Horse tack
Zur Navigation springen
Zur Suche springen
Here are collected thumbs about horse tack.
Halfter, Gebiß, Zaumzeug/Bits, Bridles, Halters
[Bearbeiten]Curb bit
[Bearbeiten]Curb bits are bits that have shanks and use leverage, regardless of mouthpiece. A curb bit might have a jointed mouthpiece or a solid mouthpiece.
-
Diagram showing parts of a curb bit
-
A low port curb bit with a roller or cricket and loose jaw shanks
-
A low port curb with a cricket roller, loose jaw shanks. "Quick" brand bit
-
A western style curb bit with silver design, suitable for show.
-
A western style curb bit with silver design, suitable for show.
-
A western style curb bit with silver design, suitable for show.
-
medium port curb bit with short loose shanks and sweet iron mouthpiece inlaid with copper.
-
traditional low port western style curb bit
-
Bits with direct pressure are snaffles, even without broken mouthpiece; bits with shanks are curbs, even with a broken mouthpiece.
-
Shanked bits with jointed mouthpieces are curb bits. (Bits at top of image)
Combination designs, curb and snaffle pressure
[Bearbeiten]A bridle may be able to apply both snaffle and curb leverage, depending on the bits used and where the reins are attached to them.
-
A curb bit and a bradoon (double bridle)
-
A pelham bit combines curb and snaffle pressure on different rings placed on a single bit
-
A Kimberwicke bit looks like a snaffle, but has very slight leverage due to slots that hold reins in position.
Snaffle Bit
[Bearbeiten]Snaffle bits are bits that use direct pressure without leverage, regardless of mouthpiece. Not all snaffle bits have jointed mouthpieces, and a bit with a jointed mouthpiece is not always a snaffle, it depends on the type of leverage.
-
Diagram of the parts of a snaffle bit
-
A snaffle bit with western styling, also wrapped in rubber to make it milder
-
Dee Ring Snaffle Bit
-
French Link Snaffle Bit
-
Mullen mouth snaffle, synthetic mouthpiece.
-
Loose ring snaffle with a ball-link in the middle
-
Bits with jointed mouthpieces and no shanks are snaffle bits (bottom two bits)
-
Bits with direct pressure are snaffles, even without broken mouthpiece; bits with shanks are curbs, even with a broken mouthpiece.
-
Single-jointed bits: loose ring (either side) and eggbutt (middle)
-
Twisted wire snaffle
-
Single jointed fulmer snaffle
Snaffle bridles
[Bearbeiten]-
Detail of headstall and browband
-
Snaffle bridle with a Market Harborough
-
Eggbutt
-
D-ring
-
snaffle bridle with flash noseband
-
Snaffle variation called a boucher
-
Australian Barcoo (or ring-head) bridle
-
A western style bridle with a browband and a snaffle bit
-
Hunt (or English) bridle, snaffle bit, cavesson noseband
Double (Weymouth) bridles
[Bearbeiten]Gag bits
[Bearbeiten]-
"Gag snaffle"
-
American gag
-
American gag
-
3-ring bit/Pessoa gag
Western Bridles
[Bearbeiten]-
A western style "split ear" bridle with decorative silver added for show, has curb bit
-
A set of romal style reins
-
A set of western-style split reins, attached to a snaffle bit
-
A western style bridle with a browband and a snaffle bit
Hackamores
[Bearbeiten]-
A bosal style hackamore
-
Detail of mecate reins attached to a bosal
-
Closeup of bosal and mecate on a horse
-
A horse wearing a bosal hackamore
-
A Jumping Cavesson--a type of hackamore that allows a sport horse ridden in English style tack to be ridden without a bit in its mouth
-
A sidepull, a type of hackamore for horses
-
A type of combination halter and bitless bridle
Historic bits
[Bearbeiten]-
Tarquínia Winged-Horses with harness
-
Left half of a late-medieval historic bit, found Eisenberg, near Pfronten, Germany
Halters
[Bearbeiten]-
Flat nylon web halter (or headcollar)
-
Show halter
Other
[Bearbeiten]-
Cheekers (w:Frentera plus w:Bit guards)
-
Bits, mouthing keys, and metal parts of a serreta (see w:Noseband)
Saddles
[Bearbeiten]-
Knee rolls and girth on a dressage selle.
-
Riding simulator with a dressage selle.Texte en gras
-
Horse collars
-
Harnesses
-
Fly mask
-
Fiador knot
-
Six-horse harness