Work around Alfie’s position as he is mentioned three times.
There are four pieces of information provided:
Alfie finished 3 lengths ahead of Charlie.
Alfie finished 4 lengths behind Bobby.
Dolly finished 4 lengths behind Alfie.
Flo finished 5 lengths ahead of Dolly.
Flo’s finishing position is 2nd.
Bobby won the race, Flo finished second, Alfie third, Charlie fourth and Dolly fifth.
A bridlepath is the section of a horses mane that is clipped from behind the ears a few inches back. Different breeds have different lengths of bridlepaths. Most horses bridlepath should be about the length of the horses ear. Arabians bridlepaths are about and ear and half length. The longer bridlepath accentuates the horses neck which should be arched in Arabs.
The area right behind or slightly behind the horses ears is the poll, you'll also find the bridle path in this area if the horse has one.
charlie horse
Charlie is for boy horses and Minny is for Girls
a bridlepath :)
A Bridlepath
NO! Never stand close to a horses` butts.
no
He was not disqualified and he was not drunk!If you scroll to about 3:50 into this replay video and let it play through the 4 minute mark you will see the listing for Calvin is DIS.youtube.com/watch?v=qVoASaWVG8kLike you I thought disqualified but I asked why in a horse racing game forum and one of the members replied with the following answerCalvin finished 19th (next to last), per the DRF results chart. No mention of disq. Perhaps you saw "dist" which would mean distanced (behind so many lengths of the next horse they didn't calculate # of lengths).Hope that answers your question. Calvin wasn't disqualified just came in really late in the race compared with other horses except 1 who came in behind him.
When you clip or shave the section of mane behind the horses ear, it is called the bridle path. It is on www.Howrse.com riding level 2.
Stay a little more then the length of the horses leg behind the horses hind quarters
if you trust the horse or pony. i have no fear in standing behind the horses that i ride in my yard. however, it is better to be safe than sorry and always leave at least a horses leg's-worth of space between you and a horses rear