enow.com Web Search

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_saddle

    The green circle indicates the placement of a 7/8 rigging, blue shows 3/4 rigging, and the red circle shows the historic "center fire" position. Saddle rigging refers to the arrangement of rings and plate hardware that connects the billets and girthing system that holds the saddle on the horse. Western saddle rigging can be either single or double.

  3. Category:Rodeo equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Rodeo_equipment

    Print/export Download as PDF; ... Rodeo bareback rigging; Roping chute; S. Spur; W. Western saddle This page ...

  4. Girth (tack) - Wikipedia

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

    Tightening the girth, or cinch, of a western saddle. Several types of girth are shaped to allow ample room for the elbows. The Balding style is a flat piece of leather cut into three strips which are crossed and folded in the center, and the Atherstone style is a shaped piece of baghide with a roughly 1.5” wide strip of stronger leather running along the center.

  5. Side reins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Side_reins

    Side reins may be attached from the bit rings to the surcingle rings, or from the bit to the buckles of the girth of an English saddle or cinch rings of a western saddle. Side reins are adjusted longer for less-experienced horses, and gradually shortened and raised higher (from point of shoulder up to the point of hip) as a horse becomes better ...

  6. Rein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rein

    Western riders in timed rodeo events use a single closed rein, as do those who use a romal. A closed rein helps prevent the rider losing the reins altogether when dropping them. Split reins: a rein style seen in western riding where the reins are not attached to one another at the ends. They prevent a horse from tangling its feet in a looped ...

  7. Team roping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_roping

    Western saddle - Roping saddles have a particularly strong design with double rigging and other specialized features, including a rubber wrap around the saddle horn to keep the dally from slipping, and usually a wooden rawhide-covered saddle tree or a reinforced fiberglass tree.

  8. Western riding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_riding

    The horn is the easiest way to identify a western saddle. It allows the rider support and can be used for a lasso or other equipment (Gen, 2011). [4] The western saddle also consist of a deep seat and a high cantle. Depending on the local geography, tapaderos ("taps") cover the front of the stirrups to prevent brush from catching in the stirrups.

  9. Dally ribbon roping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dally_ribbon_roping

    Western saddle - Roping saddles have a particularly strong design with double rigging and other specialized features, including a rubber wrap around the saddle horn to keep the dally from slipping, and usually a wooden rawhide-covered saddle tree or a reinforced fiberglass tree. Bell boots and brushing boots are placed on the horse's legs for ...