*lol* I was wondering what this was called, because one of my horses did it once...while she was about 5 feet in the air. Not with me on her, but while I was lunging her. It was kinda funny, but scary at the same time.
My horse Rooster does that all the time, he only tries to cow kick me but ive seen him deliver a 'double barrel' kick more than id like. one was in a fight with a Belgian mix and the other was for no apparent reason other than the mare was to close!
I was kicked (double barrel) in the arm by a yearling Thoroughbred colt. It hurt and I had a bruise for a couple of weeks. Thank God he wasn't wearing shoes!! Otherwise I would've had a broken arm for sure!! Two weeks later, he ran over me and broke my leg.
Yup, you never want that, and i agree with SexyBear77, The 1st this i did when training my 2yr old stud pony is bomb proof him as much as possible and he isn't hardly afraid of anything, not even my friends HUGE great Dane didn't impress him at all even when it when up be hind him, the dog got himself a kick 8/
...And I was behind one of those from my horse. Luckily he didn't have shoes on or I probably wouldn't be here. An inch over and I wouldn't be here either...many hospital days and surgeries...
Actually...She should not have put the stirrups up... Think of it this way... Are the stirrups up during an accidental fall? No... if you round pen a horse with stirrups down in a safe environment it is a good idea~... If you are to have a fall while riding, the horse will be able to already have had the sensation of flopping stirrups and not buck and bolt in fear like a horse I watched last weekend..
pretty sure you should've pulled the stirrups up, if he bucked you off thats another thing but if they got caught on something it could just make matters worse.
@MototRuby well under normal circumstances she probably would have but this seems like shes doing whats called 'sacking out' around here it where you get your horse used to the saddle and anything that could happen if you were to fall off so that if you do your horse doesnt bolt and spazz out. also in a well built round pen there will be nothing to catch on so hes safe
The first times you tighten the girdle around the horse he behaves like this. Iv é done it a dousins of times on young horses whos to be schooled. A little mistake is though to keep the stirups on the saddle as theese tends to hit the horse and make it even more scare. If we look beyond this it´s pretty awesome to be able to be there with the horse during the whole process. And sometimes quite fun =D
Only a horse who has been improperly prepared for the saddle should behave like this. I train horses and will only have one buck once in a great while.
Thats just partly correct. Horses are living creatures and therefor reacts in different ways. Some horses acceptance is high and can be trained. Other horses is impossible to train not to buck when the girdle tightens the first time. They usually calms down very fast.
An importat fact to consider is that horses just like any other animals got a survival instict and to buck is one of them. Otherwise they wouldnt survive for long.
I always leave the stirrups down, it simulates the feeling of being kicked and having something dangling down the side and so the horse is quieter when ridden.
Guess you can find just as many ways to train a horse as theres humans training them =D
I was to fast with my judgement in my first text. It´s not my job to tell ppl wether they doing wrong or not. I don´t know either the horse nor the owner.
If you were meaning leaving the stirrups down, how is that a problem?
I do it with all baby or youg horses as its a fantastic way of desensitising them to something "scary", like a flapping leather or loose stirrup. Do you want a young horse to bolt in terror when it shies and you lose a stirrup, or do you want a calm, well rounded youngster that isnt fazed by it.
I have never had an extreme adverse reaction to leaving the stirrups down, ever. All my youngsters atm accept it very well.
@SexyBear77 You don't do that because it gets stuck behind things, like for instance, the posts of the walking/training mill, nails sticking out walls etc.
One thing I've seen happen is a horse abandoned like that, decided for some reason to mess with the stirrups. It's jaw got caught inside the metal, somehow nobody knows how, it broke. It took two surgeries to set decently. But after a week or three, it was infected with a bacteria that ate the bone. It had to be euthanised.
@SexyBear77 that may be true but it can be terrifying enough to have something on your back so its best to introduce everything seportally ( fail spelling i know, its late lol )
The horse wasn't in any pain, it was just confused about the new thing strapped to it's back, and was trying to 'buck' it off, their instinctive way of removing predators on their backs.
i got one of those in the knee once not that high though. I was riding with a couple frinds and the horse in front of me was trying to kick my horse, but my horse moved his head and it got me in the knee. It didn't dislocate but i couldn't walk for about a week it was rough lol.
umm hello yall the horse is bucking becuz....when you put the saddle on you let him walk around with it on and let him get used to it.......DUh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
He looks like he is having fun in my opinion. My older sister had a horse and she would do a few good kicks in the air every now and then when she was being exercised in the round pen.
