AmyMay
Situation normal
Yes, I too wondered why you're still leaning over if the horse is now ridden away.
can i ask why at 5yo you are still leaning over her? suggests she has not been at all easy to break as once ive been on mine and got trotting i do away with leaning completely.
all i can say is that i would triple check the saddle. i am backing my 3yo and he was fab, walking tight circles each way and straight lines with me leaning over him but then out the blue dumped me on my back and from then on wouldnt let me back on, kept swinging his head round and really tensing his back. swapped saddle for a W (rather than MW) and hes been fine. so even the tiny bit of lunging hes been doing has bulked him up! they change shape SO quickly.
we leant over bareback a few times to 1. decide if it was saddle and 2. build confidence up and it was immediately apparent that he was ok with that.
I took that to be that she leaned over AFTER the broncing event because she wanted to test how the horse would react...
Anyway, why is this horse in a martingale? Is it necessary? If not, that's the first thing I'd take off a horse with some buck as it encourages them to put their head down - and that's the last thing you want. I'd go back to basics with her. Tack her up and put the stirrups down and lunge her - does she react at all? If not, try some side reins. The point isn't to pull her head in - it's just to mimic the contact she'd have if she were being ridden to see if you can trigger her to start the bucking (so they shouldn't be too tight). If she does, you can now correct it by really getting after her - make her work really hard, straight into a fast canter. Then relax and repeat. If you keep making her go forward from the ground every time she bucks, she'll change her mind about its benefits. And you won't need to worry about staying in the saddle. If she doesn't react, you'll have to get on (make sure the side reins are off!). Then the trick is to start slow and loose. Gradually push her more with minimal contact. If she starts to tense, turn her in a tight circle but try to keep contact light and only tighten if she pulls her head down. The less contact in her mouth, the more inclined she'll be to relax, not brace and stay forward - and the more seriously she'll take it when you do pull back. Stop when she is relaxed, get off, lunge for a bit and put her away. You may just walk the first time and trot for a week before you ever even think of cantering - that's ok. If you keep doing this daily for a little while and she never even gets the chance to buck you off, she will lose the desire to do it.
We have done all of this, as I have repeated the saddle is not the issue, how can she be totally happy in it and jumping one week and the next week be so angry she doesn't even want to be leant on...
She isn't the sort to let you get in with things, if something bothered her she'd not accept it in the first place let alone wait until she has decided it hurt!
We have done all of this, as I have repeated the saddle is not the issue, how can she be totally happy in it and jumping one week and the next week be so angry she doesn't even want to be leant on...
She isn't the sort to let you get in with things, if something bothered her she'd not accept it in the first place let alone wait until she has decided it hurt!
Is she only just backed?
I would also recommend that you rule out any pain.
I wouldn't personally be taking a youngster that reacts in this way into the arena, I have found that these sort of antics are far better worked through out hacking. Use a neck strap and ride her forwards at all times, if this means trotting the whole ride then so be it, do not let her think backwards.
Ultimately if it is naughtiness then you will have to find the way to work through it yourself, good luck.
Good luck to your mare, this thread has gotten weirder and weirder.
If you were going to send her to the breakers anyway then why post a thread? Just seems pointless.
Very strange
That is WAY too much, you are right. Not sure about frying her brain, that would have pushed her way too far physically. Even an older, established, fully fit horse, I would never lunge for more than 20 minutes, that alone is really tough on them. Let alone, then ask her to school on top. Your new plan sounds much more suitableI would be lunging for half an hour and then riding for a good 45 minutes and then doing a short hack, which must've just fried her brain and she was obviously completely put off!
That is WAY too much, you are right. Not sure about frying her brain, that would have pushed her way too far physically. Even an older, established, fully fit horse, I would never lunge for more than 20 minutes, that alone is really tough on them. Let alone, then ask her to school on top. Your new plan sounds much more suitable![]()
There is no need to be so rude. I asked for advice so that if she continued to do it when I got home then I'd have some tips on how to ride it out, if you weren't going to say something nice, supportive or constructive why did you even respond?