Wrong nomenclature. You are applying equine terms for the Gaits of a Horse to canines. The four speeds are ( with Horses)- Walk, Canter, Trot, and Gallop. None of these is applied to dogs- with the possible exception of racing dogs such as Greyhounds, which are after all racing animals and some ( equestrian sports) terms may have been adopted. I have never heard of Galloping Hounds!
Normally you walk, trot and then canter but mostly trot and canter .
A pace slower than a canter is a trot. In equestrian terms, the trot is a two-beat gait where the horse's legs move in diagonal pairs. It is faster than a walk but slower than a canter.
After trot comes canter! An easy way of putting it is: Halt >> Tip-toe >> Walk >> Sitting Trot >> Rising Trot >> Canter >> Gallop Hope this helps xx
gate, trot, canter
The third fastest gait of a horse is know as the canter.
No; dressage requires trot and canter, but not jumping. You should actually know dressage before you jump.
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By telling your horse to canter...but your horse needs to know how to canter and needs lots of practise, and he also needs to know the command "canter". after he/she gets what you want, practise going from a trot to a canter. soon enough your horse will be transitioning smoothly! good luck!
The gaits are Walk, trot, canter and gallop. =] Hope this helped! Hollie x
To tell (or ask) your horse to trot in French is:"Aller au canter."Translation is: To go into a canter.
papillon