Group
Horse groups
It is called the rump to the back and top of the hindquarters of the horse, which is commonly referred to as hips.
It includes the hips or hips, the quadrilateral, the upper part of the buttocks and the tail mass. It is said that it is necessary for a horse, when he forms the turns, to have his back opposite the rump and have meant in this that when the horse walks sideways or two tracks, they must trace one or follow the same path the backs of the horse. animal, while, without crossing, forms another road or another track other than his rump. This way of speaking is not really reasonable nor fair, because then the backs do not go opposite in a straight line to the rump, since half of the backs walks towards the outside and before the rump that approaches towards the center of the circle, slightly folding the horse's neck and looking inside the turn. Related words
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