| England - 1844 - 826 pages
...happen to be well-grown stallions, into the pasture grounds. It is constantly observed that these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The fact is so well known, that such colts have received a particular name ; they are termed ' aguilillas."... | |
| Royal Agricultural Society of England - Agriculture - 1853 - 618 pages
...inherited the action of the sires to such a degree that they had all to be sold as carnage-horses, being unfit for racing, hunting, or almost any other...Their ancestors have been in the habit of obeying the voice of their riders, and not the bridle, and the horsebreakcrs complain that it is impossible... | |
| Caricatures and cartoons - 1848 - 582 pages
...which is a sort of running amble." And what has been the eventual result? Why, "these horses became the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching." It is these instances that make us fear for the future figures of our poultry. Instinctively knowing... | |
| England - 1844 - 828 pages
...to be well-grown stallions, into the pasture grounds. -It is constantly observed that these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The fact is so well known, that such colts have received a particular name ; they are termed ' aguilillas.'... | |
| Scotland - 1844 - 834 pages
...happen to be well-grown stallions, into the pasture grounds. It is constantly observed that these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The fact is so well known, that such colts have received a particular name ; they are termed ' aguilillas."... | |
| John Smith (of Malton.) - 1845 - 456 pages
...to be well-grown stallions, into the pasture grounds. It is constantly observed, that these horses become the sires of a race, to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The fact is so well known, that such colts have received a particular name: they are termed "aguilillas."... | |
| James Cowles Prichard - Anthropology - 1845 - 748 pages
...happen to be well-grown stallions, into the pasture grounds. It is constantly observed that these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The fact is so well known that such colts have received a particular name : they are termed " aguilillas"... | |
| United States. Department of Agriculture - Agriculture - 1862 - 698 pages
...still more curious fact is, that if these domesticated stallions breed with marcs of the wild herd which abound in the surrounding plains, they "become the sires of a race in which the ambling pace is natural and requires no teaching." Mr. TA Knight, ia a paper read before... | |
| John Smith (of Malton.) - History - 1854 - 334 pages
...happen to be well-grown stallions, into the pasturegrounds. It is constantly observed, that these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The fact is so well known, that such colts have received a particular name : they are termed " aguilillas."... | |
| Charles Hamilton Smith, Samuel Kneeland - Ethnology - 1855 - 474 pages
...are taught very early a sort of running amble, quite different from their natural gait ; these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural, and requires no teaching. The dogs employed in hunting the peccary are taught the peculiar way necessary to take this animal ; their... | |
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