A Guide to Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable and Veterinary Vocabulary and the Calcutta Turf Club Tables for Weight for Age and ClassThacker, Spink, and Company, 1878 - 298 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 23
Página 9
... heel - ropes are admissible only with animals - like those in the Artillery and Cavalry that may be called upon to camp out at any time . In such cases , if there be any probability of rain , great care should be taken to render the ...
... heel - ropes are admissible only with animals - like those in the Artillery and Cavalry that may be called upon to camp out at any time . In such cases , if there be any probability of rain , great care should be taken to render the ...
Página 10
... heel- ropes are necessary . Poultry should never be allowed about a stable , nor should they be kept near it , for the louse , that often infects fowl , proves excessively irritating to the horse , when they are allowed to settle on him ...
... heel- ropes are necessary . Poultry should never be allowed about a stable , nor should they be kept near it , for the louse , that often infects fowl , proves excessively irritating to the horse , when they are allowed to settle on him ...
Página 17
... heeled shoe - as during treatment for sprain of the back tendons or suspensory ligaments , & c . - sawdust makes the best bedding , as it will not catch in the long calkins . Alone , without a raised shoe , it enables a horse to assume ...
... heeled shoe - as during treatment for sprain of the back tendons or suspensory ligaments , & c . - sawdust makes the best bedding , as it will not catch in the long calkins . Alone , without a raised shoe , it enables a horse to assume ...
Página 75
... heels ' and grease ' were constantly present among the horses while the system of washing the legs with warm or cold water was in vogue , a discontinuance of the practice of washing has been followed by the entire cessation of these ...
... heels ' and grease ' were constantly present among the horses while the system of washing the legs with warm or cold water was in vogue , a discontinuance of the practice of washing has been followed by the entire cessation of these ...
Página 77
... heel ropes is apt to strain him . When the horse returns from exercise in clothing ,. he should be tied up , his hood removed , and his neck and throat scraped , if there be any sweat visible . This done , the The ears should The space ...
... heel ropes is apt to strain him . When the horse returns from exercise in clothing ,. he should be tied up , his hood removed , and his neck and throat scraped , if there be any sweat visible . This done , the The ears should The space ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable ... Matthew Horace Hayes Visualização integral - 1885 |
A Guide To Training And Horse Management In India M. Horace Hayes Pré-visualização indisponível - 2008 |
Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable ... Matthew Horace Hayes Pré-visualização indisponível - 2016 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
9 7 Capes acid Admiral Rous allowed amount animal animal's Arabs bandage barley become blood boiled bran bridle Calcutta canter Capes Country-breds carbonic carbonic acid clothing cold condition corn couple curb chain digestion distance ditto double bridle English Australians exercise feed feet fluid foot gallop gastric juice Gaylad ghora Ghoré girths give given grain gram grass grooming ground half hands hard heat heels hence Hind hoof Horse Owners horse's hot weather husk inches India intestines jockey keep kúlthee kurna latter legs linseed Lottery mane martingale mash mile muscles nitrogenous noseband Notes for Horse nutritive oats ordinary ponies practice pull quantity race race-horses reins require rider riding saddle saliva shoe skin snaffle speed stable starch stirrup stomach Stonehenge straw sugar supply sweat syce tion tissue trainer Umballa Waler walk weight for age
Passagens conhecidas
Página 28 - Carrots also improve the state of the skin. They form a good substitute for grass, and an excellent alterative for horses out of condition. To sick and idle horses they render grain unnecessary. They are beneficial in all chronic diseases of the organs connected with breathing, and have a marked influence upon chronic cough and broken wind.
Página 52 - The chemist frequently employs water as a like means of preparing substances; but saliva in much better adapted than water for blending with many substances used as food. The numerous air bubbles for which saliva is remarkable have their special purpose ; since the presence of atmospheric air in the stomach is accessory to digestion.
Página 28 - This root is held in much esteem. There is none better, nor perhaps so good. When first given, it is slightly diuretic and laxative ; but as the horse becomes accustomed to it, these effects cease to be produced.