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 Class |
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A Guide to Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable ... M Horace 1842-1904 Hayes Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
A Guide to Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable ... Matthew Horace Hayes Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Admiral Rous allowed amount animal animal's Arabs bandage barley become blood bran bridle Calcutta canter carbonic acid clothing cold condition corn Country-breds couple course curb chain Dehra digestion distance ditto double bridle exercise feed feet fluid foot frog gallop gastric juice Gaylad ghora Ghoré girths give given grain gram grass groomed ground hair hands hard head heat heels hence hind HINDUSTANEE hoof Horse Owners horse's hot weather inches India jockey keep latter lbs./st legs linseed lottery mane martingale mash Meerut mile morning muscles nitrogenous noseband Notes for Horse nutrition oats ordinary ponies practice pull quarter race race-course race-horses reins require rider riding saddle saliva shoe side skin snaffle stable starch stirrup stomach Stonehenge sugar supply sweat syce tion tissue trainer Umballa Veterinary Waler walk weight for age
Populære avsnitt
Side 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.
Side 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.
Side 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.