martingale
Irish martingale
Dirt can trap dampness, so leaving dirt caked onto riding equipment such as leather saddles and straps can eventually cause them to rot. So keeping horse riding equipment clean will prolong its life.
There isn't one. If you ride with split reins you can tie a simple knot. Both types of martingales (standing and running) will stop the reins from going over the horse's head but their purpose is training. These are 'head setting' devices. I thought of 'draw reins' and 'side reins' but these also are training equipment. There are 'stoppers' made of rubber or leather but these are used to keep the bit and reins where they belong. Unless someone have invented something new in the last 5 minutes there is nothing that has the 'sole' purpose of keeping reins in your hands.
A Irish Martingale
The tongue. the pin is called a CHAPE (and not just for horse equipment but all buckles)
When showing, you will need grooming brushes, sponges, mane and tail comb, plaiting equipment, horse shampoo and soap, coat gleam/ shiner, hoof oil, bucket for water (to bathe coat, not for drinking), and a brush to get the hairs off your own clothes.
The purpose of using a horse float is to clean a horse's teeth. It is a part of dentistry for the animal and it is very necessary to be done for its health.
Because, to some extent, it resembles a horse's back.
Before the days of powered farm equipment, the horse was the all-purpose power source. That's one reason why we still have a unit of energy called "horsepower". Horses were used to pull plows, power threshing machines, pull harvesting equipment, pull the wagons to transport farm goods, and just about everything else that is now done on the farm with gasoline or diesel powered equipment.
Currently now, there is no saddlery. But to equip a horse, you would go to the horses page and look at the Equipment section, equip the horse from there.
The cavesson is in reference not to a horse but to a piece of horse equipment. This term can be used for a lunging cavesson, or the noseband of a bridle.
A saddler makes, repairs, and sells horse equipment.