CarolineJ
Well-Known Member
Merlin's still testing his boundaries a little under saddle - my fault, he's been here 10 months and I've only ridden him a handful of times. However, he's getting his summer podge on, so it's time to get him working regularly before I have to restrict his grazing.
At some point in the past he's learnt that he can open his mouth, set his neck and go in whatever direction he wants (always towards the school gate or his field!) and there's not a lot his rider can do about it. Initially I thought it was a pain reaction, so jumped off immediately, which hasn't helped the issue - back, teeth and saddle have all been checked now and no problems found. He doesn't do it if someone is walking by his head or he's being led (with or without a rider on board).
Can anyone give me some suggestions for working through this? I've only come up with two ways of winning the battle when he does it, 1) open the outside rein (assuming he's napping to the inside) and push him over with inside leg or, if that doesn't work, 2) making him turn on his forehand and then riding a small half circle to get us pointing back in the direction I was originally wanting us to go.
The temptation is to stick him in a flash, but I feel that's avoiding the issue rather than solving it - or would it not be a bad idea to try it just for one or two sessions and then take it off again?
At some point in the past he's learnt that he can open his mouth, set his neck and go in whatever direction he wants (always towards the school gate or his field!) and there's not a lot his rider can do about it. Initially I thought it was a pain reaction, so jumped off immediately, which hasn't helped the issue - back, teeth and saddle have all been checked now and no problems found. He doesn't do it if someone is walking by his head or he's being led (with or without a rider on board).
Can anyone give me some suggestions for working through this? I've only come up with two ways of winning the battle when he does it, 1) open the outside rein (assuming he's napping to the inside) and push him over with inside leg or, if that doesn't work, 2) making him turn on his forehand and then riding a small half circle to get us pointing back in the direction I was originally wanting us to go.
The temptation is to stick him in a flash, but I feel that's avoiding the issue rather than solving it - or would it not be a bad idea to try it just for one or two sessions and then take it off again?