Hobble (device) explained

A hobble (also, and perhaps earlier, hopple),[1] or spancel, is a device which prevents or limits the locomotion of an animal, by tethering one or more legs. Although hobbles are most commonly used on horses, they are also sometimes used on other animals. On dogs, they are used especially during force-fetch training to limit the movement of a dog's front paws when training it to stay still.[2] They are made from leather, rope, or synthetic materials such as nylon or neoprene. There are various designs for breeding, casting (causing a horse or other large animal to lie down with its legs underneath it), and mounting horses.

Types

Western horse hobbles

"Western"-style horse hobbles are tied around the pasterns or cannon bones of the horse's front legs. They comprise three basic types:

The above patterns are unsuitable for training, as they can tighten around a leg and cause injury.

Western hobbles are normally used to secure a horse when no tie device, tree, or other object is available for that purpose; e.g., when, if traveling across open lands, a rider has to dismount for various reasons. Hobbles also allow a horse to graze and move short distances slowly, yet prevent the horse from running off too far. This is handy at night if the rider has to get some sleep; using a hobble ensures that, in the morning, they can find their horse not too far away.

Hobble training a horse is a form of sacking out and desensitizing a horse to accept restraints on its legs. This helps a horse accept pressure on its legs in case it ever becomes entangled in barbed wire or fencing. A hobble-trained horse is less likely to pull, struggle, and cut its legs in a panic, since it has been taught to give to pressure in its legs.

Other hobbles

History

+hieroglyphmeaning
Thobble rope(a sound in the range of pronounced as /link/ to pronounced as /link/)
V20cattle hobble, or yoke (Egyptian numeral for 10)
Hobbles date at least as far back as Ancient Egypt. Two Egyptian hieroglyphs are believed to depict hobbles.

A hobble is illustrated on a silver vase excavated from a 4th century B.C. tomb at Chertomlyk in modern day Ukraine.[5]

The Persians were also known for their custom of hobbling. In Anabasis, Xenophon claims "a Persian army is good for nothing at night. Their horses are haltered, and, as a rule, hobbled as well to prevent their escaping as theymight if loose."[6]

See also

References

  1. Web site: October 25, 2005 . The How-To's of the Hobble. R. J. Sagely. - A detailed discussion of the various types of Western hobbles
  2. Book: Alan Henderson Gardiner. Egyptian Grammar; Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs. . Griffith Institute. 1957.

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Oxford English Dictionary. Second. VII. 380. 0-19-861186-2.
  2. http://www.gundogsonline.com/misc-dog-supplies/dog-hobbles.html Dog Hobbles
  3. Web site: skt.netc.net.au. Solid Hide Belts. November 3, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20091013174743/http://skt.netc.net.au/hide_belts.htm. October 13, 2009. dead.
  4. Web site: Nylon Breeding Hobbles. KY Horse. 28 June 2011. 9 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111009202421/http://kyhorse.com/store/equipment/breedinghobbles.htm. dead.
  5. Book: Sythians and Greeks: A Survey of Ancient History and Archeology on the North Coast of the Euxine from the Danube to the Caucasus . 2011 . Ellis Hovell Minns . Cambridge University Press.
  6. Book: The first four books of Xenophon's Anabasis . 1883 . Boston: Ginn & Co. . William Watson Goodwin and John Williams White.