Oh... that makes me hurt... I caught a kick like that when a child and her horse were cornered in the paddock by another horse. I stepped in between and was nailed by the aggressor. This horse had never offered to kick before or ever acted aggressive...
He nailed me in the thigh and the upper arm (I put my arm up in front of my head) and somehow broke no bones, although I have a permanent dent in my thigh muscle.
My horse does exactly that everytime i collect him before a canter. We've had his saddle, back, teeth checked, we've had him vetted and there was no problems but we just don't know what to do. if anyone has any suggestions then please drop me a message cos i'm really beginning to lose confidence with him.
Give him a good spanking when he does it... Stop your forwards motion, pull him in a circle and spank spank spank... Then work him hard in circles till he sweats... He'll learn he doesn't like the after effects of kicking out and acting silly...
Yes beat the horse into submission.Way to create a happy, confident horse and bond with him. What a typical rodeo response.
Don't stop the forward motion,keep him moving. hold his head as high as you can,disomfort not pain, before asking for the canter.Sit deep in the saddle and lean back sightly. Dont stand in the stirrups.Push him forward with your legs and seat.
How long have you had him and how old i s he, could be a habit learnt from his past. Also does he do it lunging or in the field?
Rodeo response? Uh huh. How's he goin to learn if you only pull his head up? My mare has a very very high head set, pulling her head up would do nothing. Puttin a negative reaction behind his antics does something though. A good pop or two with the riens on his butt isn't going to 'mentally 'damage the horse... Horses don't nautrally like to work their butts off, so working him hard in small circles after he acts up makes him assoicate his kicking out with the hard work and thus he stops.
Negative reaction is fine. But 'a good spanking' Hes not a naughty child. Holding his head up and pushing him forward will hopefully prevent him doing it in the first place.
His behaviour may go deeper, as I said it may be habit learnt in his past from an old pain. WE dont know. So before we start hitting the crap out of him, try and understand why he does it.
Your right, it could be a learned behavior... But it should be corrected... A horse isn't going to think anything different of you if you spank his but because he's actin up five minutes later... If you repeatedly beat him about his face, then yes, he'll become head shy, but that is learned... By spankin his butt when he kicks out, he'll have a simiular reaction and stop kicking out like in the vid.
if you held the horse head up when you cantered they would leanr to do that everytime, maybe just keep the head where you want it but keep a good mouth contact so their head can only stay in the right place or go up, but not allowed to go down.
it feels really good when you get double barreled in the stomach
leonarju100 2 weeks ago
hahahah her voice made this video what it is <3
MrJacketa 1 month ago
could i use this video?? thanksss i will give you credit
moonwhisper101 1 month ago
My horse double-barreled the pony behind me when we were out a hack, scary shit
Babiiamz1 3 months ago
Horse;
Look what I can
* Horse jumps *
horse;
I CANN FLY, I CA...
* Horse lands *
Oh wait.. I can't
912romy 3 months ago
That's horse is crazy
AnimalStar1 4 months ago
@AnimalStar1 no its not
LetsFlyOnceMore 4 months ago
that is so crazy
Tra2024 4 months ago
Oh man I would NOT want to be riding that :p
DaninaSheep 4 months ago
Nice airs above the ground. You might try entering him in the Spanish Riding School!! Haha
JumpingPerfection121 5 months ago
Somebody got a saddle on for the first time... (:
xo0Hannah0ox 6 months ago
yesterday i was on the receiving end of a double barrel kick by my friends pony! bloody hell does it hurt!
Angeless 8 months ago
I lived and worked on a horse farm for 13 years and learned by other people's experiences that it's only safe to not be around horses at all.
geoh7777 8 months ago
*lol* I was wondering what this was called, because one of my horses did it once...while she was about 5 feet in the air. Not with me on her, but while I was lunging her. It was kinda funny, but scary at the same time.
BarrelsPolesandJack 8 months ago
Were you attempting to break him??
horses4eva1996 9 months ago
he looks big, how tall is he?
iButterscotch 10 months ago
Such a beautiful and frisky little guy!
