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A stockman with a packhorse

A packhorse or pack horse refers generally to an equid such as a horse, mule, donkey or pony used for carrying goods on their backs, usually carried in sidebags or panniers. Typically packhorses are used to cross difficult terrain, where the absence of roads prevents the use of wheeled vehicles. Use of packhorses dates from the neolithic period to the present day. Today, westernized nations primarily use packhorses for recreational pursuits, but they are still an important part of everyday transportation of goods throughout much of the third world.

Contents

History[edit]

Mountain guide Alice Manfield using packhorses to carry wooden chairs up Mt Buffalo, c1912

Packhorses have been used since the earliest period of domestication of the horse. They were invaluable throughout antiquity, through the Middle Ages, and into modern times, used wherever roads were nonexistent or poorly maintained.

Historic use in the United Kingdom[edit]

Packhorses were heavily used in the transport of goods in England in the period up until the coming of the first turnpike roads and canals in the 18th century. Away from main routes, their use persisted into the 19th century. This usage has left a history of old paths across wilderness areas called packhorse roads, and distinctive narrow and low sided stone arched packhorse bridges at various locations. For similar reasons, names such as The Packhorse are common public house names throughout England.[1]

Historic use in North America[edit]

The packhorse, mule or donkey was a critical tool in the development of the Americas. In colonial America, Spanish, French and English traders made use of pack horses to carry goods to remote Native Americans and to carry hides back to colonial market centers.

As the nation expended west, packhorses, singly or in a pack train of several animals, were used by early surveyors and explorers, most notably by fur trappers, "Mountain men", and gold prospectors who covered great distances by themselves or in small groups. Packhorses were used by Native American people when traveling from place to place, and were also used by traders to carry goods to both Indian and White settlements. During a few decades of the 19th Century, enormous pack trains carried goods on the Old Spanish Trail from Santa Fe, New Mexico west to California.

On current United States Geological Survey maps, many such trails continue to be labeled pack trail.

Other historic uses[edit]

Japanese pack horse (ni-uma or konida uma) carrying two girls as passengers, circa 1900-1929.

Packhorses are used worldwide to convey many products. In feudal Japan riding in a saddle (kura) was reserved for the samurai class until the end of the samurai era (1868), lower classes would ride on a pack saddle (ni-gura or konida-gura) or bareback.[2]Pack horses (ni-uma or konida-uma) carried a variety of merchandise and the baggage of travelers using a pack saddle that ranged from a basic wooden frame to the elaborate pack saddles used for the semi-annual processions (sankin kotai) of Daimyo.[3]Pack horses also carried the equipment and food for samurai warriors during military campaigns.[4]

Modern uses[edit]

Pack horses on a suspension bridge crossing the Rogue River in Oregon, USA

In North America and Australia, in areas such the Bicentennial National Trail, the packhorse still plays a major role in recreational pursuits, particularly to transport goods and supplies into wilderness areas and where motor vehicles are either prohibited or impracticable. They are used by mounted outfitters, hunters, campers, stockmen and cowboys to carry necessary tools and equipment that cannot be carried with the rider. They are used by guest ranches to transport materials into remote locations to set up campsites for tourists and other guests. They are even used by the United States Forest Service and the National Park Service to carry in supplies to help maintain trails, cabins, and even to bring in commercial goods to backcountry tourist lodges and other remote but permanent residences.

Australian National Horse Trail

In the third world, packhorses and donkeys to an even greater extent, are still seen hauling goods to market, carrying supplies for workers, and many other of the same jobs that have been performed for millennia.

In modern warfare, packhorses are still used to bring supplies to areas where roads are poor and fuel supply is uncertain. For example, they are a critical part of the supply chain for all sides of the conflict in remote parts of Afghanistan.[5]

Training and utilization[edit]

Foundation training of the packhorse is similar to that of a riding horse.[6] Many, though not all packhorses are also trained to be ridden. In addition, a packhorse is required to have additional skills that may not be required of a riding horse. A pack horse is required to be tolerant of close proximity to other animals in the packstring, both to the front and to the rear. The horse must also be tolerant of breeching, long ropes, noisy loads, and the shifting of the load during transit. Patience and tolerance is crucial; for example, while there are many ways that pack horses are put into a pack string, one method incorporates tying the halter lead of one animal to the tail of the animal in front of it, an act that often provokes kicking or bolting in untrained animals.

Loading of a packhorse requires care. Weight carried is the first factor to consider. The average horse can carry up to approximately 30% of its body weight.[7] Thus, a 1,000 pounds (450 kg) horse cannot carry more than 250 to 300 pounds (110 to 140 kg). A load carried by a packhorse also has to be balanced, with weight even on both sides to the greatest degree possible.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • Back, Joe. Horses, Hitches and Rocky Trails.

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packhorse — Please support Wikipedia.
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68 news items

 
NOW Bath
Sun, 09 Jun 2013 13:10:45 -0700

The Packhorse has been running at a loss for quite some time. Punch Taverns, the brewery, had been trying to sell the lease for a number of months but were unsuccessful in finding new tenants. It was finally put on the market for over 2 months, in ...
 
CounterPunch
Tue, 18 Jun 2013 00:34:19 -0700

Over time, a good caddie became “a packhorse, a companion, a course expert, and a psychologist.” When good caddies weren't juggling all those roles, writes Morris, they were “a tireless maintenance machine, replacing divots, raking sand traps, and ...
 
This is Leicestershire
Mon, 17 Jun 2013 11:30:39 -0700

Benjamin Bingham (38), of Packhorse Green, Glen Parva, Leicester, was found guilty after pleading not guilty to harassment without violence between September 10, 2012, and November 29, 2012, by sending "countless unwanted text messages" to a mobile ...
 
stv.tv
Mon, 17 Jun 2013 05:51:57 -0700

Louise said: "I'd just recovered from having Oscar in an emergency Caesarian and I'd only just recovered from that before I then had to become the packhorse for the family and do all the physical things and Neil absolutely hated that. It was like ...
 
Buckinghamshire Advertiser
Mon, 17 Jun 2013 05:53:05 -0700

There will also be attractions outside Tesco in Packhorse Road, as well as at the Ethorpe Hotel and at Marks & Spencer. Several events will also be taking place at the library, including a creative writing workshop, a life drawing session and a book sale.

Yorkshire Evening Post

Yorkshire Evening Post
Sat, 15 Jun 2013 01:21:07 -0700

The bridge also carries the Calverley Cutting – a track created in 1856 to replace the old packhorse track through Calverley to Apperley Bridge. It also forms part of the Calverley Millennium Way – a special walk around the boundary of the village ...

Halifax Evening Courier

Halifax Evening Courier
Sat, 15 Jun 2013 04:50:18 -0700

During the Industrial Revolution, Queensbury was on the packhorse route between Halifax and Bradford and grew rapidly due to its textile links in the period when John Foster built Black Dyke Mills in 1835. In addition to the erection of mill ...
 
Huffington Post UK (blog)
Fri, 14 Jun 2013 02:07:44 -0700

The weather is utterly unpredictable. An outing with little ones involves planning for every eventuality. I will be doing my packhorse pilgrimage hundreds of times a year, laden with sun hats/cream/shades, rain cover, wellies, waterproofs, medicine ...
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