Allover
Well-Known Member
Or maybe they are just closed minded to a useful tool in the right hands.
Or maybe there are too many peolpe out there who think they have the "right hands"?!
Or maybe they are just closed minded to a useful tool in the right hands.
Or maybe there are too many peolpe out there who think they have the "right hands"?!
Well that's the thing. Everyone on here is stuck in the mindset of using them to pull a horse's head down and in. If you think of them instead as a variable martingale to stop it putting its head UP then you can see how useful they would be. Personally I hate martingales. A running martingale is the quickest way to turn a resistant horse's neck upside down that there is. A standing martingale cannot be released quickly if you need to. Draw reins suffer neither of these problems.
Rearing? Well, there are two main types of rearer. One does it as an evasion from going forwards. The other does is when it is wanting to go forward faster than its rider requires. The second type very often start their rear by chucking their head upwards. You can prevent this with the martingale effect of draw reins and then release them as a reward when the horse decides not to rear after all.
To use draw reins you need to be able to use two reins indepently, have hands completely independent of your seat and reactions fast enough to release them if they are going to cause a problem and bring them into use when they are going to solve one.
Spawn of the devil. No. Useful short term tool. Yes. Some guy someone else calls "God" says only lazy people use them? More fool him. Half the top class dressage trainers in the world are laughing at him as we discuss this.
Half the top class dressage trainers in the world are laughing at him as we discuss this.
the right hands are the ones that find room in the bin for them...Or maybe they are just closed minded to a useful tool in the right hands.
Maybe a good lesson to learn would be patience and good horsemanship?
Rubbish. Safety first at all times. And as you didn't bother to read the whole thread through you will see that I have very clearly stated when I would choose to use draw reins. Please have the courtesey to read the responses before you put your tuppence worth in.
Some guy someone else calls "God" says only lazy people use them? More fool him. Half the top class dressage trainers in the world are laughing at him as we discuss this.
Or maybe there are too many peolpe out there who think they have the "right hands"?!
Do you really truly think half of the top class dressage trainers in the world are laughing at a trainer who is regarded as one of the best? (that has nothing to do with my opinion, my epithet, etc, it's a serious question.)
(of course there's a whole other discussion there about finding out why the horse is rearing rather than just stopping the sympton, but I'm sure you're familiar with those discussions too and lets for argument's sake assume the horse is rearing for no other reason than some prior idiot rider letting it become a bad habbit....)
What a load of fuss about nothing this thread has been, when the original quote was incomplete and gave a false impression of what the man said![]()
For some horses, in the right hands, draw reins are a good short term solution, just as Klaus Balklenhol, we now know, indicated.
What a load of fuss about nothing this thread has been, when the original quote was incomplete and gave a false impression of what the man said![]()
I'm terribly sorry for you but there is nothing I can do if you don't think you have the skill to use draw reins and I know that I do, is there?
Hear hear.
But it wouldn't be HHO if we didn't have all the arguing, backtracking and (as Baydale put it) Forum Land comments would it?
I think everyone's bored with not being able to ride in the snowy weather![]()
I love it when people who ride the most immensely capable horses in the world tell the rest of us how to train the common or garden ones who aren't born with uphill, elevated paces.
I don't put draw reins on my KWPN because he is naturally round. Anyone who can afford horse with that talented self carriage has no need of draw reins. But I would love to see this man reschool a failed racer who thinks that shorter reins mean" lean and go faster". Or a stuffy necked and obstinate maxi-cob. Or a persistant rearer.
By far the quickest, kindest and safest way to train a failed racer,for example to stop racing and canter rounded instead of upside down is with draw reins. All things have their place. Only last week I saw my friend have a lesson with one of the world's leading trainers (fee £90 a lesson for a block booking) and her mare was in draw reins. He sold her the horse too, and it cost a fortune and is very talented but he felt there was a need for them at that time.
It's the rider that is good or bad, not the tools. So if you feel you need to use draw reins, you are in good company, stop beating yourself up![]()
Racehorses do not have the correct muscles to carry themselves in an outline, this has to be developed over a period of time as it would with a young horse being brought on.
What a load of fuss about nothing this thread has been, when the original quote was incomplete and gave a false impression of what the man said![]()
I disagree with you entirely! And please note, I'm not commenting on the Mark Todds of this world. How can it possibly be the quickest, kindest and safest way to retrain an ex racer using draw reins? How about having the time, patience and ability to reschool your horse correctly so that he learns how to carry himself as a riding horse as opposed to a racehorse. Racehorses do not have the correct muscles to carry themselves in an outline, this has to be developed over a period of time as it would with a young horse being brought on. If you are looking for a quick fix and for your horse to be going in a 'pretty' outline, then sadly draw reins may be your solution.
'good company'? Don't think so, not in this instance.