Yes. Riders in Western Pleasure, Equitation, and Dressage can compete in walk/trot classes.
If you are riding a "fast horse trot" it could be a lengthened or an extended trot. That is referring to the actual length of stride a horse is making at that trot. "Collection" is the exact opposite, basically, of a fast trot.
speed: distance: will vary depending on your horse Walk Trot Canter Gallop
Probably a halter class, or, if riding, do a walk/trot pleasure class
A non-gaited horse has 4 basic gaits. The walk, the trot, the canter and the gallop. The gallop is the fastest a horse can go.
"Gaited" refers to horse breeds that have unique, smooth, and ambling four-beat gaits. These gaits are different from the typical walk, trot, and canter or gallop observed in other horse breeds. Gaited horses are often prized for their comfortable ride and smooth movements, making them popular choices for leisure riding and trail riding.
Walk Trot Canter Gallop
walk, trot, canter, gallop
There are 4 gaits a horse will use: Walk, Trot, Canter/Lope, and Gallop. The answer to your question is A. Skip. This is not a gait.
Skip is not a horse gait
A simple change is a change of legs at canter by returning to trot or walk in between. A flying change does not require a change of pace.
Yes; if it's not visible at the walk, you need to trot the horse in-hand and have someone watching its feet.
in most shows, yes. walk, trot and canter and the movements during halter classes.