0 Members and 7 Guests are viewing this topic.
Trotting is a far more taxing gait. Historically trotters have been 2 wheel (2 hoof) drive and pacers have been 4 wheel drive. Trotters used to derive almost all their forward impulsion from their hindquarters and the showy front feet only really served to keep their chins from scraping on the stonedust.It's interesting that the modern trotters are far more like pacers with efficient and tidy front gaits and the destructive forces from speed are more evenly spread fore and aft. It follows that their useful careers might be expanded.I'm a trotting person through and through but the pacing gait is much more suited to high speed than trotting.
Fuguzzi unfortunately has fallen into a common trap by asserting that trotting is a natural gait. The problem is that trotting is not a natural gait at harness racing speeds. In simplest terms a horse would escalate from a walk to a trot, then to a canter and finally to a gallop as the need for speed is increased.Selective breeding has dramatically increased the speed range of the trotting gait but at the high end it's anything but natural.As a side note, did you know that Paul Revere rode a pacer on his ride to immortality? Pacing is not as unnatural as you think.
The tell-tale sign of repeating untruths is when a person says "I trained and raced horses for 40 years". The accepted beliefs from the past are almost always wrong.Here is an example " because of the direction in which we race and the pulling motion on their right side in the turns. That is why i have found across the board pacers almost always bow in the right front." The root is this fallacy is the belief that the outside limbs take a disproportionate load in the turns. It's likely that the belief stems from 4 wheel autos where we all know the outside tires take almost all the stress in the turns. Not so for horses.. in a turn the inside legs migrate towards the centre line and the outside legs aren't much more than outriggers for a brief duration. The most compelling studies on inner versus outer injuries come from Australia where the incidence of splint bone displacement was tracked and quantified.Of course fatigue on the inside prompts extra load on the outside so the chicken and the egg conundrum will always be present.
I will always stand by my contention that pacers almost always bow in the right front and alot of that has to do with the fact that it is the pulling leg. Cmon, backstretchers, do any of you disagree. Typical racetrack coversation - "Don't claimer that one." Why? "Bowed tendon" Rght front? "Yup"