It's Me Megan
Well-Known Member
to be honest probably if someone looks over 14/15 stone they may say i am sorry, you are too heavy. I very much doubt they will be dragging scales out!
We have a set of scales at my yard...
to be honest probably if someone looks over 14/15 stone they may say i am sorry, you are too heavy. I very much doubt they will be dragging scales out!
To clarify, the BHS does not impose weight limits for its Approved Centres to adhere to and there are no plans to do so.
Weight limits are completely at the discretion of individual Centres and will of course depend on factors such as horses available, types of lessons offered and so on.
Weight limits should be set by each individual riding school according to what horses they have.
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BHS can be so stupid. Like most charities.
Isn't this a bit of discrimination against anyone over 13st. I'm 15.5st fully clothed 6'1" tall and not fat. why should i be deprived of having lessons at a BHS approved school just because of my genes.
I'm sorry for not reading all of the replies to this thread ruth83. But i still stand by what i say, if you're over an average weight of 13st (going by over peoples comments) then you will struggle to find somewhere to give you
lessons.
Nothing wrong with thinking of horses welfare obviously. Would a r/s put a 5'9" 13st onto a 11hh pony, hopefully not. No one's saying we should put people on inappropriately sized horses. I think that what i'm trying to get across is that, it would better if there was a greater amount of r/s that cater for the heavier rider.
Just for the record, I'd just like to show you photos of my allegedly "significantly overweight" husband (Nostromo), with his 34" waist and his 42" chest....
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He has trouble buying trousers because a 34" waist will not accommodate the size of the muscles on his thighs and still give him room to move, unfortunately (although not that you'd think so from that particular ridden pic!!!). I can confirm that there is not an ounce of fat on him. If the weight that is there is muscle, how WOULD you suggest he lose it????
A proper wieght carrier is a big investment for a school you need a not to tall horse with a great temperament not too stuffy but not sharp with great back conformation and certainly when I was involved that meanlt you where buying the same horses as people looking for sensible gents hunters and that made them difficult to find and difficult to afford.
At the school I was at the horses had to work three hours each day or the owner was making no money .
Personally I would not use the a TB to carry thirteen stone plus tack in that job.
I still think it just comes down to market place. Even taking crap rs out of the equation, there are plenty of rs that don't have a horse that works above elementary, or could be a schoolmaster for jumping courses beyond 3' etc & I think whether or not they have weight carriers would be for the same reasons. I can't see any rs deciding they won't have weight carriers because they don't think people over a certain weight deserve to ride, it will just come down to economics. Giving a group lesson on natives under 12.2 will be far more profitable than a group lesson on 15.2's, & same again, a group of average weight adults on overheight/large natives has more profit than a group lesson on large horses.