BAD MANNERS 



in the rear should cluck to his 

 horse, the horses in the lead 

 would hear the clucking and im- 

 mediately start up in a more 

 rapid gait. A person in the lead 

 may be fixing a stirrup, or not 

 paying particular attention to his 

 horse, and when his mount sud- 

 denly begins to trot, canter or 

 run, if he is not a skilled rider, he 

 may be throw^n. 



Always think of the other per- 

 son and how he might be harmed 

 by your unthinking cluck to 

 your horse. 



Of course the ideal w^ay is to 

 signal by pressure on reins or 

 with the legs, but this is general- 

 ly impossible w^here the same 

 horse is used by many riders and 

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