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"In the Derby, they are going to be at his throatlatch.
Their head and neck is held high, with the head brought forward just enough to create a clean line at the throatlatch.
Fiador, a form of throatlatch, is used with a hackamore.
The first is a throatlatch known as a fiador.
These rings meet the throatlatch and the crownpiece.
Many halters have another short strap connecting the noseband and the throatlatch.
The throatlatch should be clean and allow for proper flexion and breathing.
Some horse show styles do not have a throatlatch, most working styles do.
A becket hitch is used to secure the fiador around the throatlatch of the horse.
This structure of the poll and throatlatch was called the mitbah or mitbeh by the Bedouin.
This style of fiador functions as a throatlatch, and is attached either above or below the mecate reins.
When correctly fitted for English riding, it should be possible to push the martingale strap up to touch the horse's throatlatch.
The crownpiece, browband and throatlatch are all sewn onto a ring near the horse's ears on each side of the head.
It also is thought to give the horse the appearance of a slimmer throatlatch, a generally desirable conformation trait.
It runs from the horse's right ear, under the horse's throatlatch, and attaches below the left ear.
Another breed characteristic is an arched neck with a large, well-set windpipe set on a refined, clean throatlatch.
Leg white may not be higher than the level of the elbow or the stifle, white on the face may not extend past the throatlatch.
It had elegance, as it proclaimed in its clean, glistening throatlatch, its ironic black eye and supple crest.
In general, the breed tends to have a straight or slightly concave facial profile with a broad forehead and refined throatlatch and neck.
Clinical signs include fever, heavy nasal discharge, and swollen or enlarged lymph nodes in the neck and throatlatch.
In English-speaking North America, the fiador is known principally as a type of throatlatch used on the bosal-style hackamore.
Variations of this bridle include an "extended head" with the throatlatch further back than usual) to prevent horses rubbing the bridle off.
To be registered with the American Council of Spotted Asses, the animal must have at least two spots behind the throatlatch and above the legs.
The throatlatch is adjusted each time the bridle is put on the horse, loose enough to not interfere as the horse flexes at the poll.
A standard throatlatch measurement is that the width of three or four fingers should be able to fit between the throatlatch and the horses' cheek.