USArmysis1 10 months ago
Oh wow
jtp1949 11 months ago
His front legs looked like they were about to break when he land o.o
HeartFullOfBuckshot 11 months ago
why in the saddle?
missmery02 11 months ago
My horse Rooster does that all the time, he only tries to cow kick me but ive seen him deliver a 'double barrel' kick more than id like. one was in a fight with a Belgian mix and the other was for no apparent reason other than the mare was to close!
301HorseLover 11 months ago
I was kicked (double barrel) in the arm by a yearling Thoroughbred colt. It hurt and I had a bruise for a couple of weeks. Thank God he wasn't wearing shoes!! Otherwise I would've had a broken arm for sure!! Two weeks later, he ran over me and broke my leg.
Apsenniel09 1 year ago
@Apsenniel09 and a month later he raped u in the ass
1995welshlad 1 year ago
Yup, you never want that, and i agree with SexyBear77, The 1st this i did when training my 2yr old stud pony is bomb proof him as much as possible and he isn't hardly afraid of anything, not even my friends HUGE great Dane didn't impress him at all even when it when up be hind him, the dog got himself a kick 8/
chloegurl043 1 year ago
When she said, "I wouldn't want to be on the receiving ened of one of those," she meant it's penis...clearly.
coolvidzman 1 year ago
@coolvidzman no, manwhore. she meant its legs.
elinheartstristin 1 year ago
@elinheartstristin Forgive me. In all honesty, I was just kidding :)
coolvidzman 1 year ago
a buck?
jacksbabes 1 year ago
WTF!!
charlymops 1 year ago
wow, thats raw power i love it!
BrlRcr4Life1 1 year ago
ninja horse
TwoOne1806 1 year ago
lol i like how in the description it says "or even injured" as if it's a remote possibility.
i think anyone who got kicked like that would be injured, unless they were the hulk or something lol.
mickisawesome777 1 year ago
The "double bar" !!! I seen that going on out in the pasture!!!
TheWirdbird 1 year ago
that takes some serious strength XD
Arabianz7 1 year ago
Its hard to sit a double barrel kick :) but Danke for the clip
NicolexRyder 1 year ago
Take off the stirrups.
ilovemyfranns 1 year ago
@ilovemyfranns why? it doesnt harm anything and on younger horses it helps bombproof them..
tuyry1 1 year ago
Why don't you break that horse into a saddle with a western saddle... it would look better.
Billishotheismine 1 year ago
wow what a bucker. Would have some craic trying to sit on her!! :)
CorkAshe 1 year ago
woha wie cool
Sweetlulaby94 1 year ago
Can I use this clip for video im making?
HorseyHoofPrints 1 year ago
und das macht meiner, wenn ich drauf sitze ..
Jeden Tag xD
Jonn4x33 1 year ago
im guessing first time with saddle :L x
whitney95x 1 year ago
kung fu horse
cyrax2552 1 year ago 2
@cyrax2552 hahahahahaha that's funny
showjumper411 1 year ago
...And I was behind one of those from my horse. Luckily he didn't have shoes on or I probably wouldn't be here. An inch over and I wouldn't be here either...many hospital days and surgeries...
DeathByPurpleUnicorn 1 year ago
That is a seriously athletic horse. For better or for worse I suppose. :-P
pocopony2003 1 year ago
That's a fuckin falcon kick !
Halowars7070 1 year ago 3
haha we were on the ''recieving end'' of one of thosee check it out ;)
gorgeous horse tho (: xx
LadyBeeProduction 1 year ago
OMFG i don't want to be on his back xD (sorry i'm french and my english is very very bad ^^''''')
jujuloustic 1 year ago
WTF
flawlezz212 1 year ago
cute! :D
XtremeKiwi98 1 year ago
thats what i call a HORSE-PUNCH !!!!..so awesome !!!
XXplaythegamesXX 1 year ago
Also a scared horse can "kick out" While bucking..so her title is fine...Everyone is so critical... Geez. Thanks for the video~
MsRideon 1 year ago
Actually...She should not have put the stirrups up... Think of it this way... Are the stirrups up during an accidental fall? No... if you round pen a horse with stirrups down in a safe environment it is a good idea~... If you are to have a fall while riding, the horse will be able to already have had the sensation of flopping stirrups and not buck and bolt in fear like a horse I watched last weekend..
