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  2. Big Dog (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Dog_(company)

    This later inspired the name "Big Dog" for the brand. [3] However, an alternate version of the story describes Gib Mann, a designer at the company, using the term "Big Dog" throughout conversation when he first joined Sierra West. Mann and Joy Moran designed skirt-like soccer shorts for Patagonia employee and soccer fan, Roger McDivitt.

  3. Frentera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frentera

    These are the bit lifter and its variant cheekers, a rubber bit lifter with an integral pair of bit guards. Both bit lifters and cheekers are approved for thoroughbred racing in Australia. [ 3 ] In the United States and Canada , a leather thong or string is sometimes attached to the top of the crownpiece of a headstall and used to support a bosal .

  4. Horse tack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_tack

    A curb and snaffle bit shown together on a double bridle A pelham bit with a jointed mouthpiece. A bit is a device placed in a horse's mouth, kept on a horse's head by means of a headstall. There are many types, each useful for specific types of riding and training. [2]: 371–376

  5. Bit guard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_guard

    Bit burr. Resembling a bit guard is a bit burr (sometimes burr bit, also bubble cheeker in Australia), which has teeth laid against the horse's cheek. The burr bit was for a time widely used on coach horses in New York City, until the use was stopped in part through the efforts of Henry Bergh circa 1879. [1]

  6. Bit (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_(horse)

    A horse wearing an English bridle with a snaffle bit, the end of which can be seen just sticking out of the mouth. The bit is not the metal ring. Horse skull showing the large gap between the front teeth and the back teeth. The bit sits in this gap, and extends beyond from side to side. The bit is an item of a horse's tack.

  7. Bosal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosal

    A pencil bosal worn under the bridle on a finished "two rein" horse Three different sizes of bosals for horses in various stages of hackamore training, the thickest (left) is for starting unbroke young horses, the middle is a medium-sized design for horses that are steady under saddle but still "green", often also used for show, and the thinnest (right) is for use on a polished hackamore horse ...