Goldenstar
Well-Known Member
I have never felt the need to wrestle with a horse in draw riens wagtail you may chose not to use them put to say everyone who uses them is over horsed is frankly silly.
I have never felt the need to wrestle with a horse in draw riens wagtail you may chose not to use them put to say everyone who uses them is over horsed is frankly silly.
No, obviously, some people put them on as a quick fix or because they lack the skills to school the horse without them. So not all are over horsed. Look, I have never ever needed to use them, so what can I say? I have to try to envisage a scenario where I WOULD use them, and it is not for schooling because everything people have described they use them for, I have got over without them. And it does not take a long time. I HAVE used them under instruction from a trainer many years ago, but soon ditched them as they take away every bit of feel you have with a horse. But I DO know several top riders who use them, but that doesn't make it right. I think they could easily do without them.
They may have taken away your feel they would not take away mine .
they take away every bit of feel you have with a horse..
It is clear to me now that you simply don't know how to use them or when.
Or simply don't need them.
Look, I am sure you are a very skilled horsewoman. We just have completely different training methods. Different ways of achieving the same thing.
When I get on a horse for the first time I can tell immediately those that have been regularly ridden in draw reins. They present in one of two ways. Either they come behind the bit and hold themselves in a false outline, or more commonly, they are very strong and gobby.
No, you just haven't come across a horse where they would be beneficial yet.
The horse I lost earlier this year was strong and gobby. My hunter is strong and gobby. One had never been in draw reins, the other exhibited strong and gobby behaviour long before I used them on him for week to train him not to drop his back and rush in walk.
My young dressage horse has always been very happy to offer me behind the verticle and has to be sent out. He had never been in draw reins before offering this way of going, and was broken using a pessoa.
I worked for Robert Hall many years ago, a trainer, way before his time IMO. I feel very lucky to have witnessed the 'Fulmer' method of training a horse. the Classical way of training and schooling the horse is the way forward. Draw reins and similar artificial aids have no place in training horses. What is needed is more knowledge and the time it takes to train a horse to be the best it can be. Where is the satisfaction of rushing a horse by tying him down to in an unnatural outline. The satisfaction is correctly and sympathetically training a horse in a classical way. When hopefully everyone today is outlawing the use of rolkur, why are we still using draw reins?
I worked for Robert Hall many years ago, a trainer, way before his time IMO. I feel very lucky to have witnessed the 'Fulmer' method of training a horse. the Classical way of training and schooling the horse is the way forward. Draw reins and similar artificial aids have no place in training horses. What is needed is more knowledge and the time it takes to train a horse to be the best it can be. Where is the satisfaction of rushing a horse by tying him down to in an unnatural outline. The satisfaction is correctly and sympathetically training a horse in a classical way. When hopefully everyone today is outlawing the use of rolkur, why are we still using draw reins?
Why bother with any of it?
If you are a novice rider you should not use any gadgets, as an experienced rider you have the seat, aids and knowledge not to need or to bother with them. Maybe there's an argument for using them to keep you safe but then why put yourself in an unsafe situation?
All gadgets are is a short cut to training, so assess the problem, and then spend the time working it through. If you cannot work the problem through find a trainer who can help you.
Originally Posted by Mearas
Why bother with any of it?
If you are a novice rider you should not use any gadgets, as an experienced rider you have the seat, aids and knowledge not to need or to bother with them. Maybe there's an argument for using them to keep you safe but then why put yourself in an unsafe situation?
All gadgets are is a short cut to training, so assess the problem, and then spend the time working it through. If you cannot work the problem through find a trainer who can help you.
/\ This /\
Thanks for the replies guys... A very interesting and thought provoking discussion... Next question...
What made you use them? Was it influence from other people? Be it top riders, instructors, friends, even the Internet? How did you learn to use them?
cptrayes said:I note with huge interest that you seem to find it acceptable for a man to get onto a horse and use his brute strength to control it, and not for a woman to take temporary and sensitively used advantage of draw reins. How very , very odd.
