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  2. Breastplate (tack) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breastplate_(tack)

    A breastplate (also referred to as a breastcollar, breaststrap or breastgirth) is a piece of tack (equipment) used on horses. Its purpose is to keep a saddle from sliding back. It is also a safety feature—if the saddle's girth or billets break, a rider may have enough time to stop the horse and dismount before the saddle slips off the animal ...

  3. Bucking Horse and Rider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucking_Horse_and_Rider

    The horse survived World War I and was retired to a stable in France. The idea that the horse in the image was Old Steamboat (1894–1914), the famous bucking horse near Cheyenne, was developed much later, as few civilians saw the event depicted by Ostrum. The incident was documented with citations in the book Where Rivers Run North by Sam ...

  4. King's Plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King's_Plate

    Horses owned by Windfields Farm have won the Plate eleven times, but the most successful was the stable owned by Joseph E. Seagram, a prominent distiller from Waterloo, Ontario. Seagram's stable won the Plate on twenty occasions between 1891 and 1935 including eight times in a row between 1891 and 1898, and ten times in eleven years from 1891 ...

  5. Equestrian facility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equestrian_facility

    Stables can be maintained privately for an owner's own horses or operated as a public business where a fee is charged for keeping other people's horses. In some places, stables are run as riding schools, where horses are kept for the purpose of providing lessons for people learning to ride or even as a livery stable (US) or hireling yard (UK ...

  6. Barding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barding

    Sometimes this included hinged cheek plates. A decorative feature common to many chanfrons is a rondel with a small spike. [4] The chanfron was known as early as ancient Greece, but vanished from use in Europe until the mid eleventh century [5] when metal plates replaced boiled leather as protection for war horses. The basic design of the ...

  7. Horse tack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_tack

    A horse equipped with a saddle for mounted police. Saddles are seats for the rider, fastened to the horse's back by means of a girth in English-style riding, or a cinch in the use of Western tack. Girths are generally a wide strap that goes around the horse at a point about four