[personal profile] alnaperera posting in [community profile] little_details
I am writing a sort of fantasy adventure thing and it involves horses. I have no experience with them whatsoever, so I have a few questions.
1) would a horse be okay with a trip that's ~15km, roughly 100m drop but with minor ups and downs and a pretty low grade throughout (say a maximum of ten degrees for very short stretches, sustained is more like one degree)? How long will this take? What about the return trip?
2) how would they react to this being at 2 in the morning? One horse is the rider's best friend pretty much, the other horse has never met the rider before but assume it's a nice horse. The second rider is also very experienced, just not with this horse.
3) how will the react to a bicycle being a part of the party?

Editing to add a bit more context.
The party consists of the following:
1. Horse A and character A, both used to each other (in town, around town, exploring hills, committing crime together).
2. Horse B and character B. Horse B is my biggest variable because they will appear for just this trip, that's it. Generally used for riding around farms and getting to nearby cities and stuff, I don't imagine this horse being one of those big farm horses. Character B is from a culture that is very horse based and has been riding since she feasibly could, mostly training with war horses.
3. Character C and bicycle. Character C has no riding experience whatsoever and needs to arrive at the destination in reasonable shape, hence the bicycle.
The trip happens early in the morning what would be the rough equivalent of northern hemisphere early March, temperatures would be in low single digits C and warming up slowly to low double digits.
The roads are reasonably well lit for established cultural reasons.
Character A and Character B can both see in the dark much better than the average person.
They also need to start the return trip almost immediately afterwards, though they can reasonably get some rest about 2 kilometers in.

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Date: 2025-01-21 02:51 am (UTC)
azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)
From: [personal profile] azurelunatic
Some horses are more skittish than others; this also goes by breeding, so some types of horses are generally more skittish than others. Generally, horses bred to Go Fast OMG are more likely to Behave Badly at things that startle them, and horses bred for things like draft (pulling things behind them with more power than speed) or specialty breeds like IRL Icelandic horses, are much steadier (you will hear some of these individuals described as "bomb proof"). Riding horses could fall into either category.

The second horse might spook at unexpected noises that it might be fine with if it could see things better, particularly if it's high-strung.

The rider of the second horse is going to have to spend a little while on the trip learning their mount, and (possibly) guiding it out of Bad Habits. Which could be (for a high strung horse) shying at things, or for a super laid back horse, trying to pause to munch on convenient things.

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