Sol
Well-Known Member
Seeing as everyone gets so worked up over the whole pelham thing... I wondered what you'd think to this 
I'm sure everyone knows by now that Dan can be a bit of a fruit loop at times, admittedly less often now but he has his moments.
I DO jump (and hack) him in a pelham - just a straight bar with reasonably short shanks, 2 reins because roundings make him go loopy too. We were fighting a losing battle in the snaffle resulting in wasting a lot of time, though we tied hard for a long time. I was using it for comps prior to asking instructor, she asked to see him in it for a lesson and agreed that it was better than constantly fighting him in the snaffle.
I do hope to see the day when he grows up enough to jump in a snaffle again!
However, she has also told me to school in the pelham a little on the flat. Various reasons really, iincluding just to sit him back and get him listening. I am NOT using it as a short cut - he's required to do dressage in a snaffle anyway therefore we do the majority of our flatwork in the snaffle.
But, his pelham is a straight bar, his snaffle is a double jointed full cheek. Sometimes I feel that there is more resistance to the straight bar and with the pelham I feel I use a little too much curb still as the aid isn't as clear as with a double (I'm quite used to using double bridles). Using a double would also allow me to use a lozenge snaffle as he's use to and even almost abandon the curb rein for a while whereas with the straigh bar pelham this just feels odd and doesn't work!
Obviously, I indent to discuss it with my instructor anyway at some stage.
And also, obviously whenever I do introduce him to one, it will be done slowly and patiently. (He has actually had one ON before, but merely so I could see how it looked just stood in his stable - he didn't object.)
Anyway, something for you to potentially rant about this Friday afternoon!
Sol x.
I'm sure everyone knows by now that Dan can be a bit of a fruit loop at times, admittedly less often now but he has his moments.
I DO jump (and hack) him in a pelham - just a straight bar with reasonably short shanks, 2 reins because roundings make him go loopy too. We were fighting a losing battle in the snaffle resulting in wasting a lot of time, though we tied hard for a long time. I was using it for comps prior to asking instructor, she asked to see him in it for a lesson and agreed that it was better than constantly fighting him in the snaffle.
I do hope to see the day when he grows up enough to jump in a snaffle again!
However, she has also told me to school in the pelham a little on the flat. Various reasons really, iincluding just to sit him back and get him listening. I am NOT using it as a short cut - he's required to do dressage in a snaffle anyway therefore we do the majority of our flatwork in the snaffle.
But, his pelham is a straight bar, his snaffle is a double jointed full cheek. Sometimes I feel that there is more resistance to the straight bar and with the pelham I feel I use a little too much curb still as the aid isn't as clear as with a double (I'm quite used to using double bridles). Using a double would also allow me to use a lozenge snaffle as he's use to and even almost abandon the curb rein for a while whereas with the straigh bar pelham this just feels odd and doesn't work!
Obviously, I indent to discuss it with my instructor anyway at some stage.
And also, obviously whenever I do introduce him to one, it will be done slowly and patiently. (He has actually had one ON before, but merely so I could see how it looked just stood in his stable - he didn't object.)
Anyway, something for you to potentially rant about this Friday afternoon!
Sol x.