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By Jessica at 10/03/08 22:04
I am new to the large organized trail rides and was not sure of proper etiquette before my first ride. I made sure to stay a little ways behind the horse in front of me and did not gallop or even really trot to catch up to prevent spooking leading horses. I just wonder if there are other rules I should be aware of?And as far as what to bring, I just kind of winged it. I made sure I had water and a small first aid kit in my saddle bags. I also packed some food and lead ropes to tie my horse when we stopped. Other than that I was not sure what to bring. I need to find someone who frequently goes on rides to show me the ropes. Index for Texas Texas Tags: trail riding • organized rides • trail gear • etiquette • 0 Comments. - Permalink |
By Bianca at 10/03/08 22:01
I was on a trail ride recently and we all stopped for lunch and I noticed a horse that was nibbling on a tree that it was tied to. He wasn't stripping bark, just nibbling. A man approached to owner of this horse and really let her have it. I felt very bad for her. I am sure that no one wants to look at a forest full on gnawed trees, but he was just cruel about it. He yelled at her in front of the whole group and she just kept apologizing and looked near tears.So my question is, does it damage a tree if a horse chews it a little. I am not talking stripping huge sections of bark, but just a nibble. It seemed like he overreacted just a touch and the woman seemed like she never wanted to come on an organized trail ride again. There must be a way to educate people without being so hateful. And if it really doesn't hurt the tree, why such a severe scolding? Index for Georgia Georgia Tags: trail riding • chewing trees • damage • 0 Comments. - Permalink |
| trail riding Archives: • October, 2008 • |
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