I do like to gallop around on trails, but some like a more sedate mozy. It def. is best to determine what someone else’s preferences are before hand ==
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That is the polite thing to do when hacking with someone you never have ridden with before.
Actually a determination should be made early on as to who is the least experienced or on the most unpredictable horse and the pace and behavior as well as the route be adjusted to take care of that individual or horse.
However, the remark that one should never canter off without warning is not correct in every case.
Those who show must have their horse broke to stand or walk while others trot or canter past.
Look at the cow horses that stand or work their job while a horse very close to them is doing some pretty fast stuff.
Team penning is an example. There are many others.
On the trail, a horse is not broke until he will stand perfectly still until it is his turn to cross a bad creek crossing.
In the hunt field, a horse is not broke until he will stand and wait for 5 or 50 horses to jump a fence before his turn. There are a lot of fences in hunt country that must be taken from a trot, one horse at a time, because of ditches, creek banks, pavement, etc.
When the whip works his way past the field on a narrow trail in the woods, the broke horse must back his tail into the bushes and face the trail so there is no danger of him kicking the whip’s horse as he passes.
He must do that with no fuss.
If the whip[ is just changing his position in relation to the field, he may walk past and speak to each member as he passes.
He might be in a moderate hurry and trot by.
If the hounds are headed for a paved road, he will go down that trail like a maniac on a dirt bike. No matter, your horse must not move.
And field reversals, that is a really important one. You horse must stand while maybe 50 horses go past, with his tail in the bushes and his head toward the trail.
There are many other examples, but that makes the point.
For trail riding, it is true that the plan should be adjusted to accommodate the least experienced rider and horse, but all that is doing is acknowledging that one or both is not what we/they hope they will become.