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  2. Horse tongue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_tongue

    The horse tongue is highly sensitive, and therefore vulnerable to injury. [ 3 ] [ 40 ] The main cause of lingual injuries in horses is from mishandling or accidents related to a bit . [ 3 ] A horse's tongue may hang over the bit for various reasons, particularly if the rider's hand is too heavy or if the bit is ill-suited to the horse's mouth ...

  3. Horse pain caused by the bit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_pain_caused_by_the_bit

    When the vascularity of a horse tongue is compromised by its tack, the tongue changes color. [35] Dr. Jacques Laurent identifies three possible forms of vascularization changes in the horse's tongue: arterial compression alone, which gives the tongue a white color ; venous compression, which turns the tongue blue and swollen; and

  4. Tongue-tie (tack) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongue-tie_(tack)

    This horse wears a tongue-tie, the yellow object seen by the mouth. Tongue tie visible below the bit on California Chrome. A tongue-tie is a piece of equipment used by equestrians to prevent a horse from getting its tongue over the bit, which would make the animal very difficult to control. It is usually a strip of cloth or rubber, passed ...

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  6. Bit mouthpiece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_mouthpiece

    This bit can put pressure on the tongue, although it also adds pressure to the bars and lips of the mouth. It contains a double jointed mouthpiece similar to the French link, with the center section a flat plate. In its original form, the plate was intended to lie across the whole width of the horse's tongue.

  7. Ruscus hypoglossum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruscus_hypoglossum

    Ruscus hypoglossum is a small evergreen shrub with a native range from Italy north to Austria and Slovakia and east to Turkey and Crimea. [1] Common names include spineless butcher's-broom, [2] mouse thorn and horse tongue lily.

  8. Bit (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_(horse)

    A horse wearing an English bridle with a snaffle bit, the end of which can be seen just sticking out of the mouth. The bit is not the metal ring. Horse skull showing the large gap between the front teeth and the back teeth. The bit sits in this gap, and extends beyond from side to side. The bit is an item of a horse's tack.

  9. Spendthrift Farm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spendthrift_Farm

    Spendthrift Farm is a thoroughbred race horse breeding farm and burial site in Lexington, Kentucky, currently owned by Eric & Tammy Gustavson. [1] It was founded by Leslie Combs II and named for the great stallion Spendthrift, who was owned by Combs' ancestor, Daniel Swigert of Elmendorf Farm. Spendthrift was the great-grandfather of Man o' War.