An overcheck has a practical purpose; if a horse lowers its head too far when in harness, particularly if moving quickly, it can catch the bridle or reins on the shafts of the carriage or wagon, risking an accident. Properly adjusted and when used for a limited period of time, an overcheck does not significantly impede the motion of the horse or cause discomfort. If too tight, however, an overcheck rein can be uncomfortable because it puts strain on the neck muscles and ligaments. On a hard-working draft horse, it generally is not used at all, as it puts the animal off balance by preventing it from lowering its head when trying to pull significant weight. A horse pulling weight normally lowers and extends its neck in order to push against the harness. If an overcheck is inappropriately used, or used for too long a period, spinal strain resulting in neck or back injury can occur.
TIL!
This comic makes me wonder when the arrow symbol for pointing at things lost its fletching
Interesting! So this comic is actually on the more “outdated” end on how the symbol is drawn
The horse’s reigns are drawn stiff, forcing it’s neck back in an uncomfortable position.
Everett even cared about animal comrades? Fucking based af in 1919, wild
Wait until you see the next comic strip I’ll post.
💀💀💀
Looking forward to it! Thank you for posting these!
I dunno, when I go read these comics they aren’t nearly as progressive as a lot of the ones I see posted here. They seem to get kind of cherry picked.
I tend to pick out ones that people can relate to especially today, usually of a political nature. I can absolutely post about more mundane or cynical things, I just wasn’t sure people would be interested in that.
*and as always, people can post comic strips themselves if they feel I’m missing out on some (:
I noticed too, but don’t mind. The general idea is “this really grinds my gears” and that includes things people not making their mind up at a restaurant or chit chatting instead of getting out of the way for customers, etc. To be fair, those would be memes in modern era, too.
The fact that animal abuse peeves the author is indeed based for 1919, though.
This Everett chap is like too perfect