User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
gaited- past of gait
Extensive Definition
Lateral gaits fall in the sequence right hind,
right front, left hind, left front. They may be "even," with a
steady 1-2-3-4 rhythm, or in a slightly uneven 1-2, 3-4 rhythm,
where the horse picks up and sets down its feet on each side
slightly faster than when switching to the opposite set.
Running Walk
The Running Walk is an even four-beat lateral gait with footfalls in the same sequence as the regular walk, but characterized by greater speed and smoothness. The horse retains a regular 4-beat cadence but the running walk is characterized by an extreme overreach of the hind foot (often being placed as far as 24 inches ahead of where the front foot landed) and speeds of up to 10 mph. It is a distinctive natural gait of the Tennessee Walking Horse."Slow gaits"
The slow gait is a general term for the classic amble and several slightly different gaits that follow the same general footfall pattern as the walk, in that lateral pairs of legs move forward in sequence, but the rhythm and collection of the movements are different. The common thread is that all are smooth gaits, comfortable to the rider. Terms for various slow gaits include the stepping pace and singlefoot. Some slow gaits are natural to some horses, while others are developed from the pace. All are very smooth; in particular, the stepping pace is said to have been used at times to transport wounded soldiers from battlefields. The stepping pace, sometimes called an "amble," is a slightly uneven lateral gait, with a 1-2, 3-4 sequence, while the singlefoot has an even 1-2-3-4 rhythm.Rack
The rack or racking is a gait that is also known historically as the "Virginia Single-foot Gait," with many breeds of horses capable of producing this gait. It is most commonly associated with the Five-Gaited American Saddlebred. In the rack, the speed of an even lateral singlefoot gait is increased to be approximately that of the trot of pace, but instead of being a two-beat gait, it is a four-beat gait with equal intervals between each beat.The rack, like other intermediate gaits, is
smoother than the trot because the hooves hitting the ground
individually rather in pairs minimizes the force and bounce the
horse transmits to the rider. To achieve this gait the horse must
be in a "hollow position". This means that, instead of a rounded
back as seen in dressage horses and others that
work off their hind quarters, the spine is curved somewhat
downward. This puts the racking horse in the best position to rack
without breaking into another gait. If the rider sits back or leans
slightly back, this will encourage the hollow position. This allows
the hind legs to trail and makes the rack easier for the horse. The
downside of this is that this position weakens the back and makes
the horse less able to carry the weight of the rider without
strain.
The rack, at speed, can be as fast as a canter.
The ride is smooth, and the rider appears to remain motionless as
the horse moves. The horse itself maintains a fairly still head and
most of the action is in the legs. At horse shows,
one of the Slow Gaits and the Rack are required gaits for the
Five-Gaited American
Saddlebred, who also performs the walk, trot and canter. The gait is to some
degree hereditary in five-gaited Saddlebreds. The rack is also a
genetic trait in a breed called the Racking
horse, and a variation is seen in the Icelandic
horse.
Tölt
The Tölt (also, less correctly, Tolt) is a gait that is often described as being unique to the Icelandic Horse. In its pure form, the footfalls are the same as in rack, but the gait in the Icelandic horse has a different style with more freedom and liquidity of movement. The most prized horses have a very long stride and considerable lift with their forelegs. Icelandic Riders will demonstrate the smoothness of a tölt by going at the speed of a gallop without spilling a drink they hold. However, some horses have a tölt that is considered imperfect, and may be described as a "trotty tölt" or a "pacey tölt". The Tölt differs from the rack as the horse is not suppose to hollow its back.The majority of Icelandic horses can also perform
a type of pace called
flugskeið or a "flying pace," and are thus called "five-gaited".
(Walk, trot, canter, tölt, pace.) Good pacers are held in high
regard in this breed, but for a pacer to stand out the horse has to
be able to perform the pace at a high speed. Slow pacing in
Icelandic horses is considered a major flaw. A horse that goes at a
slow pace, or "piggy-pace," is referred to as lullari.
The Faroese Horse
and the Nordlandshest/Lyngshest
of Norway
share common ancestry with the Icelandic
horse and some individuals of these breeds have the capacity to
tölt, although it is not as commonly used.
Paso gaits
The Peruvian Paso and Paso Fino are two breeds which have smooth innate intermediate gaits.The Paso Fino has several speed variations called
(from slowest to fastest) the paso fino, paso corto, and paso
largo. All have an even 1-2-3-4 rhythm. The Paso fino gait is very
slow, performed mainly for horse show
competition. Horses are ridden over a "fino strip", which is
usually plywood set into the ground, so the judges can listen for
absolute regularity of footfall.
The Peruvian
Paso has an even lateral gait known as the Paso Llano, which
has the same footfall sequence as the Running Walk, and is
characterized by an elongated and lateral motion of the front
shoulder known as "Termino." The faster ambling gait of the
Peruvian Paso is called the Sobreandando and is a slightly uneven
lateral gait somewhat closer to a pace.
Marchador lateral gaits
The Mangalarga Marchador has two lateral gaits: the "marcha picada", a lateral gait ranging in speed from a somewhat pace-like running walk to a pace similar to the Icelandic flying pace; and the "center march", which is very close to the classic running walk seen on flat-shod Tennessee Walkers. It also has a third, diagonal, ambling gait, described below.Diagonal ambling gaits
The diagonal gaits are usually slightly uneven, in a 1-2, 3-4 rhythm that gives the rider a slight forward and back sensation when riding. They are considered physically easier on the horse than the lateral gaits as less hollowing of the back occurs when the horse is in the gait. However, proponents of laterally-gaited horses argue that they are also not quite as smooth.Diagonal gaits in Latin American breeds
The Mangalarga Marchador performs the marcha batida, a diagonal gait similar to the fox trot. The Peruvian Paso and Paso Fino performs the trocha, which is also a four-beat diagonal gait, though it is often discouraged as a gait fault in these breeds. Another version seen in the Paso Fino is called the Pasitrote.Breeds of gaited horses
Horse breeds that have natural gaited tendencies include the following:In most "gaited" breeds, an ambling gait is a
hereditary trait.
