Education of Colts 6i 



ten days are quite way wise, and steady enough to 

 go on the roads, etc., nor does this summary method 

 seem to have any particularly bad effects upon either 

 temper or mouth. We have always been taught 

 that certain preliminaries were advisable, but theory 

 must always give way to satisfactory practice, and 

 certainly, in this case, results are good enough for 

 practical purposes. 



No colt is ever born vicious. If a saucy youngster 

 becomes, through incapable handling, unmanage- 

 able or dangerous, he should be destroyed, but if 

 he does adopt such practices, it is solely and simply 

 the fault of the man who essayed to educate and 

 control him. 



