Tinker_Belle
Well-Known Member
I'm not asking for actual advice here, more pointers and ideas. I have no intention of shoving every bit of metal available in to my pony's mouth just to see what happens.
She's a 15 year old NF mare and has been on loan for the past four years. I can't speak to her loaner as things got very messy.
All I know of her time with her loaner as far as bitting is concerned is that my pony was ridden in a English hackamore.
I've tried her in this and I am not entirely happy with it. I've tried it on various settings and she basically takes the P unless it's done so tight that I think it is beyond a joke.
I've had my pony since she was two and she came to me in a eggbutt snaffle which she clearly was not happy in. The bit had given her sores in her mouth and she got in to the habit of putting her tongue over the bit and evading it completely. As a result of this, her previous owners put her in a martingae to stop her throwing her head around. She was fully broken when she came to me and had been pushed through the process of breaking and schooling and the end result was I was advised to rest her for a year/18 months and then re-break her (back problems also had a bearing on this decision).
I have had her teeth seen to (last week) and it seems part of the bitting problem is that her teeth grow at quite a steep angle and she has quite a thick tongue.
The dentist advised a French Link sweet iron bit or similar.
My pony no longer throws her head around but she can be a strong ride and excitable and when the excitement kicks in, she jig-jogs and her head goes up. She's had schooling and she does eventually settle but in the meantime, she tries it on and will evade the bit as much as possible. She's never been ridden heavy-handedly and never had her mouth pulled around.
I am really not keen on a martingale as I feel it hides the problem rather than helps to solve it.
The dentist is coming back out for a quick check-up on my pony's teeth (loaner did not have them done as well or as regularly as was made out
) in the next few weeks so any ideas anyone has that I can speak to the dentist about would be appreciated
.
Thanks in advance for any helpful replies
.
ETA; Off to the yard now so I won't be able to reply until later on
.
She's a 15 year old NF mare and has been on loan for the past four years. I can't speak to her loaner as things got very messy.
All I know of her time with her loaner as far as bitting is concerned is that my pony was ridden in a English hackamore.
I've tried her in this and I am not entirely happy with it. I've tried it on various settings and she basically takes the P unless it's done so tight that I think it is beyond a joke.
I've had my pony since she was two and she came to me in a eggbutt snaffle which she clearly was not happy in. The bit had given her sores in her mouth and she got in to the habit of putting her tongue over the bit and evading it completely. As a result of this, her previous owners put her in a martingae to stop her throwing her head around. She was fully broken when she came to me and had been pushed through the process of breaking and schooling and the end result was I was advised to rest her for a year/18 months and then re-break her (back problems also had a bearing on this decision).
I have had her teeth seen to (last week) and it seems part of the bitting problem is that her teeth grow at quite a steep angle and she has quite a thick tongue.
The dentist advised a French Link sweet iron bit or similar.
My pony no longer throws her head around but she can be a strong ride and excitable and when the excitement kicks in, she jig-jogs and her head goes up. She's had schooling and she does eventually settle but in the meantime, she tries it on and will evade the bit as much as possible. She's never been ridden heavy-handedly and never had her mouth pulled around.
I am really not keen on a martingale as I feel it hides the problem rather than helps to solve it.
The dentist is coming back out for a quick check-up on my pony's teeth (loaner did not have them done as well or as regularly as was made out
Thanks in advance for any helpful replies
ETA; Off to the yard now so I won't be able to reply until later on