kerilli
Well-Known Member
Did this make anyone else wonder a little? I really don't want to start the whole 'big heavy riders' debate again as I suspect it's been done to death and then some, but when the H&H vet Karen Coumbe is quoted as saying:
"Its advisability depends on the horse's conformation and the rider's capabilities - a light rider can be like a sack of potatoes. Heavy horses were, after all, bred to carry a man in armour."
It did make me boggle a bit. Yes, a light rider can be like a sack of potatoes, but a heavy rider cannot physically ride at less than their weight, no matter how good, experienced, balanced they may be.
And maybe I've been misinformed, but I thought heavy horses were bred to pull ploughs, no? Hugely different to carrying any significant weight.
Do we actually have any modern-day breeds truly similar to the horses which were ridden into battle by knights (and we're going back many hundreds of years to those, no?) Because knights (and horses) in armour were rapidly phased out once gunpowder came into play on the field of battle.
I looked after a Highland x Percheron once and suspect he was the closest thing I've ever seen (or ridden) to a true destrier. He was about 15h and had a back like a table, truly built like the proverbial...
Thoughts? And this is about the vet's words and about HORSES, not about riders who need 22" saddles, okay?

"Its advisability depends on the horse's conformation and the rider's capabilities - a light rider can be like a sack of potatoes. Heavy horses were, after all, bred to carry a man in armour."
It did make me boggle a bit. Yes, a light rider can be like a sack of potatoes, but a heavy rider cannot physically ride at less than their weight, no matter how good, experienced, balanced they may be.
And maybe I've been misinformed, but I thought heavy horses were bred to pull ploughs, no? Hugely different to carrying any significant weight.
Do we actually have any modern-day breeds truly similar to the horses which were ridden into battle by knights (and we're going back many hundreds of years to those, no?) Because knights (and horses) in armour were rapidly phased out once gunpowder came into play on the field of battle.
I looked after a Highland x Percheron once and suspect he was the closest thing I've ever seen (or ridden) to a true destrier. He was about 15h and had a back like a table, truly built like the proverbial...
Thoughts? And this is about the vet's words and about HORSES, not about riders who need 22" saddles, okay?