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Question:

What is Dual Alarm Settings?

On a feature for an alarm clock it states: Dual Alarm SettingsDoes this mean I can set the alarm for Monday-Friday only?

Answer:

If the strobe line breaks/fails then the bell will also fail. I would have a dedicated line running to it. You can also look through the building codes for info. Hopefully, you are licensed so any electricial fire, is covered.
it's a very rare stud that can handle that kind of stress AND mares in the lineup. parades are super noisy and super stressful. much different than shows. my brother's walking horse stud is one of the kindest, easiest studs i've ever encountered and he really stresses in parades.
No. It is not safe. Not for you, not for the other riders, not for the other horses, not for your stallion, and not for the spectators. Please don't put all these horses and people at risk because you prefer to show off on one horse rather than on another. Not what you wanted to hear, I'm sure; just what you evidently need to hear.
I'm going to ride my mare in a parade for the first time this year , (she's 7) I wouldn't have done it when she was four, she was just too young and inexperienced to handle it emotionally. Having said that, you know your horse and whether he can handle it or not. Personally I would give him more experience with crowds, and a couple of more years of maturity first. Ride the gelding.
I think 4 years old is a but young for that type of thing. If he was an older BTDT horse, then no problem. As far as him being a stallion, that shouldn't matter. A well trained, well mannered stallion can safely be ridden around all types of other horses. They should be trained well enough to know when they are being used for breeding and the rest of the time they should act respectful. I used to show with some backyard breeder type people that owned a stallion. They were always going around telling everyone to give him room, he is a stud, etc. We were at a show with them yelling, there was another guy, a fairly well known trainer in our area there riding a VERY nice stallion, he never said a word, just sat quietly on his very well behaved horse. I even sat on my mare next to him while we chatted, and snickered about the other people. THAT is how a stallion should act while he is being handled.

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