Vaulting buck
A vaulting-buck, also known as a buck horse, is a gymnastics apparatus that consists of a heavy block of wood, upholstered and covered with leather, that is mounted on four sturdy legs about 1 to 1.5 meters high. The legs are usually individually adjustible such that the vaulting-buck can also be slanting. Modern vaulting-bucks are sometimes covered with synthetic materials instead of leather.
A vaulting buck is like a short version of a vaulting horse and used a lot in PE (Physical Education). For example, students are trained to hurdle onto a springboard and leap over the apparatus, with their legs spread or together, with or without using their hands.
Use for spanking
A vaulting buck can also be used as an item of spanking furniture for a bent-over-object position, similar to a birching horse. In some schools in the 19th and 20th century, vaulting-bucks were used for that purpose, usually for the administration of canings.
Often, a second student was instructed to hold the delinquent's hands during such a punishment.
See also
Links
- Photo of a student leaping over a vaulting-buck
- Example of a modern vaulting buck
- Another modern buck horse
- Still of a German music video showing the caning of a schoolboy over a vaulting-buck by his teacher clad in black lingerie (F/m)
- Photo series of a "schoolgirl" strapped bare bottom over a vaulting-buck (called "trestle") (Adult site)
- Photo of a bare-bottomed woman over a vaulting-buck (Adult site)
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