Gray_Lensman wrote:Hmmm. 20 gallons of water a day... At my old age, I wouldn't want to guess which one of us would have to stop more often to use the facilities, me or the horse?![]()
pepe4158 wrote:Lol...realisticly Arsan you could expect a conf cav man to do more, but remember when your walking, you carry just you, the horse carries you both is the problem, and at a fast pace, like you might have to do, he can get spent quick.
Remember a horse cant say...man I am tired I am gona drop and die cuz you rode me too hard...they just drop and die trying to fullfill your requests.
Rafiki wrote:I think that number must be for a very slow, very comfortable and purely recreational pace.
Skimming the article about the battle of Little Big Horn over at Wikipedia, it seems to me that cavalry in the 19th century could sustain much larger speeds.
On the day of the battle, following a forced night march, one of Custer's battalions was able to cross approx 15 miles in a few hours to attack the village. Granted, a battle is different than a campaign and the article reports that the timelines are somewhat debated, but I still think it serves as an illustration of the scale we are talking about here![]()
arsan wrote:I must confess i have not even touched a real horse on my life(European urban guy, here
) so...
![]()
Talking about loong rides... how about Grierson raid?? I will have to check Footes books about speeds and distances when i arrive home but he went from Corinth to Baton Rouge![]()
At least he did not need to go back home to Corinth...![]()
Regards!
pepe4158 wrote:Speed isnt the issue Raf...its stamina...
pepe4158 wrote:n yes fiqure about double; a max of 20or so miles a day without killing horses for a confederate horseman
Gray_Lensman wrote:I never realized how shrewd Lincoln was as a political manipulator until I read these books. I read them thru once, late last year and I am re-reading them again.
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