| SADDLED | Fitted with a riding seat, ... the horse |
| MADMEN | AMC series in which a drunk secretary severs someone's foot with a riding lawn mower |
| SWITCH | Change allegiance with a riding-whip (6) |
| THONG | A strap or a strip; a lash of a whip; a loop of a riding crop; or, a flimsy sandal, also called a flip-flop (5) |
| SADDLE | With a style fitted with a leaping horn for sitting aside rather that astride, a rider's seat on a horse (6) |
| SASH | From the French word "chassis", meaning "frame", a term for a sliding framework fitted with a windowpane; or, a ribbon or a scarf worn as a belt (4) |
| ROD | A slender shoot; an iron bar; a fishing-pole; the angler using this; a riding crop; a measuring staff; or, a perch/pole, as a unit of length/land (3) |
| UNSADDLE | Remove a horse-riding seat (8) |
| STILT | Pair of poles fitted with a footrest somewhere along the length and used for walking with the feet above the ground |
| ASTERN | The sort of seat the navy has at the rear end of the ship (6) |
| EATS | Seat the leader at the end for the grub (4) |
| TRURO | Birthplace in Cornwall of actor Samuel Foote, whose loss of a leg in a riding accident is sometimes attributed the origin of the theatrical phrase "break a leg!" (5) |
| SPUR | Metal tool worn on the heel of a riding boot for the purpose of directing a horse (4) |
| OBOE | A woodwind instrument consisting of a conical tube fitted with a mouthpiece having a double reed (4) |
| LUNETTE | In the Roman Catholic Church, a case fitted with a bracket to hold the consecrated host |
| DIVAN | Seat the daughter beside the Russian (5) |
| STRADDLE | Time right to get into riding seat? Yes (8) |
| HOWDAH | Riding seat for maharajah who had hiccups (6) |
| STEED | Sow round the junction for a riding horse |
| SADDLES | Horse-riding seats |