AY Honor Horsemanship - Advanced Answer Key used by General Conference

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Horsemanship - Advanced

Skill Level

2

Year

2000

Version

25.11.2024

Approval authority

North American Division

Horsemanship Advanced AY Honor.png
Horsemanship - Advanced
Recreation
Skill Level
123
Approval authority
North American Division
Year of Introduction
2000
See also


1

Have the Horsemanship honor.


For tips and instruction see Horsemanship.


2

Label on an outline drawing of a horse or point out on a live horse a minimum of 30 different parts of a horse.


Parts of a horse

To the parts listed you can add obvious ones like nose, eyes, tail, ears etc to get past 30 parts.


3

Demonstrate and explain how to care for tack.


Improperly cared-for tack can easily break and injure the rider, the horse, or both. Tack should be inspected every time it is used, and it should be cleaned and put away after every use as well.

Most tack is made from leather, though some is synthetic. Synthetic tack can be thrown into a washing machine, but leather must be meticulously care for. The greatest enemy to leather is mold and mildew. Once mold and mildew have attacked leather, it is nearly impossible to stop it from progressing and destroying the tack. Remove molded or mildewed tack from your other tack, or it will spread. Mold and mildew reproduce by making microscopic pores which become airborne and stick to any surface they come into contact with.

Once molded leather has been taken outside, you can attempt to save it. Start by wiping it down with a disposable wet cloth. Try to get up as much of the mold as you can without smearing it around. Then throw away the damp cloths. Use an old toothbrush to clean out the stitching and crevices. Once it has been thoroughly cleaned, do not put it away with the rest of your tack. Store it in a place by itself, and check it again after a week or two. If the mold has come back, there is probably nothing you can do other than dispose of the tack.

It is obviously better to prevent mold and mildew from getting a start on your tack. To do this, clean your tack after every use. Use a good-quality saddle soap and wipe down all surfaces, including the underside of the saddle (you need to remove the horse's sweat). The purpose of cleaning your tack is to remove salts and dirt. Salts can make leather brittle, while dirt works into the fibers and abrades them, weakening the tack.

Once the tack has been cleaned, store it in a warm, dry place that has plenty of circulation. Do not store tack in a plastic bag, as this effectively prohibits circulation. Many people store their tack in a corner of the barn, but you need to be aware that barns are often havens for mold and mildew.

Tack needs to be conditioned a few times per year after washing, but don't overdo it. If you find that the conditioners are rubbing off onto your clothing, you are definitely over-conditioning the tack. Remove excess conditioning oils with saddle soap and adjust accordingly.

The type of conditioner you use depends on how the leather was tanned. Vegetable-tanned leather should be conditioned with neatsfoot oil. Chrome-tanned leather should be conditioned with Lexol.


4

Demonstrate and explain how to catch and halter a horse safely.



5

Demonstrate and explain how to tie a horse safely with a manger knot and with a bowline knot using the correct length of rope and tying at the correct height from the ground.


Demonstrate

Demonstrate and explain the listed knots. Knots shown below for reference.

Manger Knot

Manger Knot
Manger knot.png

Use: This knot should be use when tying a horse to a stationary object. Its main advantage is that it can be quickly untied, so if the horse starts to panic it can be quickly freed from the rope before it dangerously tangles itself.

How to tie:

  1. Make a loop around whatever the horse is being tied to.
  2. Make a second loop in the running end and lay it on the standing part (that is, the end the horse is tied to).
  3. Make a bight on the free end, pass it beneath the standing part and through the second loop (made in step two).
  4. Tighten the second loop.
  5. Untie by pulling on the running end.


Bowline

Bowline
Knot bowline.jpg

Use: This knot doesn't jam or slip when tied properly. It can be tied around a person's waist and used to lift him, because the loop will not tighten under load. In sailing, the bowline is used to tie a halyard to a sail head.

How to tie:

  1. Make the overhand loop with the end held toward you, then pass end through loop.
  2. Now pass end up behind the standing part, then down through the loop again.
  3. Draw up tight.


6

Demonstrate and explain how to correctly saddle and bridle a horse and adjust stir­rup length.



7

Demonstrate the correct positions while riding at a trot/jog including circles and reverses:


7a

Sitting



7b

Standing



7c

Posting




8

Safely demonstrate an emergency dismount.



9

Ride on a trail for a total of 7 cumulative hours, following all safety rules and using correct position.