MsRideon 1 year ago 2
pretty sure you should've pulled the stirrups up, if he bucked you off thats another thing but if they got caught on something it could just make matters worse.
MototRuby 1 year ago
@MototRuby well under normal circumstances she probably would have but this seems like shes doing whats called 'sacking out' around here it where you get your horse used to the saddle and anything that could happen if you were to fall off so that if you do your horse doesnt bolt and spazz out. also in a well built round pen there will be nothing to catch on so hes safe
LittleMustangMare 1 year ago
my horse, blaze, does that when hes angry or upset or pissed.
euryko09 1 year ago
Please come watch and comment on my videos?
Please?
My horse and I have impoved so much and I would like some input.
horsegaldressage 1 year ago
DO A BARREL KICK!!
NorfairPrince 1 year ago 35
damn horse in the hair
SuperDozer14 1 year ago
my pony did one of those along with 6 broncs, 3 bucks and 1 rear. all within 15 seconds
iloverats612 1 year ago
i agree
HaleyG12311 2 years ago
BOOM-SHAKALAK-BOODWUYY!!
snakeplissken83 2 years ago
wow!
rsanders30 2 years ago
oula j'aurais pas aimé etre dessu x'D
jujuloustic 2 years ago
hhahah he like a old regular buckin horse
MsBrokeTooManyTimes 2 years ago
i no a man who got double barled he broke bothe his legs
nadds67 2 years ago
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FAKE !!
Chocho5983 2 years ago
Wow someone has some energy.
XHorseDreams4everX 2 years ago
yeah i think its called a buck....
JazyHorseLuva 2 years ago 3
Actually horses can buck without kicking out their back legs, so no you wouldn't just call it a buck.
cbootman 2 years ago
lol actualy u can just call it a buck..but okay!
Ariat041504 2 years ago 3
what a beautiful horse!!
THEbigDILLpickle 2 years ago
it looks like capriola ;P
rodeoappaloosa 2 years ago
Spunky girl !!! Nice footing in the roundpen.
mactine2k7 2 years ago
hey could i please use these clips???
Horses247alldaylong 2 years ago
now thats a kick. all my boring quarter horses just crow hop. lol.
equinefaace 2 years ago
pretty baby!
DarkMoonCutie 2 years ago
For all of you who´s not familiar with horses:
The first times you tighten the girdle around the horse he behaves like this. Iv é done it a dousins of times on young horses whos to be schooled. A little mistake is though to keep the stirups on the saddle as theese tends to hit the horse and make it even more scare. If we look beyond this it´s pretty awesome to be able to be there with the horse during the whole process. And sometimes quite fun =D
TiaSweden 2 years ago
Only a horse who has been improperly prepared for the saddle should behave like this. I train horses and will only have one buck once in a great while.
Smrobs84 2 years ago
Thats just partly correct. Horses are living creatures and therefor reacts in different ways. Some horses acceptance is high and can be trained. Other horses is impossible to train not to buck when the girdle tightens the first time. They usually calms down very fast.
An importat fact to consider is that horses just like any other animals got a survival instict and to buck is one of them. Otherwise they wouldnt survive for long.
TiaSweden 2 years ago
Two Words....Natural Horsemanship!!!! I agree with you Smrobs84
missygirl688688 2 years ago
I always leave the stirrups down, it simulates the feeling of being kicked and having something dangling down the side and so the horse is quieter when ridden.
SexyBear77 2 years ago 2
Guess you can find just as many ways to train a horse as theres humans training them =D
I was to fast with my judgement in my first text. It´s not my job to tell ppl wether they doing wrong or not. I don´t know either the horse nor the owner.
Have a nice day
TiaSweden 2 years ago
Comment removed
rodeosabuseanimals 2 years ago
I beg your pardon!!! Where the hell did that come from?
SexyBear77 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
gee yeh thats clever. NOT
missygirl688688 2 years ago
Whats not clever?
SexyBear77 2 years ago 2
If you were meaning leaving the stirrups down, how is that a problem?
I do it with all baby or youg horses as its a fantastic way of desensitising them to something "scary", like a flapping leather or loose stirrup. Do you want a young horse to bolt in terror when it shies and you lose a stirrup, or do you want a calm, well rounded youngster that isnt fazed by it.
I have never had an extreme adverse reaction to leaving the stirrups down, ever. All my youngsters atm accept it very well.
