Page:Notes on New Zealand (1892).pdf/136

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126
NOTES ON NEW ZEALAND.

ment. Galloping over rough country at top speed after wild horses, and using a stock whip, requires good riders and sure-footed animals, as a false move means a bad accident. Then there is immense fun, to say nothing of danger, to be found in a stockyard amongst a mob of young horses.

Of course, the horses, after being sold in town, are very often carefully broken to saddle and harness again when required for town work, by the same means as are generally employed in England.

The Wanganui hacks are famed throughout the colony, and large numbers of good horses are bred in that district.