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  2. 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.

  3. Hackamore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hackamore

    The noseband is made of leather, rawhide, or rope with a leather or synthetic strap under the jaw, held on by a leather or synthetic headstall. Sidepulls are primarily used to start young horses or on horses that cannot carry a bit. While severity can be increased by using harder or thinner rope, a sidepull lacks the sophistication of the bosal.

  4. Mechanical hackamore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_hackamore

    The mechanical hackamore may be a relatively modern invention. In the United States, a device with shanks and a noseband, called a "hackamore bit" was mentioned in at least one western riding-based horse training book by the late 1930s. [6] Early patent applications were filed in 1940 for a "Hackamore bit" [2] and a "leverage hackamore bridle". [7]

  5. Bridle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridle

    A hunt seat style English bridle Western show bridle. A bridle is a piece of equipment used to direct a horse. As defined in the Oxford English Dictionary, the "bridle" includes both the headstall that holds a bit that goes in the mouth of a horse, and the reins that are attached to the bit. It provides additional control and communication ...

  6. 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. This category does not include veterinary equipment.

  7. Fiador (tack) - Wikipedia

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

    The fiador is attached to a headstall via a common (shared) browband, and its opposite end is tied to the bottom of a noseband or bosal, leaving a small loop. Seen in some nations on both bridles and hackamores, in Mexico, the United States and Canada it is used only on a bosal hackamore.

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