SexyBear77 2 years ago 79
@SexyBear77 You don't do that because it gets stuck behind things, like for instance, the posts of the walking/training mill, nails sticking out walls etc.
One thing I've seen happen is a horse abandoned like that, decided for some reason to mess with the stirrups. It's jaw got caught inside the metal, somehow nobody knows how, it broke. It took two surgeries to set decently. But after a week or three, it was infected with a bacteria that ate the bone. It had to be euthanised.
Blahb27 9 months ago
@SexyBear77 thats what they did to a horse we used to have they tied tires to the sides of the saddle
MmeLyraGirl 7 months ago
@SexyBear77 that may be true but it can be terrifying enough to have something on your back so its best to introduce everything seportally ( fail spelling i know, its late lol )
LetsFlyOnceMore 4 months ago
The horse was a good 1 - 2 feet off the ground at 1 point, wow! But my gosh, poor horse! I hope he/she was O.K!
xoxoTango 2 years ago
The horse wasn't in any pain, it was just confused about the new thing strapped to it's back, and was trying to 'buck' it off, their instinctive way of removing predators on their backs.
Bronwyn140 2 years ago 2
thats a buck....
GottoRide222 2 years ago
i got one of those in the knee once not that high though. I was riding with a couple frinds and the horse in front of me was trying to kick my horse, but my horse moved his head and it got me in the knee. It didn't dislocate but i couldn't walk for about a week it was rough lol.
colourinBW 2 years ago
umm hello yall the horse is bucking becuz....when you put the saddle on you let him walk around with it on and let him get used to it.......DUh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
whitedunker77 2 years ago
thats what there doing you stupid cow
GALLOPSwithHERheart 2 years ago
Not all of us understand horses.
justinaurelius 2 years ago
it probrably huts
sorry the gramatical erros
14 years old boy from brazil
jijijijujuju 2 years ago
matrix horse!
georgechimpanzee 2 years ago 3
Hes probaly bucking cuz his stirrups keep hitting him and scaring him..if ur gonna make him buck..take off his stirrups so they dont hit him
Rivetingfoal 2 years ago
omg any horses buck!!!! it not a kick. its a buck.
jacksbabes 2 years ago
same here :)
but u can tell its a happy-kick :D
TheBestDamnThing94 2 years ago
what kind of horse is he?
MultiStalion 2 years ago
a bucking horse a rare kind but worth alot of money if you have the money you should get one.
bsckts 2 years ago
ive been on a horse what does that, it's kinda fun, really! you just need a good balance (:
Pilvennukka 2 years ago
LOL thats what i think! ppl think im crazy :)
loneoakgrls 2 years ago
lol same here
housendcameron 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
maybe you should practice what you preach, roll up his styrrups before he ends up with severly bruised elbows.
dangerous610 2 years ago
well if the trainer didnt do it theres a reason i dont see ur degree in horse teaching
horselover7012 2 years ago
That will do nothing
loneoakgrls 2 years ago
aww, poor fella, =) he's being trained isn't he?
foxdemon23112 2 years ago
aww cute but what the hell kinda language is that o.o
niriton 2 years ago
shit
e111iza 2 years ago
my horse did that to my trainer.. I don't blame her though, she hit her with a whip.
Snowyiceel 2 years ago 4
lol, "launched 20 feet or even injured"?!
I'd say a 20-foot leap is enough to injure you pretty badly... and even a one-foot kick can injure you, 20-foot-leap or no.
gilraen690 2 years ago
Is she being borken or something??
foxyladay260 2 years ago
"Capriole" ... the most difficult thing to teach the horses :)
lol
xXBlondPrincessXx 2 years ago 3
He looks like he is having fun in my opinion. My older sister had a horse and she would do a few good kicks in the air every now and then when she was being exercised in the round pen.
ReaquaintedHorror 2 years ago
it looks like shes on a trampoline
RiskyGirl9000 2 years ago 4
my horse does tht wen i ask him 2 canter
T0tallySt0n3d 2 years ago
0:03 wow what a kick happy to be not standing there!!! =O
YJMvdW 2 years ago
Oh... that makes me hurt... I caught a kick like that when a child and her horse were cornered in the paddock by another horse. I stepped in between and was nailed by the aggressor. This horse had never offered to kick before or ever acted aggressive...