However, some representatives of these breeds may not always gait,
and some horses of other breeds not listed above may have ambling
gaited ability, particularly with training.
From the 1728 Cyclopedia
At one time, even horses without natural ambling ability were trained to produce the gait on command. But historically, as the value of the ambling horse of the Middle Ages gave way to a preference for trotting breeds and the development of classical dressage by the time of the Enlightenment, training the amble became a topic of considerable discussion amongst horse trainers in Europe. The 1728 Cyclopedia discussed one form of the gait (the lateral type derived from the pace) and some of the training methods used to create it in a horse that was not naturally gaited:- ''Ambling, in horsemanship, is a peculiar kind of pace, wherein a horse's two legs of the same side move at the same time. The ambling horse changes sides at each remove, two legs of a side being in the air, and two on the ground, at the same time. An amble is usually the first natural page of young colts, which as soon as they have strength enough to trot, they quit. There is no such thing as an amble in the manage, (a riding arena for schooling horses) the riding masters (early practitioners of Classical dressage) allowing of no other paces beside walk, trot, and gallop. Their reason is that a horse may be put from a trot to a gallop without stopping him, but not from an amble to a gallop, without such a stop, which interrupts the justice and cadence of the manage.
Faulty methods
- There have been various practices and methods of discipline for bringing a young horse to amble. Some choose to toil him in his foot-pace through newly-plowed lands, which naturally inures him to the stroke required in the amble. Its inconveniences are the weakness and lameness that such disorderly toil may bring on a young horse. Others attempt it by sudden stopping, or checking him in the cheeks, when in a gallop; and thus putting him into a confusion between gallop and trot, so that losing both, he necessarily stumbles on an amble. However, this is apt to spoil a good mouth and rein, and exposes the horse to the danger of an hoof-reach, or sinew-strain, by over-reaching, etc.
- Others prefer ambling by weights as the best way. To this end, some overload their horse with excessively heavy shoes, which is apt to make him interfere, or strike short with his hind feet. Others fold lead weights about the fetlock pasterns, which are not only liable to the mischiefs of the former, but put the horse in danger of incurable strains, crushing of the coronet, and breeding of ringbones, etc. Yet others load the horse's back with earth, lead, or other heavy substances, which may occasion a swaying of the back, overstraining the fillets, etc.
- Some endeavor to make him amble in hand, ere they mount his back, by means of some wall, smooth pale or rail, and by checking him in the mouth with the bridle-hand, and correcting him with a rod on the hinder hoofs and under the belly when he treads incorrectly. However, this is apt to drive a horse to a desperate frenzy, ere he can be made to understand what they would have of him, and to rear, sprawl out his legs, and make other antic postures, which are not easily stopped again. Others think to effect it by a pair of hind shoes with long spurns or plates before the toes, and of such a length that if the horse offers to trot, the hind foot beats the fore foot. But this occasions wounds of the back sinews, which often bring on incurable lameness.
- Some attempt to procure an amble by folding fine, soft lists (flanks of pork) straight around his hocks, in the place where he is gartered for a stifle strain, and turn him thus to grass for two or three weeks, and afterwards take aways the list. This is the Spanish method, but is disapproved, for though a horse cannot then trot but with pain, yet the members must be sufferers, and though the amble is gained, it must be slow and unsightly, because attended with a cringing in the hind parts.
Proper method
- In effect, ambling by the trammel (a type of leg restraint) appears the nearest to nature, the best and most assured way. There are diverse errors usually practised in this method, such as, that the trammel is often made too long, and so gives no stroke, but makes a horse hackle and shuffle his feed confusedly. It may also be made too short, which makes him volt and twitch up his hind feet so suddenly that by custom it brings him to a string-halt, from which it will scarce ever be recovered. Sometimes the trammel is misplaced, and to prevent falling put above the knee, and the hind hoof. In which case, the horse cannot give any true stroke, nor can the fore leg compel the hind to follow it. If, to evade this, the trammel is made short and straight, it will press the main sinew of the hind leg, and the fleshy part of the fore thighs, so that the horse cannot go without halting before, and cringing behind.
- As to the form of the trammel, some make it all of leather, which is inconvenient, in that it will either stretch or break, and thus confound the certainty of the operation. In a true trammel, the side-ropes are to be so firm, as not to yield a hair's breadth; the hose soft, and to lie so close, as not to move from its first place; and the back-band flat, no matter how light, and to descend from the fillets so as not to gall.
- When the horse by being trammeled on one side, has attained to amble perfectly in the hand, it is to be changed to the other side, and that to be likewise brought to rule. When, by this changing from one side to another, with a half trammel, the horse will run and amble in hand, readly and swiftly, without snappering and stumbling, which is ordinarily done by two or three hours labour, the whole trammel is to be put on, with the broad, flat, back-band, and both sides trammeled alike.
See also
Sources
- Bennett, Deb. Conquerors: The Roots of New World Horsemanship. Amigo Publications Inc; 1st edition 1998. ISBN 0-9658533-0-6
- Lieberman, Bobbie. "Easy-Gaited Horses." Equus, issue 359, August, 2007, pp. 47-51.
- "Breeds that Gait." Equus, issue 359, August, 2007, pp. 52-54
- Hart, Rhonda. "Ready to Gait?" Equus'', issue 359, August, 2007, pp. 55-56.
gaited in French: Amble
gaited in Italian: Ambio
gaited in Russian: Иноходь