Smooth transition from rack to pace:
Versus the "yank, yank, yank" of the riders of Icelandic Horses to get pace:
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Tolt
It's labeled a "tolt", but it's a saddle rack; how does it look? Is the rider's body still? Are the hands following? Is the horse fluid? how much contact? does it look natural?
Monday, April 6, 2009
Tennessee Walking Horse Cumberland Classic

The TWH Cumberland Classic video is on-line here:
http://walkinghorseworld.com/forums/index.php?topic=1.0
You can register, login, and view the videos for free.
Next live coverage:
Mid-Atlantic Plantation Classic Horse Show
April 17-18, 2009
Old Dominion Gaited Horse Association's Gaited Classic
April 17-18, 2009
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Trouble With Gaited Horse

Are you having trouble with your gaited horse? If you need help with your horse, or other gaited horse owners to discuss things with, you may find some answers on the Gaited Horse discussion list.
There's a thread about someone needing help with her Peruvian Paso:
Trouble with my Peruvian.. help?
We also study gaited horse biomechanics and gaits. Here are some gaited horse videos:
Several Gaited Horse videos
For a description of gaits, see: Gait Information
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
New Year - New SNIP BLOG
Hi Everyone and welcome back to the SNIP blogspot.
While the website has been neglected for a while, SNIP's dedicated volunteers have been tirelessly working to help the cats and kittens of North London.
Sadly the number of cats needing our help is increasing. More people are dumping their pets on the street when they move or are evicted, we are getting more reports of teenagers setting their dogs on cats and more people are giving up their pets than ever before (a quick sample of reasons include leaving the country, moving to a new rented property where the landlord won't accept animals, their kids keep hitting their cat or they are bored with their old cat).
Despite the best efforts of the free neutering scheme (7,000 cats are neutered every year across London) unwanted litters or kittens are being born and feline Aids continues to be a big problem.
All this means SNIP needs all the help you can give. Hopefully this website will now be regularly updated with stories from the work volunteers are doing, cats in need of homes and fundraising events to rally round.
SNIP is an important part of welfare work in North London so please give all the help you can.
While the website has been neglected for a while, SNIP's dedicated volunteers have been tirelessly working to help the cats and kittens of North London.
Sadly the number of cats needing our help is increasing. More people are dumping their pets on the street when they move or are evicted, we are getting more reports of teenagers setting their dogs on cats and more people are giving up their pets than ever before (a quick sample of reasons include leaving the country, moving to a new rented property where the landlord won't accept animals, their kids keep hitting their cat or they are bored with their old cat).
Despite the best efforts of the free neutering scheme (7,000 cats are neutered every year across London) unwanted litters or kittens are being born and feline Aids continues to be a big problem.
All this means SNIP needs all the help you can give. Hopefully this website will now be regularly updated with stories from the work volunteers are doing, cats in need of homes and fundraising events to rally round.
SNIP is an important part of welfare work in North London so please give all the help you can.
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