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 sider |
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Side xi
... Courses . On keeping a galloping track in order - Effect of ground on Horses - Measuring courses - Lengths of different courses in India . 238-243 Trainers and Jockeys Wasting for Race riding CHAPTER VIII . CONTENTS . xi.
... Courses . On keeping a galloping track in order - Effect of ground on Horses - Measuring courses - Lengths of different courses in India . 238-243 Trainers and Jockeys Wasting for Race riding CHAPTER VIII . CONTENTS . xi.
Side xii
... Trainers and Jockeys Wasting for Race riding CHAPTER VIII . PAGE 244-245 CHAPTER IX . - · 246-253 CHAPTER X. Betting . Lotteries - Double lotteries - Pari mutuels - Race pools · - " 254-266 - 267-281 HINDUSTANEE STABLE AND VETERINARY ...
... Trainers and Jockeys Wasting for Race riding CHAPTER VIII . PAGE 244-245 CHAPTER IX . - · 246-253 CHAPTER X. Betting . Lotteries - Double lotteries - Pari mutuels - Race pools · - " 254-266 - 267-281 HINDUSTANEE STABLE AND VETERINARY ...
Side 8
... trainer , or groom can personally sa- tisfy himself as to the proper degree of warmth by regulating it according to what he would consider agreeable to his own feelings , were he to make the stable his own abode ; always remembering ...
... trainer , or groom can personally sa- tisfy himself as to the proper degree of warmth by regulating it according to what he would consider agreeable to his own feelings , were he to make the stable his own abode ; always remembering ...
Side 24
... trainer , thus writes : - " The grain should be oats of good qua- lity . I do not let colts have corn at all when young ; and even to old horses I think it should be fed very sparingly . . . . . Above all , avoid Indian corn in all ...
... trainer , thus writes : - " The grain should be oats of good qua- lity . I do not let colts have corn at all when young ; and even to old horses I think it should be fed very sparingly . . . . . Above all , avoid Indian corn in all ...
Side 48
... trainer , or owner , can tell to a pound , how much hay his hard- worked horse should eat , is too palpably absurd . The case of corn is very different , for a horse , unless his powers are fully taxed , is almost always prone to eat ...
... trainer , or owner , can tell to a pound , how much hay his hard- worked horse should eat , is too palpably absurd . The case of corn is very different , for a horse , unless his powers are fully taxed , is almost always prone to eat ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable ... Matthew Horace Hayes Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1885 |
A Guide To Training And Horse Management In India M. Horace Hayes Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2008 |
Training and Horse Management in India: With a Hindustanee Stable ... Matthew Horace Hayes Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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
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.