Rose Folly
Well-Known Member
A few years ago I was much involved with local bridleways. The local council were very supportive, and among other things put in bridleway gates here and there.
At the time we were pleased, because they replaced collapsing wooden 5-barred gates each done up with half a mile of decaying binder-twine. Now I am not so sure.
My three current livery horses, all sensible sorts, are terrified of the 'new' gates (the kind with a high lever you pull back).
1. The gates are so strongly sprung that they snap back on the horses' rumps. All our horses now try to charge through the gates
2. They are very noisy - naturally, as they're always metal
3. The local farmers, however good or not they may be at trimming the hedges, never leave you any horse head room. With the old 5-barred gates the horse could, if surrounding vegetation demanded it, put its head over the gate. This is impossible because of the lever attachment. Also, to protect his machinery, no farmer is going to cut the hedge right up to the gatepost for fear of damaging his equipment; ergo the horse has nowhere to put his head if he is unable to stand alongside the gate.
One of my liveries complains she has very short arms. We were out yesterday and she was riding her 17.2 e-xracer. She was the lead horse on a single file track through thick undergrowth to a bridleway gate. Because of the problems listed above she was physically unable to reach it (her big fella measures over 11 feet nose to tail). There was general mayhem until the pony livery manged to crash through the vegetation to the front to reach the lever (but then her pony baulded because it has become very scared of the clang-shut). I'm surprised we're not all still out there!
Anyway, wondered how others fee - particularly anybody currently involved with bridleways or PROW officers.
NB: WISH WISH WISH more PROW personnel rode - non-horsemen don't always get the picture
At the time we were pleased, because they replaced collapsing wooden 5-barred gates each done up with half a mile of decaying binder-twine. Now I am not so sure.
My three current livery horses, all sensible sorts, are terrified of the 'new' gates (the kind with a high lever you pull back).
1. The gates are so strongly sprung that they snap back on the horses' rumps. All our horses now try to charge through the gates
2. They are very noisy - naturally, as they're always metal
3. The local farmers, however good or not they may be at trimming the hedges, never leave you any horse head room. With the old 5-barred gates the horse could, if surrounding vegetation demanded it, put its head over the gate. This is impossible because of the lever attachment. Also, to protect his machinery, no farmer is going to cut the hedge right up to the gatepost for fear of damaging his equipment; ergo the horse has nowhere to put his head if he is unable to stand alongside the gate.
One of my liveries complains she has very short arms. We were out yesterday and she was riding her 17.2 e-xracer. She was the lead horse on a single file track through thick undergrowth to a bridleway gate. Because of the problems listed above she was physically unable to reach it (her big fella measures over 11 feet nose to tail). There was general mayhem until the pony livery manged to crash through the vegetation to the front to reach the lever (but then her pony baulded because it has become very scared of the clang-shut). I'm surprised we're not all still out there!
Anyway, wondered how others fee - particularly anybody currently involved with bridleways or PROW officers.
NB: WISH WISH WISH more PROW personnel rode - non-horsemen don't always get the picture