Wanted A Square Gait 7 



present many illustrations and diagrams. The reader may have some 

 difficulty in understanding them, but a greater familiarity with the 

 nature of the motion of the horse, according to the simple plan out- 

 lined above and in Chapter X, will soon enable him to overcome such 

 apparent difficulties. Shoeing and balancing is a difficult subject at 

 best and requires TIME as a PRIME CONDITION to bring about 

 any satisfactory result at all. By means of this method and with a 

 little perseverance the particular gait of each individual horse may be 

 ascertained, and from such definite data it will not be so very difficult 

 to follow a plan of shoeing that will make the subject stick to a 

 SQUARE GAIT. 



