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Originally bred as a utility horse, the Tennessee Walking Horse is
presently best suited for a recreational mount due to its smooth easy
ride and its gentle disposition. Calm, docile temperament, combined
with naturally smooth and easy gaits insure the popularity of the
Tennessee Walking Horse as the worlds greatest show, trail and
pleasure horse.
Tennessee Walking Horse is a light horse breed founded in middle
Tennessee. This breed is a melting pot much like Americans it is a
composition of the Standardbred, the Thoroughbred, the Morgan, and
the American Saddlebred stock. The Tennessee Walking Horse generally
range from 14.3 to 17 hands ( a hand being 4 inches) and weigh 900 to
1200 pounds. The modern Tennessee Walking Horse possesses a pretty
head with small, well placed ears. The horse has a long sloping
shoulder, a long sloping hip, a fairly short back and a short strong
coupling. The bottom line is longer than the top line, allowing a
long stride.
Color: Tennessee Walking Horses come in all colors and all patterns.
The wide variety of range in color is sure to please everyone as
there is no discrimination in color. Black, bay, chestnut, palomino,
buckskin roan and spotted patterns are apparent on the smooth riding
Tennessee Walking Horse.

Gaits: The Tennessee Walking Horse performs the flat foot walk,
running walk, and canter. These three are the gaits for which the
Tennessee Walking Horse is famous, with the running walk being an
inherited natural gait unique to this breed. Many Tennessee Walking
Horses are able to perform the rack, stepping pace, fox-trot,
single-foot and other variations of the famous running walk, while
this is not desirable in the show ring the above mentioned gaits are
smooth easy trail riding gaits.
The flat foot walk is a brisk, long-reaching walk that can cover from
4 to 8 miles an hour. This is a four cornered gait with each of the
horses feet hitting the ground separately at regular intervals. The
horse will glide over the track left by the front foot with his hind
foot. (right rear over right front, left rear over left front.) The
action of the back foot slipping over the front track is known as
overstride. Overstride is unique to the walking horse breed. The hock
should show only forward motion, with vertical hock action being
highly undesirable. A Tennessee Walking Horse will nod its head in
rhythm with the cadence of its feet. This nodding head motion, with
the overstride, are two features that are unique to the Tennessee
Walking Horse. This unique head motion along with overstride are two
things the judge should take into consideration when judging a
Tennessee Walking Horse.

The running walk is the gait for which the walking horse is most
noted! This extra-smooth gliding gait is basically the same as the
flat walk with a marked increase in speed. This breed can travel 10
to 20 miles per hour at this gait. As the speed is increased, the
horse over-steps the front track with the back foot by from 6 to 18
inches. The more "stride" the horse has the better
"walker" it is considered to be, for this gives the rider a
feeling that he or she were gliding through the air as if propelled
by some powerful but smooth-running machine. Walking horses relax
certain muscles while doing the running-walk, some nod their heads in
rhythmic timing, swing their ears in perfect motion, and some even
snap their teeth. The running walk is a smooth, easy gait for both
horse and rider. The running walk is basically the same gait as the
flat walk with an increase in speed. There should be a noticeable
difference in the rate of speed between the flat walk and the running
walk but a good running walk should ever allow proper form to be
sacrificed for excessive speed. A true Tennessee Walking Horse will
continue to nod while performing the running walk. Judging should not
be influenced by speed, but rather by the true form exhibited.

The third gait is the canter, which is a collected gallop. The canter
is performed in much the same way as other breeds, but the walking
horse seems to have a more relaxed way of performing this gait. The
canter is a forward movement performed in a diagonal manner to the
right or to the left. On the right lead, the horse should start the
gait in this order: left hind, right hind and left fore together-then
right fore. The order for the lead is: right hind, left hind and
right fore, then left fore. When performed in a ring, the animal
should lead his canter with the fore leg to the inside of the ring.
In the canter the horse gives one the abundance of ease with lots of
spring and rhythm, with the proper rise and fall to afford a thrill
from sitting in the saddle. Thus the canter lifts with the front end
giving an easy rise and fall motion that is likened to a rocking
chair. This is often referred to as the "rocking-chair-gait".
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