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FOR NEWCOMERS
About the Breed
Gait Tips
Getting Gaited! |
The North American
Single-Footing Horse
In 1991 an organization was started for the production of ranch, pleasure,
competition and versatility horses that move with a true old style traveling,
single-footing gait. The North American Single-Footing Horse Association
was started as a performance based registry. The goals were set by avid
trail riders and ranch owners who log thousands of miles a year on horses
under various conditions. They knew what it took to make a good, usable
saddle horse. Over and over again these riders requested the same qualities
in a horse:
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Solid strong natural gait, a big range in gait speeds, maximum smoothness
at all speeds.
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A tractable "willingness to work" temperament that is neither hot and explosive
nor lethargic and stubborn.
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General working conformation such as saddle back, good feet, good legs,
endurance, and athletic ability.
The old style traveling single-footing gait came closest to the
needs of these riders. A major consideration was the big range of useful
speeds at which the gait can be performed. This is an easy gait for the
horse to travel and the medium length of stride at most speeds lends itself
to an athletic conformation and ability, particularly regarding stock horse
type moves.
What makes the single-footing gait unique? Ideally the gait is an intermediate
4 beat gait and is very near even in timing. It can be performed at a huge
range of speeds. From a relaxed trail speed of 7 to 9 mph, to a ground
eating road gait speed of 12 to 15 mph, to the breathtaking racing single-foot
(and the speed at which the name "single-footing" comes from) of over 20
mph. At the fastest speeds these horses will be traveling with one foot
on the ground at a time, thus the name "single-footing". Some horses will
start single-footing at a road gait speed and others at racing speed. Either
is correct. While the ideal horse will remain as close as possible to even
timing at all speeds, the reality is that at top speeds these horses tend
toward a more lateral timing. We do not want to see horses that are near
a dead pace at speed and do not consider this single-footing. Speed is
characteristic of this gait, but speed at the intermediate gait for the
sake of speed with improper form is not a goal. This makes for a weak gaited
saddle horse and that is exactly what NASHA wants to avoid.
Trail riders also found they needed a horse with some lift in front
to clear uneven ground without stumbling. This lift comes natural to this
gait since the single-footing horse must get the front end out of the way
of the driving rear end at speed. The rear end should at least cap and
will often over-stride as speed increases. The length of stride increasing
with speed keeps the horse smooth at various speeds. This requires a powerful
driving rear end. Both excessive rear hock action or a low skating action
that leads to tripping in the rear should be avoided. Since the gait is
both even in timing and medium in stride, the horse will not exhibit a
head nod or bob. These horses generally travel with head up. Many may stretch
out, lowering their heads at the racing single-foot.
Locating the few remaining pockets of horses with a true single-footing
gait was not easy. When found, these horses were generally very tightly
line- bred. Outside blood was necessary. For the first several years any
horse with an intermediate 4 beat gait was eligible for registration as
long as the owners were dedicated to producing single-footing horses from
that point on. The registry is still open but in 1998 horses that running
walk, fox trot, slick pace or have extremely long striding or short tight
striding gaits are no longer accepted for registration. The registry will
place appropriate restrictions on new applications to insure overall quality
and correctness of gait.
Horses were found in rare pockets of true single-footers within other
gaited breeds where certain lines produced occasional single-footers rather
than the appropriate gait for their breed and from wild horse herds and
non-gaited breeds where a crop out still occurs. Needless to say, the rare
pockets of single-footers dominate the breeding programs of North American
Single-Footing Horses.
It was also absolutely essential to the interested participants in the
registry that these horses do not become show horses, but remain working
horses. The design of the award program includes a series of checks and
balances, which insure that these horses are rewarded for working qualities.
Both gait classes offered by NASHA are geared toward working qualities.
No horse in any class can carry a shoe heavier than a trail shoe. Of the
45 categories offered for high points awards only two are show ring gait
classes; road gait and park gait. Road gait is the premier gait class for
single-footing horses. Rather than rewarding a perfectly trained horse
that is carefully held in perfect gait, the judge will push the horses.
We need to see if and at what point the horse’s gait will break down to
check for strength of gait, which is essential in a good trail horse. We
are looking for genetics, not training ability. After gait judging, the
horses are required to stand quietly while the rider dismounts, ground
ties the horse, opens the saddlebags, reaches in and returns to the horse
and mounts. Then the horse must back quietly. These are basic trail manners.
During gait judging the horse must travel in a relaxed easy manner.
Not surprisingly, a conformation is emerging that lends itself to the
type of horse that NASHA requires. The North American Single-Footing Horse
is well on its way to becoming a performance based " breed" registry. A
"breed of horse" is simply selecting for a specific purpose, which allows
a consistent type to emerge. After at least 3 generations of selective
breeding producing consistent results, a breed begins to emerge that is
distinct from other breeds already in existence. What we are starting to
see is a horse similar to the old style Morgan in conformation with a slightly
more refined neck. This is not surprising when you consider the original
purpose intended for the Morgan horse and the genetic types used in its
development. The NASHA horse differs from this type because the gait is
of primary importance. The use of Narragansett type gaited horses (known
for their speed in gait) combined with heavy use of the Spanish style gaited
stock for improved lateral flexibility for ranch use, is producing a type
not found in other gaited breeds.
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