Bridles,
hackamores,
halters, or
headcollars, and similar equipment consist of various arrangements of straps around the horse's head, and are used for
communication with the animal, to show it where to go and when to stop/start.
Halters A
halter (United States) or
headcollar (United Kingdom) (occasionally
headstall) consists of a noseband and headstall that buckles around the horse's head and allows the horse to be led or tied. The lead rope is separate, and it may be short (from six to ten feet, two to three meters) for everyday leading and tying, or much longer (up to , eight meters) for tasks such as for leading
packhorses or for picketing a horse out to graze. Some horses, particularly
stallions, may have a chain attached to the lead rope and placed over the nose or under the jaw to increase the control provided by a halter while being led by using stronger pressure. A chain must never be used on a tied up horse, for if it was to pull back suddenly the chain would severely damage the horses face. Most of the time, horses are not ridden with a halter, as it offers insufficient precision and communication, unless the horse is trained to be ridden that way. Halters have no bit. In Australian and British English, a
halter is a rope with a spliced running loop around the nose and another over the poll, used mainly for unbroken horses or for
cattle. The lead rope cannot be removed from the halter. A show halter is made from rolled leather and the lead attaches to form the chinpiece of the noseband. These halters are not suitable for paddock usage or in loose stalls. An
underhalter is a lightweight halter or headcollar which is made with only one small buckle, and can be worn under a bridle for tethering a horse without untacking.
Bridles Bridles usually have a
bit attached to
reins and are used for
riding and
driving horses.
English Bridles are available with many different types of
noseband and are usually seen in
English riding. Their reins are buckled to one another, and they have little adornment or flashy hardware.
Western Bridles used in
Western riding usually have no
noseband, are made of thin bridle leather. They may have long, separated "Split" reins or shorter closed reins, which sometimes include an attached
Romal. Western bridles are often adorned with silver or other decorative features.
Double bridles are a type of English bridle that use two bits in the mouth at once, a snaffle and a curb. The two bits allow the rider to have very precise communication with the horse. As a rule, only very advanced horses and riders use double bridles, because the pressure from the curb bit can be very strong. Double bridles are usually seen in the top levels of
dressage, but also are seen in certain types of show hack and
Saddle seat competition.
Hackamores and other bitless designs A
hackamore is a headgear that utilizes a heavy
noseband of some sort, rather than a bit, most often used to train young horses or to go easy on an older horse's mouth. Hackamores are more often seen in
western riding. Some related styles of headgear that control a horse with a noseband rather than a bit are known as
bitless bridles. The word "
hackamore" is derived from the
Spanish word
. Hackamores are seen in
western riding disciplines, as well as in
endurance riding and
English riding disciplines such as
show jumping and the stadium phase of
eventing. While the classic
bosal-style hackamore is usually used to start young horses, other designs, such as various
bitless bridles and the
mechanical hackamore, are often seen on mature horses with dental issues that make bit use painful, horses with certain training problems, and on horses with mouth or tongue injuries. Some riders also like to use them in the winter to avoid putting a frozen metal bit into a horse's mouth. Like bitted bridles, noseband-based designs can be gentle or harsh, depending on the hands of the rider. It is a myth that a bit is cruel and a hackamore is gentler. The horse's face is very soft and sensitive with many nerve endings. Misuse of a hackamore can cause swelling on the nose, scraping on the nose and jawbone, and extreme misuse may cause damage to the bones and
cartilage of the horse's head.
Other headgear A
longeing cavesson (UK:
lungeing) is a special type of halter or noseband used for
longeing a horse. Longeing is the activity of having a horse walk, trot and/or canter in a large circle around the handler at the end of a rope that is 25 to long. It is used for training and exercise. A
neck rope or
cordeo is a rope tied around a horse's neck used to guide the horse during bridleless riding or groundwork.{{cite web|title=Using a Neck Rope or Cordeo == Reins ==