Big Licked
Slang term used to refer to a horse that has more than
the average stride and or animation when performing its
gaits.
Buggy trot
Slang used when referring to the gait of a horse
that is long trotting or square trotting.
Canter
The canter is a broken three-beat gait, and
should be performed with collection. The horse should be
relaxed and under control, should not crossfire, and
should be in the correct lead. In the canter the outside
rear foot hits the ground first, the inside rear and the
outside front feet hit the ground simultaneously, and the
inside front foot hits last. This produces the broken
three-beat cadence. Because of the rocking motion of the
canter, the saddle should move smoothly without surging
or bouncing. This rocking chair canter allows the horse
to have a showy head movement as the head is used as a
counter balance to the broken gait. The head will reach
its highest point when the outside rear foot hits the
ground, and its lowest point when the inside front foot
hits the ground. The horse gathers itself on the off beat
and takes another step. The speed of the canter should be
near that of the flat foot walk.
Capping
If the rear foot of a horse sets down squarely
on the track of the same side front foot as it is set
down, the horse is said to be capping.
Cow trot
Term used to refer to method of moving the back
end of a horse when trotting. A cow trotting horse is
stiff in the rear joints, and uses the hips for most of
the forward movement. A cow trotting horse will swing its
tail side to side and its feet out in an arc as it moves
them forward. A cow trotting horse will not break over in
the hocks, but will swing them side to side in a stiff
motion. A cow trotting horse may also be either long
trotting or square trotting.
Cross firing
A horse is cross firing when the inside rear
foot hits first, and the inside front foot hits last when
the horse is in the canter or lope.
Dog Walk
A slang term that is used to describe a walk that is so
slow that there is movement front to rear when sitting on
the horse. This gait is used to get the horse to work on
the fundamentals of the rhythms and build reach on both
ends or break up a pace.
Flat foot walk
A true flat foot walk is a four-beat gait in
which each foot is picked up and set down in an even
cadence. The rear end movement should be smooth and close
to the ground without any snap or pop. Each stride should
reach forward and slide in as it is set down, over
striding the track of the front foot. The head shake is
in time with the rear feet and should be smooth. The tail
should set still and flow.
Fox Trot
The fox trot is a broken diagonal gait with a distinctive
rhythm that is created by a horse moving its front foot a
split second before its opposite rear foot. The fox trot
is a smooth gait because the horse is in contact with the
ground at all times. A horse that is foxtrotting
correctly will never have more than two feet off the
ground at any given time. On both the front and back ends
the horse will sit one foot down as it picks the other
foot up and for a moment both feet will be touching the
ground.
Hard trot
Slang term referring to all of the mutations of
the fox trot that result in a rough ride for the rider
i.e., long trot, cow trot, and square trot.
Long trot
Slang used to refer to the gait of a horse that
is being pushed or over ridden in the fox trot. A horse
that is long trotting will have some fly time on the
front end, but may not have fly time on the back end. A
long trotting horse will have at least three feet off the
ground part of the time, and will not give as smooth a
ride as a horse that is foxtrotting correctly. The term
is also sometimes used when referring to a square trot.
Lope
The lope has the same basic movements as the
canter, but in the lope the inside rear and outside front
feet hit separately creating a four beat gait. The lope
is a broken four beat gait that is common to all horses.
The lope is a faster gait than the canter. The lope is
like a slow gallop. The lope a horse moves with a low
flat motion and has some rocking motion. In a lope each
foot touches the ground one at a time, and the horse is
not supported at all a part on each stride.
Over-stride
If the rear foot of a horse passes the track of
the same side front foot as it is set down, the distance
between the front of the front track and the rear of the
rear track is the amount of over - stride.
Pace
The pace is a two-beat lateral gait in which a
horse moves both right feet and then moves both left
feet. In a pace the front and rear foot are picked up and
then set down simultaneously making only one beat. A
pacing horse will move its head side to side to counter
the motion of its feet.
Pace-walk
The pace-walk is a lateral four-beat gait in
which the horse will pick up both the front and rear foot
simultaneously, then moves the rear foot faster than the
front foot and sets the rear foot down before the front
foot. This allows the pace-walker to have an up and down
head shake, and have a four-beat cadence. The pace-walk
is much closer to a flat foot walk than a pace, having
both a head shake and a four beat cadence.
Pacy
Slang term that is used to refer to a horse that
is moving in a fashion that is between the gait desired
at the time and a pace. Most common when referring to a
horse that is walking with a rhythm that is more lateral
than a correct flat foot walk. Also see "slick"
Rack
Racking in the world today includes both the
slow rack, and the fast rack. The gaits used are the rack
and the stepping pace. In both the rear of the horse
provides the most of the forward motion and support while
the front end does little pulling. Both have an even four
beat cadence without any head shake. In the slow rack the
feet are picked up one foot at a time with the front end
moving up and down with little forward extension. The
slow rack is near the same speed as a fox trot and is one
gait that many foxtrotters seem to have a tendency for.
Especially with inexperienced riders. This is partly
because inexperienced riders may not relax and may hold
the head of the horse higher than the natural head set.
Also if the horse is not relaxed it may be prone to rack.
The fast rack or stepping pace is performed by picking up
the feet like a pace, but holding the front foot up for
an extra half step. The front feet are picked up and held
in the up position for a split second then lowered as the
other front foot is picked up meeting at a point near
knee high. This means the front end is not supported at
all some of the time. However, the horse gives a very
smooth ride because the rear foot is up under the horse
far enough to support its center of gravity at that
moment. A horse doing a fast rack will seem low in the
rear because of the extra reach under the horse.
Running walk
Like the flat foot walk, the running is a
four-beat gait in which each foot is picked up and set
down in an even cadence. The rear end movement should be
smooth and close to the ground without any snap or pop.
Each stride should reach forward and slide in as it is
set down, over striding the track of the front foot. The
head shake is in time with the rear feet and should be
smooth. The tail should set still and flow. The flat foot
walk and the running walk have the same general movements
and look alike in many ways. In a true flat foot walk at
least one front foot is touching at all times, and as a
flat foot walk is pushed faster, the front end of the
horse will leave the ground for a split second each step.
At that point it has become a running walk.
Slick
Slang term used to refer to any gait that is
being performed more lateral than the correct gait would
be: i.e. slick trot - is between a fox trot and a running
walk; slick running walk - is between a running walk and
a pace slick walk - is a pacy flat foot walk. |