Versatile and Variable Bitless Bridle Attachment
Simply convert your regular bridle to bitless by attaching
the Orbitless to your existing cheekpieces
Unique shape allows 8 different configurations
Precision fit between components provides clear aids
Utilizes pressure and release techniques
Instant release of contact
Lightweight to aid precise communication
Contact emphasis can be varied for individual horses
Wool-lined noseband for added comfort
New bridle for Bogi! Baby’s first bling. 😍✨ Thanks everyone on here who enabled my horrible financial decisions and encouraged me to buy it for myself as an Easter present 🙄😂
It’s a lovely bridle, and lovely that it has no noseband!
Daisy modeling her new bitless noseband <3
I hate gimmicks, like bits XD
Bogi the instigator 😂 He is always ready to party, and often takes it upon himself to try to get the herd as hyped up as he’s feeling on any given occasion (he can’t help it, he’s a Gemini ♊️). He keeps Vigri and Thór busy 😉😂
All of our horses, mares included, spend a good part of each day engaging in lively play. I’ve even had vets comment on how playful horses become when they live here! I believe it has to do with allowing them 24/7 access to forage in slow-feeder netting on their dry lots - as they learn that food will always be there, they adjust to self regulating and stop obsessing over food, which seems to give them more interest in play time! We also designed the dry lots in large, irregular shapes over varied terrain, to encourage movement (inspired by paddock paradise track system designs) which I think also helps encourage playtime. Nap time is also a main event, especially in the morning I often wander outside to find the whole herd flat on their sides 😂 No stress, just like we like it 😉 Read More »
And then we have Spönn engaging in her favorite activity - leading the mares in zoomies 🌪 No one can get the girls excited like she can! I have noticed that while the geldings seem to prefer sparring / wrestling style play, the mares prefer chasing and racing games. One of these mares is 26-years-old! So fun to watch them, and so good for them to move their bodies like this every day ❤️
Eric Lamaze and Hickstead by kearakristine on Flickr.
Those metallic palomino Akhal Tekes are a real trip!
The colt "zorse" N'Soko frolics with its mother, Victoria the mare, and father, Zebulon the zebra, in the private animal park of a farm in Cuchery, France, on August 22, 2003. N'Soko is the brother of the first zorse born in Europe 13 months earlier. "Two natural births from the crossing of the same parents is, to my knowledge, a world first," commented park owner Jean-Jacques Lefevre. ALAIN JULIEN/AFP