If you haven't done so already I encourage everyone to read the "Hints to Campaigners" under Research Articles on this website. It is by Mark Jaeger and is a transcription of items appearing in issues of the United States Army and Navy Journal from August and September of 1863. It contains a number of items pertinent to campaigning with horses. For example how to picket a horse in a sandy plain with no trees and nothing to hold the picket pin--I had always wondered how this was done, and there it is. It also makes a couple of references to "stuffing" in saddles (specifically, in the part of the saddle that contacts the horse.) The military saddles (McClellan, Jenifer) and horned saddles (for example the Hope) had no stuffing. Stuffing was found in "English-tree" and "hunting saddles" of the day (on other words what we today call "English saddles.") What I am wondering is, does this indicate that English type saddles were in more common use among officers than I might have heretofore thought?
Another interesting observation, which makes perfect sense, is the admonition not to use a whip on any horse you intend to shoot off of. People who crack whips generally do so to make the horse move faster, or perhaps to punish it for misbehavior--but a horse suddenly squirting out from under you is not exactly what you want when you are firing. My instructor's instructor, an old British cavalryman, used to chastise people who cracked whips around horses, saying "This is not a circus!" and perhaps this is why. However, whip-cracking is pretty popular at my barn, so I use it as an opporunity to get my horses to ignore this particular sound.
Ken Morris
10th Regt of Cavalry NYSV.
Another interesting observation, which makes perfect sense, is the admonition not to use a whip on any horse you intend to shoot off of. People who crack whips generally do so to make the horse move faster, or perhaps to punish it for misbehavior--but a horse suddenly squirting out from under you is not exactly what you want when you are firing. My instructor's instructor, an old British cavalryman, used to chastise people who cracked whips around horses, saying "This is not a circus!" and perhaps this is why. However, whip-cracking is pretty popular at my barn, so I use it as an opporunity to get my horses to ignore this particular sound.
Ken Morris
10th Regt of Cavalry NYSV.
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