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  2. 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.

  3. Category:Headgear (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Headgear_(horse)

    This is a category for all horse tack that may be placed primarily on a horse's head, used for a variety of purposes, including control, restraint, or safety. This includes items such bridles, hackamores, and halters, as well as accessories such as martingales, which act primarily on the head.

  4. Horse tack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_tack

    A hackamore is a headgear that utilizes a heavy noseband of some sort, rather than a bit, most often used to train young horses or to go easy on an older horse's mouth. Hackamores are more often seen in western riding. [1]: 158 Some related styles of headgear that control a horse with a noseband rather than a bit are known as bitless bridles.

  5. 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.

  6. Bridle (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridle_(disambiguation)

    Bridle usually refers to headgear worn by horses and other animals that are ridden or driven. Bridle may also refer to: Items. A part of a kite;

  7. Bit (horse) - Wikipedia

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

    The riders of early domesticated horses probably used some type of bitless headgear made of sinew, leather, or rope. [5] Components of the earliest headgear may be difficult to determine, as the materials would not have held up over time. For this reason, no one can say with certainty which came first, the bitted or the bitless bridle. [5]

  8. Hackamore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hackamore

    The word "hackamore" has been defined many ways, both as a halter [22] and as a type of bitless bridle. [23] However, both terms are primarily descriptive. The traditional jaquima hackamore is made up of a headstall, bosal and mecate tied into looped reins and a lead rope. [19] It is neither precisely a halter nor simply a bridle without a bit.

  9. Double bridle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_bridle

    A double bridle, also called a full bridle or Weymouth bridle, [1] is a bridle that has two bits and four reins (sometimes called "double reins"). One bit is the bradoon (or bridoon ), is a modified snaffle bit that is smaller in diameter and has smaller bit rings than a traditional snaffle, and it is adjusted so that it sits above and in front ...