Fitness in horses

Paint it Lucky

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I am interested to know how fit people on here like their horses to be for specific events and hiw seriously you take fitness training and why, because I seem to get my horses much fitter than other people for the same events!

For example for senior PC camp which is 5hrs riding in xc, sj and D for 4/5 days with an ODE at the end I would gradually increase my horses workload, by half an hour a week to 3 and a half hours of hard work a day, 5 days a week, (with one off day and one easy day), in the weeks prior to the camp. This is our yard policy to ensure the horses are fit enough and reduce the risk of injury. The horses I've taken (and me!) have always been more than fit enough to cope and so got the most from the experience. But other campers would only ride their ponies for an hour a day in the week before the camp and consider this fit enough, and in fairness most of them did cope fine as well.

When preparing my horse for hunting I'll want him to be working 5-6 days a week and have done a few 2-3hr hacks and be used to sustained cantering before going. Yet I know other people who'll hack their horse for half an hour 2-3 times a week and then take it hunting. Their horses don't stay all day (mine does), but surely they are putting them at risk of injury and exhaustion?

The same applies to endurance rides I've done, I only enter low level rides (the most I've done is 30 miles), but for this I spend weeks, training my horse, with a long ride every weekend, building up to four hours with him. And yet I know someone who almost never rides her horse and took it to a 20mile pleasure ride the other week, ok these aren't high intensity but none the less, surely she was asking too much of her horse?

So what are your oppinions on fitness levels? I know some horses are easier to fitten than others. I used to do a lot of long distance running when I was younger so a lot of my fittening ideas come from that. Do people not fitten their horses properly because they don't know they need to/don't know the risks of not doing so? Are they too lazy, or do they assume horses are naturally fit?
 
I think alot of depends on what you do with your horse, and how u like it to be.

My TB does dressgae and RC comps and i only ride her for an hour a day. Becasue if she is at full fitness then she is too much to handle at comps and takes forever to work in.

Also what senior PC are you in?????? Times have changed! We only ever used to ride for 2-3 hours a day at PC and it wasnt heavy going!

Also dnt think i ever heard of horses working 3 1/2 hours a day!!!!
 
Gosh i'd never do 3 1/2 hrs a day my bum would kill!!!! I do interval training and increase the intensity not the duration of the work.
 
To my mind fitness is quality over quantity. Horses only have a finate number of miles in their legs and the more time spent doing quality interval training, hill work etc, the more likely they will stay sound for longer.

When I was doing endurance (50-100 miles) I used to work my mare 4-5 days a week for between 45-90 minutes a time with the odd 3hr ride over the high moor, more for my benefit then hers. And she always had plenty in the tank at the end

Consequently, I am now one of those annoying people you see with a badminton fit horse going round riding club odes! Does nothing for my dressage but old habits die hard!
 
I think it depends on the horse. Some horses are crazy if too fit for example! But Im with Foxglove on this one, I think its quality rather than quantity. So Id rather have a serious schooling session for 45 mins than go for a leisurely hack (not that I hack!) for and hour and a half.

Personally I wouldnt dream of working any of mine for 3 1/2 hours a day because I think my horses would be bored to death!! How on earth do you find things to DO for this length of time? Or is it just hacking? I do Novice level BE with the very occassional unaffliated open 3DE (like twice a year). I do increase work obviously depending on what Im doing. But not the length of time, just that Id do more canter work etc. But a lot of what I do depends on the weather because I only have a paddock to school in! Therefore cantering etc. is limited if its really muddy or sunbaked ground! I think IF I got one of mine super fit then he'd be very difficult in the dressage phase as he already can be very sharp! Whereas my other horse who is a Welsh cob, he is hell to get fit because he's still 6 and very babyish still. He gets bored and grumpy very quickly so I simply cant get him very tired or he just gives up and starts behaving like a total brat! So he's never as fit as I want him to be unfortunately.

Your Camp seems to be very demanding since most PC kids wouldnt dream of getting their horses particularily fit. We never had 5 hr daily rides - we had 3 hours a day (split in half) and even then they weren't very hard sessions. Maybe your PC should tone it down a little! Poor ponies!
 
It depends what you do with the horse, but I've found that working a horse 5 to 6 times per week with a mixture of 30-45 minute schooling/jumping sessions, 1 hour hacks, hill work (if you can get it!) and occasional canter work has always been plenty for my event horses up to novice level. Once you get to intermediate or 3 days then ok maybe step it up but I think the key is variety and making the most of the time you have available - 30 mins schooling making the horse really work can be just as good if not better than a 2 hour hack.
 
5 hours a day is alot of work for horses at camp

When I went to camp when I was in Scotland we did 3 hours max a day which included wednesday being an easy afternoon.

Mine does about 1 1/2 hours a work during the summer, normally school for 45 minutes and hack for 45 minutes.
I like her to be fit as she is better with a bit of spark but not too fit as I am not eventing her
 
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It depends what you do with the horse, but I've found that working a horse 5 to 6 times per week with a mixture of 30-45 minute schooling/jumping sessions, 1 hour hacks, hill work (if you can get it!) and occasional canter work has always been plenty for my event horses up to novice level.

30 mins schooling making the horse really work can be just as good if not better than a 2 hour hack.

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This is about what I do with my warmblood mare. 30-40 mins in the manege or a hack out seems to keep her fit with a lesson or out jumping once a week/fortnight too.

I have a friend who jumps her horses at least once a week, either the babies in the BN and Discovery or the older ones in the Newcomers/Foxhunters classes and she works them for about 30 mins a day with the odd walk down the drive. They manage fine.
 
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