He nailed me in the thigh and the upper arm (I put my arm up in front of my head) and somehow broke no bones, although I have a permanent dent in my thigh muscle.
Kid was fine, thank god.
sarequarles 2 years ago
i dont think he likes the saddle lol
teamjasper1234 2 years ago
i think that horse looks SO gorgeous while kicking in slow mo...
id hate to get THAT kick!!
flickaluvr 2 years ago
My horse does exactly that everytime i collect him before a canter. We've had his saddle, back, teeth checked, we've had him vetted and there was no problems but we just don't know what to do. if anyone has any suggestions then please drop me a message cos i'm really beginning to lose confidence with him.
Thank you <3
xxx
XxSinging4lyfxX 2 years ago
Give him a good spanking when he does it... Stop your forwards motion, pull him in a circle and spank spank spank... Then work him hard in circles till he sweats... He'll learn he doesn't like the after effects of kicking out and acting silly...
PiggyDog89 2 years ago
Yes beat the horse into submission.Way to create a happy, confident horse and bond with him. What a typical rodeo response.
Don't stop the forward motion,keep him moving. hold his head as high as you can,disomfort not pain, before asking for the canter.Sit deep in the saddle and lean back sightly. Dont stand in the stirrups.Push him forward with your legs and seat.
How long have you had him and how old i s he, could be a habit learnt from his past. Also does he do it lunging or in the field?
hannah82nz 2 years ago 4
Rodeo response? Uh huh. How's he goin to learn if you only pull his head up? My mare has a very very high head set, pulling her head up would do nothing. Puttin a negative reaction behind his antics does something though. A good pop or two with the riens on his butt isn't going to 'mentally 'damage the horse... Horses don't nautrally like to work their butts off, so working him hard in small circles after he acts up makes him assoicate his kicking out with the hard work and thus he stops.
PiggyDog89 2 years ago
Negative reaction is fine. But 'a good spanking' Hes not a naughty child. Holding his head up and pushing him forward will hopefully prevent him doing it in the first place.
His behaviour may go deeper, as I said it may be habit learnt in his past from an old pain. WE dont know. So before we start hitting the crap out of him, try and understand why he does it.
hannah82nz 2 years ago 2
Your right, it could be a learned behavior... But it should be corrected... A horse isn't going to think anything different of you if you spank his but because he's actin up five minutes later... If you repeatedly beat him about his face, then yes, he'll become head shy, but that is learned... By spankin his butt when he kicks out, he'll have a simiular reaction and stop kicking out like in the vid.
PiggyDog89 2 years ago
Ok well lets leave it now. The poor girl probably hasn't even read any of this so not helping anyway.
hannah82nz 2 years ago
if you held the horse head up when you cantered they would leanr to do that everytime, maybe just keep the head where you want it but keep a good mouth contact so their head can only stay in the right place or go up, but not allowed to go down.
myhorsepayday 2 years ago
hav u tryed having a chiropracter look at my horse does tht because he has muscle problems
T0tallySt0n3d 2 years ago
Whoaaaa dude!
barebackbum 2 years ago
Looks like he/she aughtta be a nice english horse.
0tuffreiner0 2 years ago
lol i was on my horse barback a few days ago and he did that. just as high to it was hilarious...only cuz i stayed on tho!!!l lolz
love2barrelrace 2 years ago
i was behind that. my best horse too. Broke my eye socket and nose and I am still having surgeries. He didn't even have shoes on...
alexisfowler93 2 years ago
my horse does this when i sit on her! XD but only when she has too much energy
Sally20188 2 years ago
i almost recev that but i jump to the side just in time
armolizoz 2 years ago
my father recieved one of those. O.o
themysteriouskiller 2 years ago
oooshiiit XD that was a pretty nasty buck ;D
i woulden't have stayed on his back for more than a millisecond XD
Finizeen 2 years ago
LOL well at least you know he can do a levade and a capriole!!
JackaCrack1 2 years ago
A feel good moment? Wow ! Im w/ u on the receiveing end wouldnt want it.
rockietwo 3 years ago
Beautiful horse!
wishiwasfree 3 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
aww bad pony shame on the pony
elizabethsbiggestfan 3 years ago
can i use this vid?
123BUTFACE123 3 years ago
Wait, were you asking him to do that?
cheer0562495 3 years ago