- A
hackamore (or jáquima) is a type of
animal headgear which does not have a bit. Instead, it has a
special type of
noseband that
works on
pressure points...
- curb chain.
Other names include "
hackamore bit", "brockamore", "English
hackamore", "nose bridle" and "German
hackamore".
Certain designs have been called...
-
Headgear without a bit that uses a
noseband to
control a
horse is
called a
hackamore, or, in some areas, a
bitless bridle.
There are many
different designs...
- combat,
giving the
rider secure foot
support while on horseback. Bridles,
hackamores, halters, or headcollars, and
similar equipment consist of
various arrangements...
-
Hackamore can
refer to: The
classic hackamore (Spanish: jaquima) of the
vaquero tradition,
featuring a
bosal noseband The
mechanical hackamore Any one...
-
Hackamore (formerly Jaquina) is an
unincorporated community in
Modoc County, California. It is
located on the
Southern Pacific Railroad 30
miles (48 km)...
-
control may also be via a
noseband or cavesson, if one is used. The term
hackamore is the most
historically accurate word for most
common forms of bitless...
- animals, and
their history is not as well
studied as that of the
bridle or
hackamore. The word "halter"
derives from the
Germanic words meaning "that by which...
- /boʊˈsæl/, or /ˈboʊsəl/
bozal ) is a type of
noseband used on the
classic hackamore of the
vaquero tradition. It is
usually made of
braided rawhide and is...
-
America a
third rein is most
commonly seen as part of the
mecate of a
hackamore. In
Mongolia it is
integral to the bridle, and tied to
either a bit ring...