Gleason's horse book The only authorized work by America's king of horse tamers, comprising history, breeding, training, breaking, buying, feeding, grooming, shoeing, doctoring, telling age and general care of the horse . fi@7«e Eating bis Food from the Cls-onnd. as Nature Way to Food tbe Horse, Ttse eo3> movable, and place the grain in this box, and let the horse eat thatfrom even with his feet. He eats his grain slow, masticating it prop-erly, and the result is that while you have had to give your horsetwelve quarts of grain in feeding from a high manger, nine quartsfed


Gleason's horse book The only authorized work by America's king of horse tamers, comprising history, breeding, training, breaking, buying, feeding, grooming, shoeing, doctoring, telling age and general care of the horse . fi@7«e Eating bis Food from the Cls-onnd. as Nature Way to Food tbe Horse, Ttse eo3> movable, and place the grain in this box, and let the horse eat thatfrom even with his feet. He eats his grain slow, masticating it prop-erly, and the result is that while you have had to give your horsetwelve quarts of grain in feeding from a high manger, nine quartsfed from even with his feet will keep him in bettt>r condition thanthe twelve quarts fed from the manger; and I think that you willsoon find out that my idea will save ten per cent, of food in one year. ~1»6 — SLEfcSOtfS. fUll OUTfIT. This Enarr»\lng shown a Full Outfit, us used by O. B~ Gleasou la Handling all Hornet •f Vicious Habits. How to Make My Surcingle. In order to make my surcingle, have a piece of leather eight feet long, four inches wide, with rings upon it six inches apart, having it so that when it is buckled on the horse that two rings will be directly10 -136- under his body with one ring on each side of him and three ringson the top of the surcingle; one of these surcingles will be very use-ful and should hang in every stable. To Educate Horses Not to be Afraid of Objects when Driving. It is impossible to overestimate the value of the subjoined instruc-tions respecting nervous and shying horses, therefore on this topic Iwish to be particularly clear and explicit. Let the reader understandthat horses take fright at objects because they fancy that thoseobjects will harm them, and if you can by any means appeal to thehorses brain, and satisfy hyn that he is not going to be hurt, youhave accomplished


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1892