Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Litters were used to carry passengers between two horses, or on the back of a pack horse or mule (or camel; see Light horse field ambulance). (*) Note: The “litter” in the picture is not really a litter, designed to protect the patient and to be moved by horses, but a carriage used in hippotherapy ; the patient, often multiple disabled, is ...
Hot to Trot is a 1988 American comedy film directed by Michael Dinner, written by Hugo Gilbert, Stephen Neigher, Charlie Peters and Andy Breckman and stars Bobcat Goldthwait (credited as Bob Goldthwait), Virginia Madsen, Jim Metzler, Dabney Coleman and the voice of John Candy.
A Stokes basket as used by a fire department, with a vacuum bag to restrain the person in the litter World War I stretcher in use. A litter is a stretcher designed to be used where there are physical obstacles that impair movement, including other hazards such as, in confined spaces, on slopes or uneven terrain, or in densely forested areas.
Wesley is a horse with a big personality. Recently Amanda Enloe had a film crew at her farm filming a commercial, and they wanted to use some of her horses, including Wesley, in the scene. Wesley ...
The title character of The Pizza Head Show commercial skits. Mr. Peanut: Planters snacks: 1916–present: Popsicle Pete: Popsicle ice pops: 1940s–1995: Honeycomb Kid: Post Cereals' Honeycomb cereal: 1960s (Cowboy) 1980s (Kid) The Crazy Craving: debuted 1990s: Bernard, the Bee Boy 2010 Sugar Bear: Post Cereals' Golden Crisp cereal: 1949–present
Japan's Chihiro Akami, an example of a female jockey. The place of women in equestrianism has undergone significant societal evolution. Until the 20th century, in most Eurasian and North African countries, and later in North and South America, the horse was primarily a symbol of military and masculine prowess, associated with men for both warfare and daily labor.
Two Bits & Pepper is a 1995 family dramedy film directed by Corey Michael Eubanks and starring Joe Piscopo, Lauren Eckstrom, and Rachel Crane. The plot concerns two young girls who get into mischief with their pet horses. They are kidnapped by a pair of bumbling crooks who hold them for ransom, and it is up to their equine pets to rescue them. [1]
A psychosomatically mute English boy sights a wild white pony on the Dartmoor moors and sets out to tame him. [4] He is supported by an old moorman and a neighbouring farm girl. Much of the film is devoted to him searching for the pony and his family searching for him across the beautiful, foggy moors. [5] [6]