beerecco
Well-Known Member
Hi everyone, I'd be really grateful for advice.
We bought our first horse about 4 months ago for my three girls. Shes a 15.2 ISH, 8 years old, typical mare and can be rather determined about what she does and doesn't like to do, doesnt like taking the contact. Completely different from when we bought her, but I think she had been ridden by a strong rider for about 8 weeks before being put on sale and had been licked into shape! Recently a friend who is very experienced has ridden her a couple of times, and I have been paying for schooling once or twice a week for the last few weeks too as she doesnt step through enough so although the girls have been working on it, thought she would benefit from a bit of professional help.
We have had the dentist out, had her back checked, she's seen the farrier, and the vet etc. so those areas are all sorted. We've also put her on oestress as she can be mareish - not sure if it's making a difference but I figured there's no harm in carrying on!
She took a dislike to a large outdoor arena used for showjumping at the yard where we keep her, and my youngest rode her through it the first time but the second, could do nothing to persuade her from broncing and rearing (nothing too massive) in the corner, so we asked that she be schooled in there as the girls want to take part in the sj competitions. She was naughty for the instructor the first time but nothing too spectacular, but then the second time she took her in there, after a little while and out of the blue she started broncing then reared vertically twice. Im sure this is straightforward for a competent rider and the instructor stayed on and carried on riding her, but its not necessarily something my kids would sit! Especially if they were unbalanced by the broncing. The instructor said she thought it was something the mare had done before as she said she seemed surprised shed sat through it.
We thought it was just in that arena that she misbehaved, but then about a week later my friend rode her in a different manege where shed always been fine before apart from occasional spooks when the horses were galloping in the next field which were nothing the girls couldnt cope with. She was working well and seemed really calm and relaxed, through a warmup then schooling in walk and trot, and then 15/20 mins in and out of the blue she started bucking, then reared vertically again. My friend has been riding all her life and brought her own horses on, so she sat it, ignored it, and carried on with the schooling and warm down for another fifteen minutes but its got me a bit concerned as there was no warning - she seemed utterly relaxed before and after. There was no trigger either - she was just trotting round a 20 metre circle in the middle of the school. The friend who was riding her said she thought it was when she finally accepted the contact, like an avoidance measure? So Im thinking maybe a Micklem bridle would help if its about the sensation of the contact?
All this happened just before the Easter holidays and weve been away for a week since then, so the kids havent had chance to ride since. She was schooled twice when we were away and was a bit nappy outdoors but was fine in the indoor. The kids were planning to lunge her yesterday but Ive come back to find both back hooves very cracked - so waiting for the Farrier to have a look at her now :-/
Id be really grateful for any advice on this issue. I know the kids will only improve through being challenged but at the same time, I dont want the challenges to be so big that they are completely put off riding. Would love to find a magic solution.... so is a Micklem worth trying?
Would be very grateful for any advice! Thanks.
We bought our first horse about 4 months ago for my three girls. Shes a 15.2 ISH, 8 years old, typical mare and can be rather determined about what she does and doesn't like to do, doesnt like taking the contact. Completely different from when we bought her, but I think she had been ridden by a strong rider for about 8 weeks before being put on sale and had been licked into shape! Recently a friend who is very experienced has ridden her a couple of times, and I have been paying for schooling once or twice a week for the last few weeks too as she doesnt step through enough so although the girls have been working on it, thought she would benefit from a bit of professional help.
We have had the dentist out, had her back checked, she's seen the farrier, and the vet etc. so those areas are all sorted. We've also put her on oestress as she can be mareish - not sure if it's making a difference but I figured there's no harm in carrying on!
She took a dislike to a large outdoor arena used for showjumping at the yard where we keep her, and my youngest rode her through it the first time but the second, could do nothing to persuade her from broncing and rearing (nothing too massive) in the corner, so we asked that she be schooled in there as the girls want to take part in the sj competitions. She was naughty for the instructor the first time but nothing too spectacular, but then the second time she took her in there, after a little while and out of the blue she started broncing then reared vertically twice. Im sure this is straightforward for a competent rider and the instructor stayed on and carried on riding her, but its not necessarily something my kids would sit! Especially if they were unbalanced by the broncing. The instructor said she thought it was something the mare had done before as she said she seemed surprised shed sat through it.
We thought it was just in that arena that she misbehaved, but then about a week later my friend rode her in a different manege where shed always been fine before apart from occasional spooks when the horses were galloping in the next field which were nothing the girls couldnt cope with. She was working well and seemed really calm and relaxed, through a warmup then schooling in walk and trot, and then 15/20 mins in and out of the blue she started bucking, then reared vertically again. My friend has been riding all her life and brought her own horses on, so she sat it, ignored it, and carried on with the schooling and warm down for another fifteen minutes but its got me a bit concerned as there was no warning - she seemed utterly relaxed before and after. There was no trigger either - she was just trotting round a 20 metre circle in the middle of the school. The friend who was riding her said she thought it was when she finally accepted the contact, like an avoidance measure? So Im thinking maybe a Micklem bridle would help if its about the sensation of the contact?
All this happened just before the Easter holidays and weve been away for a week since then, so the kids havent had chance to ride since. She was schooled twice when we were away and was a bit nappy outdoors but was fine in the indoor. The kids were planning to lunge her yesterday but Ive come back to find both back hooves very cracked - so waiting for the Farrier to have a look at her now :-/
Id be really grateful for any advice on this issue. I know the kids will only improve through being challenged but at the same time, I dont want the challenges to be so big that they are completely put off riding. Would love to find a magic solution.... so is a Micklem worth trying?
Would be very grateful for any advice! Thanks.