paddi22
Well-Known Member
That's like comparing chalk and cheese though?? And PSSM is a physical issue - its muscles that hurt, not just weak and unbalanced. It's just that exercise provides considerable physical therapy if you find the right way to condition them.
And then of course you lay on top of that the psychological impact of having muscles that tense strangely and hurt their entire lives, long before a human got on their back and tried to get them to use themselves properly. But then again, imagine the feel good factor a horse like that gets from discovering they are able to do something, and from starting to feel strong and powerful. My horse used to canter like that, but these days he bounces out to the school every morning and genuinely loves his work (more than most horses I've trained), and he's taught me a huge amount about nuances of horse psychology and physiology when it comes to training them.
T's age may be against her, but I have the living breathing proof in my barn that that physical condition is not the end of the world in itself.
I agree wuith you and Thats the point i was trying to make but I must have made it badly! . The OP was wondering about the horse being weak behind and needing correct work, and I was trying to say that that a unbalanced, weak behind horse doesn't canter like the one in her video (ie showing pain). I think the OP sounds like a very caring owner who has tried everything with the horse, and if that is the result then is it fair to keep pushing the horse?