ester
Not slacking multitasking
*sigh*
No Carl, I'd bow to your superior knowledge on everything but not this
No Carl, I'd bow to your superior knowledge on everything but not this
*sigh*
No Carl, I'd bow to your superior knowledge on everything but not this![]()
Farma someone was using one and it was mentioned and Carl said it gave poll pressure so the horse lowered it's head - sigh. The laws of physics mean this cannot be the case because the rein is not fixed and is free to move around the bit ring. Penny said they'd discuss it next year and that her mother said they should all be hung![]()
My grey has a hanging cheek myler as that's what she likes. If she really takes hold, the cheekpieces go baggy/lift from the sides of her head, so I've never believed the poll pressure theory.
Palindrome I believe that NS have done some pressure testing. Even if the rein doesn't move round totally freely it is never really low enough/far enough away from the pivot point (mouthpiece on the bars) to produce poll pressure.
I have also found this, it's quite interesting IMO and would match what I have seen with the bowing of the cheekpieces.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8MmikY9kRhI
Poll pressure or not, some horses go really well in baucher or hanging cheek snaffles. I think it has more to do with the bit's stability in the mouth than any other effect.
Thank heavens ,a post with sane people talking sense about bits .
Crikes, it is rare I get called sane.
Horses that pull back often are sore or out in the poll, the effect of the pressure and they way they twist their head.
The thin rope halters apply a more concentrated pressure so effectively apply stronger pressure over a thinner area, increasing discomfort, resulting in yielding. Same reaction with a thinner bit being stronger than a thick one.
On the basis that it's tight enough to apply pressure I assume...