10

Demonstrate and explain how to use a hoof pick.


A well-worn but perfectly usable hoof pick

A groom should be especially careful to clean out all crevasses of the hoof, particularly between the frog and the bars, as those areas are most likely to trap rocks or other debris, and also are the most common area to develop thrush. It is best to work the hoof pick from heel to toe, so to avoid accidentally jabbing the horse's leg, the frog of the hoof, or the person using the pick. When picking the feet, the groom stands facing the tail of the horse, then slides his or her hand down the horse's legs. If the horse was not trained to pick up its foot when the groom runs the hand the the fetlock and lifts lightly, most horses will pick up their feet if the tendons behind their cannon bone are squeezed. Some horses, particularly draft breeds, may be trained to pick up their feet when someone pulls on their fetlock hair.

Most horse management guidelines recommend picking the feet daily, and many people pick the feet twice a day, both before and after a ride.


11

Demonstrate proper method to turn out a horse.



12

Identify a minimum of 8 common horse colors, 5 common face markings, and 5 common leg markings.


Horse Colors

Sorrel or Chestnut: A reddish brown horse with reddish, brown or tan mane and tail. Legs are the same color as the body. Their legs may also have white markings. Chestnut runs from very light reddish brown to red or very dark liver color.

Bay: A brown horse with black legs, mane and tail. Body color run from light brown, reddish to very dark brown, but legs, mane and tails are always black (they may also have white markings).

Brown: A very dark brown, almost black coat with lighter brown highlights on the muzzle, the flanks and inside the legs. Mane and tails are always black. They are hard to tell from dark bay.

White: White horses are born white. They have pink skins and usually blue or pink eyes.

Pinto: White plus large patches of black, brown, chestnut or any other colors.

Gray: Born dark with dark skin. Hair becomes whiter with age until pure white. A gray may range from iron gray (nearly black) to dapple gray, white gray or flea-bitten gray (with tiny flecks of black or brown).

Black: Coal black without brown highlights.

Palomino: Golden body color with white mane and tail. Can be a light to very dark gold color.

Face Markings

Blaze
A blaze is a broad strip that runs down the horse's face. It does not extend past the eyes, and it is wider than a stripe.
Stripe
A stripe is a narrow blaze.
Snip
A snip is a marking between the horse's nostrils
Star
A star is a marking between the eyes.
Race
A race is a crooked or wavy stripe or blaze.
Baldface
Baldface is a wide marking on the face that extends past the eyes. Often, a baldface horse will have blue eyes.

Leg Markings

Horsemarkings legs.png

In order of size:

1. Stocking
Stockings extend above the knee or hock and can bleed onto the flank or belly.
2. Fetlock or Sock
White marking that extends over the fetlock, occasionally called a "boot."
3. Pastern
White marking that extends above the top of the hoof, but stops below the fetlock.
4. Coronet
White just above the hoof, around coronary band, usually no more than 1 inch (2.5cm) above the hoof.
5. Partial Pastern
White marking on only one side of pastern.
6. Ermine Spots
Tiny spots of the coat color that show up on a white marking near the coronet band just above the hoof.
7. Black Socks or No White Markings
Some animals have no white on their legs, although some bay animals will have black socks similar to (or in addition to) white ones.

Additional terms used to describe white leg markings include:

  • Irregular: A marking within the broad confines of a given height, but with significantly uneven edges. Indicated by the highest point of the white. Most often used to describe certain types of stockings.
  • Partial: An irregular marking that only extends up part of the leg to the height indicated, sometimes with the other side of the leg dark. Usually used to describe socks and other short markings.
  • "High White:" White stockings that extend above the knee or hock, sometimes extending past the stifle onto the flank or belly, considered characteristic of the sabino color pattern.


13

Demonstrate and explain correct spacing, reversing direction and passing other rid­ers in an arena setting at the walk with at least one other rider, following all safety rules.



14

Negotiate a simple three element trail obstacle course set up on level ground riding at a walk. Choose from the following:


14a

Step over log or pole, maximum height of 16 inches (40.6 cm).



14b

Pass between 2 barrels or bales of hay spaced 45 inches (1.1 meters) apart.



14c

Zigzag between poles set at 12-foot (3.6 meters) intervals.



14d

Walk into a large hey-hole, 15-foot (4.6 meters) circle, turn and exit without stepping on or crossing any borderline.




15

Know how to cool down and care for a horse after a demanding ride.




References