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Is he gaited?!

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  • Is he gaited?!

    So I realize this is a pretty stupid question, but I have basically NO experience with gaited horses.

    I was out at my SO's farm and was going to watch him ride his horse for the first time. He has explained before that the horse likes to "walk really fast" and will basically never slow his walk down until he's done riding and gets off. Horse walks completely normal until you get on him. He also has a normal trot and canter(which he doesnt rush at all).

    I have ridden a horse who was gaited(10ish years ago) and all I remember thinking is "oh my gosh this isnt comfortable(and by that, I mean, not what im used to!)"

    Im not currently able to ride(had a small seizure and am waiting for my meds to adjust), so I wasnt able to feel what it felt like, however it looked a lot like what ive seen gaited horses look like!

    Can someone explain exactly what makes a horse gaited? (Good lord, I know we learned this in 4-H....but that was yearssss ago!)
    Charlie Brown (1994 bay TB X gelding)
    White Star (2004 grey TB gelding)

    Mystical Moment, 1977-2010.

  • #2
    Take a look at youtube and search "gaited horses" "racking horses" "tennessee walkers" "fox trotters" etc. If you find something that moves like your SOs horse, you'll have your answer.
    Patience pays.

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    • #3
      I can only tell my experience with TN Walkers (which is the only especially "fast walking" gaited horse I know of), which is limited, but it is definitely a 4 beat gait. A running walk does look like a walk if you slow it down, but in practice I don't think you could confuse the two. A running walk feels different (though still clearly 4 beat) and looks different (same sequence of footfall, but different carriage, and really unmistakeably fast).

      A gaited horse is basically one who differs from the standard walk, trot, canter. Personally, even if I didn't know exactly what I was seeing, it was pretty clear to me whether a horse was gaited or not (as in, can I clearly identify this as w/t/c?) regardless of discipline. But I've worked with TN Walkers outside of the show ring and lots of show Arabians (though not competitive saddleseat myself, although I've been the managing "trainer"--mostly manager in those cases) and some NSHs, so I might have some more experience to go from than some.

      Typically a TN Walker with a good running walk will not trot, but I have known a handful who have. Some say they can't canter but I disagree, most gaited Walkers I have known can gait and canter just fine. A running walk does look different from just a "fast walk" however, even though it is the same sequence of footfalls. I could tell you the differences as I watched it, but not specializing in it and just riding my partner's family's horses (they breed Walkers) and the occasional Walker that comes my way for general training, this is the best I can do at the moment.

      Hope this helps a bit at least.

      Edit: Just to be doubly clear, take this post with a huge grain of salt. This is my personal experience with gaited horses, and I make no claims as anything approaching an expert in that regard. I am an Arabian trainer, but focus on sporthorse so no gaited horses for me.
      Last edited by CosMonster; Jan. 11, 2011, 09:27 PM. Reason: clarification
      exploring the relationship between horse and human

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      • #4
        By "gaited horse" most of the time you mean one that does not trot (no moment of suspension) and when doing the intermediate gait always has at least one foot on the ground.

        Once you get past this "gait" (or, more correctly, "soft gait") can meaning anything from a broken trot to a broken pace.

        G.
        Mangalarga Marchador: Uma Raça, Uma Paixão

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        • #5
          Sounds like that horse does what we call a "cow walk" . Its a very nice fast, smooth walk that is taught when used for ranch work. Quarter horses will do it when taught young.
          "My treasures do not sparkle or glitter, they shine in the sunlight and nicker to me in the night"

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          • #6
            I've ridden both Morgans and Quarter Horses that will have a slow gait or indian shuffle between their walk and trot gears. Its is not that unusual.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by AliCat518 View Post
              So I realize this is a pretty stupid question, but I have basically NO experience with gaited horses.

              I was out at my SO's farm and was going to watch him ride his horse for the first time. He has explained before that the horse likes to "walk really fast" and will basically never slow his walk down until he's done riding and gets off. Horse walks completely normal until you get on him. He also has a normal trot and canter(which he doesnt rush at all).

              I have ridden a horse who was gaited(10ish years ago) and all I remember thinking is "oh my gosh this isnt comfortable(and by that, I mean, not what im used to!)"

              Im not currently able to ride(had a small seizure and am waiting for my meds to adjust), so I wasnt able to feel what it felt like, however it looked a lot like what ive seen gaited horses look like!

              Can someone explain exactly what makes a horse gaited? (Good lord, I know we learned this in 4-H....but that was yearssss ago!)
              What you're describing sounds like a running walk.
              http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XyVRl7qI2lU
              Proud member of the COTH Junior (and Junior-at-Heart!) clique!

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              • Original Poster

                #8
                Thank you all!

                What this horse does looks a lot like the "running walk" video posted. It would also make sense that it could be a cow walk, since this horse was a ranch horse earlier in life.

                I'll keep watching and try to determine which!
                Charlie Brown (1994 bay TB X gelding)
                White Star (2004 grey TB gelding)

                Mystical Moment, 1977-2010.

                Comment


                • #9
                  if it sounds like an evenly spaced

                  1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4

                  It is SOME form of a walking. BUt you knew that LOL.

                  Does he nod his head in time? flat walk..you don't feel like his back end is coming up under your chin? flat walk. Think his back end might overtake and pass his front end, like you need to lean forward to stay on him? running walk.

                  If he doesn't and the head is still...rack.

                  Any variance such as 12 34 12 34 12 34 12 34 means something like a broken pace or broken trot.

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                  • #10
                    sounds like a great marching flatwalk to me, LOTS of trail and working horses develop a flatwalk, basically the "slow gait" that gaited horses do, they can really march along, going with "purpose" and covering ground at 5-6 mph, unlike the average walk which is 2-3mph. I LOVE a horse with a good walk, no matter what the breed, every horse can have a good walk, a lot of people just never work on it and the horse slops along at half speed and attention
                    Windwalker Ridge: Gaited horses, lessons, training, sales
                    http://windwalkerridge.cloud11.net

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                    • #11
                      I have a 1/2 arab 1/2 Quarter horse pony that seems to do a flat walk. He kicks his walk into high gear when trying to keep up with some of the longer legged horses. I quite enjoy the movement, its so much better than a jig or half trot, back to slow walk. When he gets to the fastest walk, you can feel him lift his withers.

                      I keep saying that one of these days I'm going to get some video of him doing it, as I'd like to see what it looks like.

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