zoon
Well-Known Member
I’ll admit to stealing that term from Kathleen Beckham, who is an American horse trainer, but that is exactly what I’m trying to produce and I quite liked the phrase.
I’ve found myself at 40 years old, having not ridden another horse other than my own for the last 15 years, with a new unbacked rising 4 year old and I plan to turn him into the above - because I bought the baby horse before I realised I’m now a different person to when I last bought a baby horse in my twenties and I’ve had a sudden realisation that my needs have changed.
While I may still picture myself on the kind of horse I would have ridden at 25, the truth is that THAT horse is probably no longer a good match for me. 40 year old me is not as strong or as balanced. I’m certainly an entirely different shape now and my confidence is far more fragile than my younger self. And I’ve not reached the menopause yet, so really I can’t yet moan all too much about the changes.
So I’ve realised I need a different kind of horse now. I don’t yet want that super safe “you can put your granny on it” plod, but I don’t want to be scared on a regular basis either. I don’t want to produce an overly desensitised or shut down horse, but I need him to be confident and put up with some inconsistency or a little loss of balance because I’m not as athletic as I once was. I need him to be able to take me out competing one weekend (without losing his shit at the banners and flags or being that horse going sideways in the warmup) and then go out for a hack on a loose rein the next weekend. I also need him to be ok with sometimes not being ridden at all without me worrying he’s going to explode when I do get back on.
I’ve inadvertently produced one of these already. He is a rockstar of a horse and is now 15 so should be in his prime, but had a bloody awful injury 2 years ago so his ridden future is still very uncertain. So new horse takes the pressure off him and now I’ve got to remember how to do it all over again
I’ve found myself at 40 years old, having not ridden another horse other than my own for the last 15 years, with a new unbacked rising 4 year old and I plan to turn him into the above - because I bought the baby horse before I realised I’m now a different person to when I last bought a baby horse in my twenties and I’ve had a sudden realisation that my needs have changed.
While I may still picture myself on the kind of horse I would have ridden at 25, the truth is that THAT horse is probably no longer a good match for me. 40 year old me is not as strong or as balanced. I’m certainly an entirely different shape now and my confidence is far more fragile than my younger self. And I’ve not reached the menopause yet, so really I can’t yet moan all too much about the changes.
So I’ve realised I need a different kind of horse now. I don’t yet want that super safe “you can put your granny on it” plod, but I don’t want to be scared on a regular basis either. I don’t want to produce an overly desensitised or shut down horse, but I need him to be confident and put up with some inconsistency or a little loss of balance because I’m not as athletic as I once was. I need him to be able to take me out competing one weekend (without losing his shit at the banners and flags or being that horse going sideways in the warmup) and then go out for a hack on a loose rein the next weekend. I also need him to be ok with sometimes not being ridden at all without me worrying he’s going to explode when I do get back on.
I’ve inadvertently produced one of these already. He is a rockstar of a horse and is now 15 so should be in his prime, but had a bloody awful injury 2 years ago so his ridden future is still very uncertain. So new horse takes the pressure off him and now I’ve got to remember how to do it all over again