Santa_Claus
Well-Known Member
Following on from stewarding at an event today and seeing a horse jumping with wobblers I know what my answer but would you ever jump a horse with wobblers?!
^^^ ThisYou couldnt pay me enough money to get on one let alone jump it. I value my neck!
Following on from stewarding at an event today and seeing a horse jumping with wobblers I know what my answer but would you ever jump a horse with wobblers?!
1 it was obvious (it barely knew what to do with its back end) and 2 the owner admitted it outright but apparently 'it is fine to jump' lets just say the two rounds it jumped did not go well, and they are considering banning it from events but as she didn't admit it outright to a committee member its not a simple case!
Personally I wouldn't sit on a horse with that degree of lack of co-ordination never mind jump it!
1 it was obvious (it barely knew what to do with its back end) and 2 the owner admitted it outright but apparently 'it is fine to jump' lets just say the two rounds it jumped did not go well, and they are considering banning it from events but as she didn't admit it outright to a committee member its not a simple case!
but if the horse looks 'wrong' it should not be that complicated a case, I'd be surprised if the club wasn't concerned from an insurance point of view either.
1 it was obvious (it barely knew what to do with its back end) and 2 the owner admitted it outright but apparently 'it is fine to jump' lets just say the two rounds it jumped did not go well, and they are considering banning it from events but as she didn't admit it outright to a committee member its not a simple case!
Personally I wouldn't sit on a horse with that degree of lack of co-ordination never mind jump it!
but if the horse looks 'wrong' it should not be that complicated a case, I'd be surprised if the club wasn't concerned from an insurance point of view either.
The trouble is with wobblers, or at least in my horse's case it was not always the case that he was ataxic. Sometimes he would do a double clear in Discovery classes and the next day feel strange to ride. But he wasn't diagnosed until months later, he was still jumping fine in the April but was put to sleep in the June of the same year.
So it is not always clearly black and white. The OP has made me slightly uncomfortable as I had recently replied to a post by CPTRAYES about competing my horse as a wobbler and I would hate anyone to think I hadn't had his best interests at heart at the time and that I competed Rommy knowing that he had that. The girl riding the horse that the op refers to might have been told by her vet to carry on, no one really knows.
As we were clueless as to what it was, as was the vet and chiro we were not to know either.