flump
Well-Known Member
Think I'd fall off the scales with all my junk to hold on to lol
People are so obsessed with this at the moment! If your horse constantly requires the chiropractor or vet, is lame, dropping weight, can't move forward freely, resents mounting etc then possibly your weight is an issue. If your horse is working well, is relaxed, healthy and confident to carry you then that should be indication enough that there is not a problem. People seem to be getting far too carried away with numbers. I'm no good at math anyway, my horses will tell me if im too heavy and I need to drop a few pounds!
Don't forget what horses have had to cope with throughout history - pulling farm machinery, carrying soldiers to war and moving artillery, acting as taxis, carrying deer home from a hunt .... As long as you have chosen a horse which is suitable for the purpose you had in mind and he is bright and willing stop worrying and get on and ride! Besides, the more you ride, the fitter you'll both get!
I know I'll probably get ripped to shreds for this opinion but I honestly don't have enough hours in my day to be worrying about a non-existent problem!
I allowed 2 stone for tack and stuff, plus my weight, I came in just over 15%.
People are so obsessed with this at the moment! If your horse constantly requires the chiropractor or vet, is lame, dropping weight, can't move forward freely, resents mounting etc then possibly your weight is an issue. If your horse is working well, is relaxed, healthy and confident to carry you then that should be indication enough that there is not a problem. People seem to be getting far too carried away with numbers. I'm no good at math anyway, my horses will tell me if im too heavy and I need to drop a few pounds!
Don't forget what horses have had to cope with throughout history - pulling farm machinery, carrying soldiers to war and moving artillery, acting as taxis, carrying deer home from a hunt .... As long as you have chosen a horse which is suitable for the purpose you had in mind and he is bright and willing stop worrying and get on and ride! Besides, the more you ride, the fitter you'll both get!
I know I'll probably get ripped to shreds for this opinion but I honestly don't have enough hours in my day to be worrying about a non-existent problem!
23%?? ie would I let Helge Gruetjen on my 15.3 ISH -
http://theboatrace.org/men/compare-reserve-boat/2013/4
HELL NO!!![]()
![]()
Do you think he looks old and worn out? hes the cremello in the forefront
Wagtail - if that is the case I would think about wether they should be riding at all then! All riders should be able to tell if their horse is comfortable or not, tense or relaxed, sick or healthy. That is surely a basic horsemanship skill regardless of if weight is involved in the equation of not.
Which begs the question, why is he retired then? I have a 36 year old (10 years older than yours) still going strong under saddle. No mine doesn't have the workload he had as a younger horse but he is still ridden regularly.
I stand by my 12 - 15% is more than enough for a horse to be carrying.
People are so obsessed with this at the moment! If your horse constantly requires the chiropractor or vet, is lame, dropping weight, can't move forward freely, resents mounting etc then possibly your weight is an issue. If your horse is working well, is relaxed, healthy and confident to carry you then that should be indication enough that there is not a problem. People seem to be getting far too carried away with numbers. I'm no good at math anyway, my horses will tell me if im too heavy and I need to drop a few pounds!
Don't forget what horses have had to cope with throughout history - pulling farm machinery, carrying soldiers to war and moving artillery, acting as taxis, carrying deer home from a hunt .... As long as you have chosen a horse which is suitable for the purpose you had in mind and he is bright and willing stop worrying and get on and ride! Besides, the more you ride, the fitter you'll both get!
I know I'll probably get ripped to shreds for this opinion but I honestly don't have enough hours in my day to be worrying about a non-existent problem!
he is retired now because i am in my opinion too heavy to ride him these days
People are so obsessed with this at the moment! If your horse constantly requires the chiropractor or vet, is lame, dropping weight, can't move forward freely, resents mounting etc then possibly your weight is an issue. If your horse is working well, is relaxed, healthy and confident to carry you then that should be indication enough that there is not a problem. People seem to be getting far too carried away with numbers. I'm no good at math anyway, my horses will tell me if im too heavy and I need to drop a few pounds!
Don't forget what horses have had to cope with throughout history - pulling farm machinery, carrying soldiers to war and moving artillery, acting as taxis, carrying deer home from a hunt .... As long as you have chosen a horse which is suitable for the purpose you had in mind and he is bright and willing stop worrying and get on and ride! Besides, the more you ride, the fitter you'll both get!
I know I'll probably get ripped to shreds for this opinion but I honestly don't have enough hours in my day to be worrying about a non-existent problem!
how do you work out this weight thing? my boy is 12.3hh chunky not fat 312kg. welsh cross... i am just under 7 stone.. and 5.3ft
Working on you weighing 7 stone in jodders etc but without boots, hat and thick jacket.
7 stone = 44.452 kg - 44.5kg
3 kg for boots hat jacket - 47.5kg
11kg for tack (assuming average weight dual flap saddle) - 58.5kg
58.5kg / 312kg (pony's weight) = 0.1875 x 100 = 18.75%
Least thats how I worked mine out!![]()
tango's mum, I took tack weight from an article, broken down - saddle 7.5kg - I assumed for a standard dual flap with stirrups on, bridle and breastgirth - 1.5kg, numnah 1kg, four leather boots - 1kg (so probably half that for synthetic?), no mention of girth perhaps they inc in saddle weight (but getting pedantic would also depend if synthetic or leather, straight or stud etc!). So I rounded up roughly. Obviously adjust accordingly to what you put on your horse (and by the sounds of things you could knock a bit off for the saddle!)
.
It always used to be 20% that was bandied round on here as being the max from what I can remember. But to be honest there are so many factors, and as I posted earlier potentially is there an argument for considering the build of the horse to some degree rather than just a weight? Who knows perhaps some clever person could come up with a formula that determined the max weight a horse should carry not just using its weight but its also structure such as amount of bone and back length etc. I'm in no way qualified to decide and just go on what I think is right for my horses.
As far as confo, bone etc goes that's just a reason why some horses should carry far less, not why some should carry more. Eg why 18% might be appropriate on say a standard shettie or cob in great health & fit etc, whereas 15% may be too much for a spindly sec b, badly put together fine tb, old or young. Not 20% is fine for all & if its got weight carrying qualities 23 or 25% is ok.
As far as confo, bone etc goes that's just a reason why some horses should carry far less, not why some should carry more. Eg why 18% might be appropriate on say a standard shettie or cob in great health & fit etc, whereas 15% may be too much for a spindly sec b, badly put together fine tb, old or young. Not 20% is fine for all & if its got weight carrying qualities 23 or 25% is ok.