TiddlyPups
Well-Known Member
I've lurked for a long time but I'm new posting so here's my 2nd post ever!
I haven't had time to read the replies, sorry. Tell me if you've already replied to what I've said
He looks like although he's going forwards he is thinking very backwards and I wonder if this is almost to do with how well you ride him? I had one similar to him (was a mare though!) and she would pop 1m50 as easily as 50cm but it was very counter-productive. I stopped jumping her above 1m for 3 or 4 months and I practised jumping her over the smaller jumps and not helping her so much. Because the jumps were much smaller there was no effort involved to jump so she could get a horrid stride and still jump.
She learned to gain much more trust in her own ability and transformed from a very backwards thinking horse to one who became really up for it because she could get to a fence on a horrible stride and still know she could jump it (obviously a very humanised analogy but I think that explains what I mean)?
It wasn't always that fun because you could get some uncomfortable jumps but each one was a learning curve and educational experience for her.
This meant we got so if I got a poor stride to a fence instead of me going "wahey let's go" or really hooking her to it I learned just to keep hold of the front end, keep the leg on and she would always have her best stab at it.
I hope you get to the bottom of the problem because he is a lovely, scopey boy and can obviously do it all
I haven't had time to read the replies, sorry. Tell me if you've already replied to what I've said
He looks like although he's going forwards he is thinking very backwards and I wonder if this is almost to do with how well you ride him? I had one similar to him (was a mare though!) and she would pop 1m50 as easily as 50cm but it was very counter-productive. I stopped jumping her above 1m for 3 or 4 months and I practised jumping her over the smaller jumps and not helping her so much. Because the jumps were much smaller there was no effort involved to jump so she could get a horrid stride and still jump.
She learned to gain much more trust in her own ability and transformed from a very backwards thinking horse to one who became really up for it because she could get to a fence on a horrible stride and still know she could jump it (obviously a very humanised analogy but I think that explains what I mean)?
It wasn't always that fun because you could get some uncomfortable jumps but each one was a learning curve and educational experience for her.
This meant we got so if I got a poor stride to a fence instead of me going "wahey let's go" or really hooking her to it I learned just to keep hold of the front end, keep the leg on and she would always have her best stab at it.
I hope you get to the bottom of the problem because he is a lovely, scopey boy and can obviously do it all
Last edited: