|
Click
HERE to go back to the Archives
Listing
Click
here for the printer friendly version
DICTIONARY OF HORSE WORDS
Aged Horse A horse known to be nine years old or
older.
Bad Keeper A horse who does not eat well
or does not digest what he does eat.
Bedding Straw, wood shavings, sand, even peat
moss, are considered to be good bedding for horses.
Blemish An abnormality that does not
seriously affect the serviceability of a horse.
Body brush A soft brush used to make a horse
shine.
Box stall A stall in the shape of a large box (12
x 14 approx.) Breeches Riding pants
Breed Registry A group of breeders banded together
for the purposes of recording the lineage of their animals,
protecting the purity of the breed, encouraging further
improvement of the breed, and promoting the interest of the
breed.
"Buy a lot" An expression used in racing circles
for falling off. Castration Removal of the
testicles of a male to make him sterile. Colostrum
The milk secreted by the dam for the first couple of days
following birth of a foal.
Colt A young stallion.
Concentrates Feeds that are low in fiber and high
in total digestible nutrients. Examples of this class of feeds
are the various grains, sweet feeds and high grade by
products.
Conception The fertilization of the egg and
beginning of growth of the embryo inside the mare's body.
Conformation Symmetrical disposition of the parts
of a horse
(how the horse is proportionally put together).
Cribbing A vice in which the horse bites or places
its upper incisor teeth on some solid object, pulls down,
arches his neck, and swallows gulps of air which go into the
stomach, not the lungs.
Dam A name for a mare who is the mother of a foal.
Dismounting Getting off of a riding horse. This
should always be done on the "near" or left side of the horse.
Drench A method of giving liquid medicine to a
horse by elevating his head and pouring it very slowly down
his throat from a bottle.
Farrier A blacksmith or one who trims horses feet
or shoes them. Feathers Long hair found on a
horse on the fetlocks and sometimes above.
Filly Female horse under three years of age.
Firing A method of strengthening tendons by
piercing the skin of the foreleg between the knee and pastern
with a red hot iron. This is practiced largely with race
horses which have broken down in the tendons.
Foal Colt or filly under one year.
Gaits The ways a horse moves. The three natural gaits
(paces) of a horse are walk, trot and canter. Others are
extended trot, gallop, pace, rack, running walk, etc.
Gelding A male horse which has been castrated
Gestation The act or period of carrying
the young during the pregnancy period; 11 to 11 1/2 months or
330 to 340 days for the mare. Gymkhana An
all-games show or event (egg-in-spoon race, musical chairs,
pole bending, barrel racing, keyhole race and many more) for
horses and their riders.
Hand Unit of measuring horse's height (to highest
part of the withers):
1 hand = 4 in. = 10 cm. Subdivided into inches.
(For example, 16.2 hands = 16 hands and 2 inches.)
Head-shy Horse is afraid of having the head
touched or of quick movements about the head.
Heat period The period in which the mare can be
bred. Heat periods usually occur as a 21-day cycle. The
duration of the heat period averages 4 to 6 days
Hogging or roaching Clipping the mane close to the
neck.
Mare A female of the horse species.
Measuring The four common measurements of a horse
are bone, girth, height, and weight.
Mounting Getting onto a horse properly. Always
mount from the "near" or left side.
Near-side The left side of a horse. Off or
far side The right side of a horse.
Parasite An organism living on or in the horse
such as lice (external) and worms (internal).
Parturition Act of giving birth.
Pedigree A form showing the line of ancestors and
their performance for an individual horse.
Pony A horse of a small breed, 14.2 hands and
under.
Puberty The state of being capable of begetting or
bearing offspring (point of sexual maturity). Mares generally
reach the age of puberty when 15 to 24 months of age.
"Pulling leather" Hanging onto the saddle to keep
your balance. Purebred An animal whose blood
lines are pure.
Red ribbon on tail A sign that a horse kicks.
Registration Entering horse into the registry of
the breed association if he meets qualifications laid down by
the organization.
Saddle A leather covered seat for the
rider on horseback. The English saddle and the Western saddle
are the common types. Shank A long strap or
rope used for leading the horse.
Sire The male parent of a horse.
Stallion A male horse of breeding age.
Sterility or barrenness Not fertile - horses that
are incapable of producing young thus are sterile.
Straight or tie stall An area between two
partitions in which the horse is generally tied to his manger.
tie stall:(5 or 6 ft. x 9 ft.)
Tack The saddle, bridle, girth, martingale, etc.
Types of horses A classification of the different
kinds of horses. One type is the light horse which is
sub-divided into driving horses, racing horses, and riding
horses. Under driving horses we find fine harness, heavy
harness, ponies, and roadsters; under racing horses are
harness-race, quarter-race, and running-race; and under riding
horses are five-gaiter, hunters, jumpers, plantation walking
horses, polo mounts, ponies, stock horses, and three gaited
horses. The second type is work horses which is sub-divided
into draft horses, farm chunks, southerners, and wagon horses.
Umbilical cord A tube-like structure connecting
the mare's body with the growing fetus.
Vices Objectionable traits found in a horse but
not serious enough to be classified as unsoundnesses. The
common ones are weaving, biting, wind-sucking, cribbing
kicking, blanket tearing, halter pulling and crowding.
Weanling A foal no longer nursing his mother but
before he becomes a yearling. He is a yearling the next year
at one-year-old.
Withers Area of a horse at the base of the
neck, above the shoulders, where the neck joins the body.
|