>>>If someone knows the answer to this question could you
email me privately as it is not really endurance related. If a Tennessee
walking horse is not gaited by the time he is four, can it he be
>>>trained to be gaited? My email address is: sbolinge at aol dot
com. Thanks!
One of my best riding buddies when I was a kid had a registered TWH.
There were 3 of us in this "gang", 2 on QH and one on TWH. She walk, trot,
cantered...and our favorite RACED him everywhere with us for years. He never
did one lick of anything gaited that I saw. When he was 8 or 9 the farm she
lived on went up for sale and a man who rode show walking horses came over
to try her horse. He took the snaffle out, put in a long shank bit, kicked
him up a little while hold ing him back with his hands up high and the
darned horse started gaiting. I saw him the next year at a show. Very sad.
He'd had so much fun swimming in ponds with us (though he aways crapped
first thing and we had to splash to make it float away from us). We put up
with it because he stood still to be a good diving board. We were always
climbing mountains, and racing bareback, then he started having to do
that high stepping garbage in a ring. Poor boy. :-((
He was not a pacer. Maybe that made a difference.
>>>>Also....my BLM mustang mare always had a powerful
walk...but after 4 years steady riding, now, at age 8, she has a singlefoot,
rack, running walk and foxtrot at times......what you get
>>>>depends on motivation, footing, attitude and relaxation or
non relaxation, and, again. >>>>>walking for years, hills and
TIME.......
I had a big Appaloosa that was 1/2 QH who was always in a hurry and
wanted to jig. (ex-racehorse). I would make him walk everywhere and he
started walking faster and faster...kinda like when you tell an elementary
school kid *WALK!* on their way to catch the bus when the bell rings and
they find a way to do a weird gait that involves far more speed than a
normal walk but that you won't punish them for. Finally he was head bobbing
walking really fast leaving the other horses as usual (we did all our trail
rides riding 100 yards ahead and circling back, over and over all day) and a
friend said, "Is he gaited? I swear he's gaiting!" That made me mad so I
started trotting and he was my first endurance horse. >g< I suppose if
you walk *fast* enough it becomes a running walk?
I'm scared to death I'm going to have to learn all these terms. One of
my favorite uncles is 78 this year and has already been resuscitated 3
times. He's got about 13 TWH 40 miles from here and being the family "horse
expert" I *know* they're going to be my responsibility to disperse someday.
If anybody in the AL/TN/GA triangle needs one, let me know.