Agree with the rest of you that the
a) slumped over in the saddle
b) grabbing an arm and leaning to the side
c) drop off the saddle and holding on to the reins (and giving your friend a snack)
d) falling off and letting a loose horse run amok for awhile
either aren't safe or acceptable......
How about simply riding off of the field? Get out of LOS/LOF. Disappear for an hour.
Our interaction with other weapons systems (artillery, infantry, cavalry at long range, skirmishers) is not very good. We don't die when infantry volleys on us.....even if we are broadside, stationary, and less than 200 yards away. And they don't die when we fire at them when THEY are stationary, bunched up/in formation, and less than 200 yards away....and WE are stationary, firing from a stable platform (no one handed shots please), having a number of us firing (remember it took almost a man's weight in fired lead to produce a kill)...within zeroed in range of our weapons (200 yards for a rifle, 100 yards for a carbine, 15 feet for a pistol)
I know we expect them to start falling when we take single shots, one handed, from a trotting or galloping horse......it probably didn't happen too often back then and it definitely doesn't happen today....so why even waste your powder?
If you are mounted stationary and infantry fires at you from less than 200 yards.......start taking casualties and leave the field of battle. And for those foolhardy (not brave) souls that ride into covered terrain (brush or dense woods, a town, a privet hedge or thicket.......a) don't ....and b) start taking casualties immediately when you run into infantry at close range.
At the recent Outpost III there wasn't enough dismounted carbine fire, and entirely too much one handed while moving carbine shots. And too many horses stationary near enemy infantry without taking casualties and expecting the infantry to surrender, or hand over their guns.....
Bottom line, YOU or your mount are out of action.
A quick study of the Brinkerhoff Ridge battle, July 2nd, 1863 is well worth emulating. Squadrons of the 10th NY Cavalry were fed into a skirmish line East of Gettysburg as needed.....a dismounted squadron put about 30 carbines on the ground. When the Stonewall Brigade marched up in a two rank formation they simply brushed the dismounts away. Horses weren't needlessly exposed to gunfire, and were rested/grazed out of LOS/LOF. Troopers moved forward some 800-1000 yards to contest the fence / tree lines....carbine firing was from a stable firing position, often prone or tight against a ground, fence, stones, or a tree.
that's how I envision cavalry fighting against infantry. Not pistol carousels using pistols or its cousin, the one handed carbine firing at a gallop drive by......
a) slumped over in the saddle
b) grabbing an arm and leaning to the side
c) drop off the saddle and holding on to the reins (and giving your friend a snack)
d) falling off and letting a loose horse run amok for awhile
either aren't safe or acceptable......
How about simply riding off of the field? Get out of LOS/LOF. Disappear for an hour.
Our interaction with other weapons systems (artillery, infantry, cavalry at long range, skirmishers) is not very good. We don't die when infantry volleys on us.....even if we are broadside, stationary, and less than 200 yards away. And they don't die when we fire at them when THEY are stationary, bunched up/in formation, and less than 200 yards away....and WE are stationary, firing from a stable platform (no one handed shots please), having a number of us firing (remember it took almost a man's weight in fired lead to produce a kill)...within zeroed in range of our weapons (200 yards for a rifle, 100 yards for a carbine, 15 feet for a pistol)
I know we expect them to start falling when we take single shots, one handed, from a trotting or galloping horse......it probably didn't happen too often back then and it definitely doesn't happen today....so why even waste your powder?
If you are mounted stationary and infantry fires at you from less than 200 yards.......start taking casualties and leave the field of battle. And for those foolhardy (not brave) souls that ride into covered terrain (brush or dense woods, a town, a privet hedge or thicket.......a) don't ....and b) start taking casualties immediately when you run into infantry at close range.
At the recent Outpost III there wasn't enough dismounted carbine fire, and entirely too much one handed while moving carbine shots. And too many horses stationary near enemy infantry without taking casualties and expecting the infantry to surrender, or hand over their guns.....
Bottom line, YOU or your mount are out of action.
A quick study of the Brinkerhoff Ridge battle, July 2nd, 1863 is well worth emulating. Squadrons of the 10th NY Cavalry were fed into a skirmish line East of Gettysburg as needed.....a dismounted squadron put about 30 carbines on the ground. When the Stonewall Brigade marched up in a two rank formation they simply brushed the dismounts away. Horses weren't needlessly exposed to gunfire, and were rested/grazed out of LOS/LOF. Troopers moved forward some 800-1000 yards to contest the fence / tree lines....carbine firing was from a stable firing position, often prone or tight against a ground, fence, stones, or a tree.
that's how I envision cavalry fighting against infantry. Not pistol carousels using pistols or its cousin, the one handed carbine firing at a gallop drive by......
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