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The Rural Voice, 1992-09, Page 26The four -horse hitch is an impressive sight. Whcn Arnold gets the halters out, the Belgians come right up to have them positioned over their heads. They seem to welcome the chance to be out in the cool morning air, kicking up their heels. During thc day, they arc kept in the barn, to avoid thc flies and to keep from getting sunburnt. At night, the two pair are let out into thc field. Although the heavy horse can run, they don't very often do it. They don't often play as a yearling or a lighter horse might. Five other young horses, yearlings, are out in the fields. They can graze all day when you don't have to worry about their coat. The yearlings are purchased. Arnold says he used to breed the heavy horse at one time but he gave it up adding that, "It costs quite a bit to raise a colt." Although the Belgians are hosed down the night before, all the final work is done the morning of the showing. Up before dawn, Arnold and his family have the horses ready and loaded. The trailers are leaving the farm at 8:30 a.m., hauling the horses across -country for the Fair. The two teams are washed with soap and water and curried and their manes and tails are tied with red ribbons. "They don't mind the attention," says Arnold. "They get used to it." The Belgians aren't ridden at all. These animals are a little too big for 22 THE RURAL VOICE riding although many farm children have ridden about on a draught -horse. The heavy Belgian horse is docile and placid. Although they don't often run and are seldom ridden, they can be frisky. A large horse can do a lot of damage, if it is reacting aggressively to a threat, such as an intruder. A slow -talking, slow -acting man, Arnold says he never has had any trouble with his horses. Some farmers over the years had animals which could be counted on to run Slow -talking horseman never had trouble with balky horses away, several times in a season, wrecking equipment, if they were bitten by a bee or startled by a dog. Sometimes, horses wear blinders so that they will not be upset by people or cars coming up behind them. With a wide circle of vision, horses can see to the side and partially in the back of them. Other heavy breeds such as the Percheron, a dappled grey or black horse, or the Shire, the English breed, were used for heavy -draught purposes. The commercial breed of heavy horse, a lighter breed, are more popular for carriages. Horses are chosen for their conformation, for work or showing, especially if the horse has to compete. Terms such as short coupled, well let -down, deep girth and doesn't show much daylight (short legs and compactness, which is a good point) all refer to the make and shape of a horse. Similarity in appearance of the pair is a concern, as is how they perform — if they lead off with the same foot, if their agility and movement is matched. They must keep their heads up and appear alert. Arnold Young figures he can show these pairs about another two years and then he'll start to look for another set. "When they get older, they don't move the same. They don't have the same action," he says. The horses are also shown singly and in two or four -horse teams. The showing of the heavy -draughts is a family affair. Young's wife Donna has also won trophies in the heavy horse category for ladies driving a two -horse team. When asked if he had any special secret to his success in showing, Young said he just looks for good horses. "Then we wait and see. We just take what we get," he says in his patient approach to his farming. Young says he has practised mixed farming in the past and has never worked off the farm, something few people can do today. The showing of beautiful horses has given him pleasure in his later years.0