Odd? It's about core strengh, not wrestling. There are all sizes/strengths of horse and all sizes/strengths of human. You explain your need/choice to use the draw reins on a horse that is using its strength and athletism against you. Draw reins give you the extra 'strength' and control to do this. However, they are not a good substitute for human 'feel'.
This exchange has been bugging me for days, as you can tell from the dates, because I knew it was wrong but I could not immediately find the flaw in it. It came to me when I was drag hunting my "man's horse" yesterday.
The discussion came from Wagtail saying that some horses are just men's horses. If we accept that, then we are basically saying that some horse will need more strength to manage than others, and Wagtail agrees but says this is "core strength" in a man, and therefore not the same as women using draw reins on a man's horse.
The fallacy in this argument, of course, is that it is the horse which is strong, requiring a stronger rider, which is what makes it a "man's horse" in the first place. Therefore the pull exerted by the horse will be identical whether the rider has draw reins or is a stronger rider without them.
The argument, if you accept that, is simply whether draw reins, as Wagtail insists, remove feeling. They certainly don't for me, and indeed I would say that one of the measures of whether you are using them properly or not is if you do still have feeling on your ordinary reins and can ride effectively with two reins.
It is also a fallacy to believe that the issue is solely to do with strength. The placement of the "pully" which gives a 2 to 1 strength increase to any tension on the draw rein compared to an ordinary rein, is perfectly placed to obtain a neck shape which will radically increase control of the horse. It's not the strength assistance which I use, primarily, as I am tall and very strong for a woman, it's the ease with which it is possible to prevent evasive behaviour on the part of the horse by placement of the mouth in relation to the hands.
If you accept that, then they become no more of an evil than any other gadget placed on a horse to restrict its movement away from undesireable directions, like lunging in a Pessoa. Just like a Pessoa, they can be abused. I don't think that is any reason for a blanket condemnation.
This exchange has been bugging me for days, as you can tell from the dates, because I knew it was wrong but I could not immediately find the flaw in it. It came to me when I was drag hunting my "man's horse" yesterday.
The discussion came from Wagtail saying that some horses are just men's horses. If we accept that, then we are basically saying that some horse will need more strength to manage than others, and Wagtail agrees but says this is "core strength" in a man, and therefore not the same as women using draw reins on a man's horse.
The fallacy in this argument, of course, is that it is the horse which is strong, requiring a stronger rider, which is what makes it a "man's horse" in the first place. Therefore the pull exerted by the horse will be identical whether the rider has draw reins or is a stronger rider without them.
The question is, do draw reins deminish 'feel'? Personally, I think that they not only deminish it, but if used before a rider is fully accomplished, can prevent the full development of it in the first place. If we go back to your example of a horse throwing its head up in the canter transition and you using draw reins to cure this, why put the horse in the position where it feels the need to throw its head up in the first place? If the horse is prepared properly so that it has the strength and balance to cope with the transitions and then the rider ensures that it is properly 'through' before asking for the transition, why the need for draw reins? In fact, is it not 'feel' that enables a rider to tell if a horse is through? IME when a horse does this, it is my error. I have not ensured that he is through and soft enough to make the transition. No need for draw reins to prevent this if you use your sense of feel. Draw reins simply remove the need for you to listen to your 'feel' and are therefore IME detrimental to it.The argument, if you accept that, is simply whether draw reins, as Wagtail insists, remove feeling. They certainly don't for me, and indeed I would say that one of the measures of whether you are using them properly or not is if you do still have feeling on your ordinary reins and can ride effectively with two reins.
It is also a fallacy to believe that the issue is solely to do with strength. The placement of the "pully" which gives a 2 to 1 strength increase to any tension on the draw rein compared to an ordinary rein, is perfectly placed to obtain a neck shape which will radically increase control of the horse. It's not the strength assistance which I use, primarily, as I am tall and very strong for a woman, it's the ease with which it is possible to prevent evasive behaviour on the part of the horse by placement of the mouth in relation to the hands.
If you accept that, then they become no more of an evil than any other gadget placed on a horse to restrict its movement away from undesireable directions, like lunging in a Pessoa. Just like a Pessoa, they can be abused. I don't think that is any reason for a blanket condemnation.