enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: headstall bridles without noseband for horses for sale

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hackamore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hackamore

    Once a young horse is solidly trained with a bosal, a spade bit is added and the horse is gradually shifted from the hackamore to a bit, to create a finished bridle horse. Some horses are never transitioned to a bitted bridle, and it is possible to use the hackamore for the life of the horse.

  3. Bitless bridle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitless_bridle

    A cross-under bitless bridle. A bitless bridle is a general term describing a wide range of headgear for horses or other animals that controls the animal without using a bit. Direction control may also be via a noseband or cavesson, if one is used. The term hackamore is the most historically accurate word for most common forms of bitless headgear.

  4. Mechanical hackamore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_hackamore

    The longer the shanks, the more severe the action. Similarly, a thinner noseband is also more severe. [12] Occasionally it is used for a horse that has learned to ignore bit pressure on the mouth, or for horses with an injured mouth. [12] It is incorrect to assume that a mechanical hackamore is milder than a bitted bridle, it is not.

  5. Bridle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridle

    Headgear without a bit that uses a noseband to control a horse is called a hackamore, or, in some areas, a bitless bridle. There are many different designs with many different name variations, but all use a noseband that is designed to exert pressure on sensitive areas of the animal's face to provide direction and control.

  6. Horse tack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_tack

    An English bridle with cavesson noseband. Bridles usually have a bit attached to reins and are used for riding and driving horses. [1]: 156–159 English Bridles have a cavesson style noseband and are seen in English riding. Their reins are buckled to one another, and they have little adornment or flashy hardware. [1]: 156–159

  7. Martingale (tack) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martingale_(tack)

    It consists of an adjustable strap, one end which attaches to the horse's breastplate and the other which attaches to a noseband on the bridle. The noseband can be of leather, but may also be of lariat rope, or even plastic-covered cable, which can make the western tiedown considerably harsher than the English-style standing martingale.

  8. Noseband - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noseband

    A bridle does not necessarily need a noseband, and many bridles, such as those used in Western riding, flat racing, or endurance riding, do not have one. Some horses shown in-hand do not use a noseband in order to better show off the animal's head. Many old paintings also depict a hunting horse without a noseband, since it was not always deemed ...

  9. Bosal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosal

    A pencil bosal worn under the bridle on a finished "two rein" horse Three different sizes of bosals for horses in various stages of hackamore training, the thickest (left) is for starting unbroke young horses, the middle is a medium-sized design for horses that are steady under saddle but still "green", often also used for show, and the thinnest (right) is for use on a polished hackamore horse ...

  1. Ads

    related to: headstall bridles without noseband for horses for sale