fittening... how much does it depend on the individual?

rforsyth1984

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There have been a few posts recently about fittening programmes and it got me thinking about my own horse.
For the last year I have been doing a PGCE, and have not had much time of energy for riding. So, since about last October, the horse has been in very very light work (hacking once or twice a week, sometimes nothing some weeks). He is obviously now very unfit!
My plan was to just do a full scale re-fittening - 2 weeks walk, slowly introduce trot/canter/schooling, with the hope of jumping etc in about 6 - 8 weeks.
Horse had other ideas... 40 minutes of walking was not tiring him at all, so introduced some trot as he was getting quite lively anyway. This wasnt tiring at all, no problems with stiffness, lameness etc. When I lunged him, he did quite a lot of canter (his choice, not mine!) and again, no problems, not tired and just slightly warm under the roller after 20 mins work.
Last night, whilst hacking, he spooked and went into a canter. I let him canter to the top of the gentle hill we were on (it was quite a slow canter), then brought him back to trot and walk. Well, then he was fighting all the way back to speed up again, kept him in walk as I dont want him thinking he can decide when we speed up, but gave him a canter round a field back near the yard. I expected this to really tire him, and he did puff a little bit, but when we went back down the road to the yard his breathing went straight back to normal and he was doing a very lively walk, attempting to jog etc.
So, what Im getting at, is do some horses keep themselves more fit than others, and if you know your horse well enough can you take this into account? Given that I should be in my second week of walking and we are starting a bit of canter, Im a bit worried Im letting him do too much, even though he seems fine now? I worry if I do too much walk when he's so full of himself he might errupt in an almighty dangerous episode!
He is turned out for 14 hours a day, which involves a 10 minute walk down a road to the field (and back at night), so its not like he was on box rest with injury or anything?
 
It does depend hugely on the individual, i have a matching pair of ponies, both on about 45min a day 6 days a week, neither have hard feed but one i in tip top comdition, and completed a 21Km marathon with room to spare and the other look deticntly fat. I would say that by the sounds of it your horse is ready for harder work, unless he is really sweating or puffing he is coping ok.
 
yeah thats what I worry about, well the legs mostly. His heart and lungs seem to be coping ok (although I realise I cant tell entirely from his breathing and pulse!). I have been scrutinising him every day for signs of stiffness or swelling/heat, but nothing!
I did wonder if the daily 15-20 minutes in hand roadwork to the field and back was helping keep his tendons in good order?
 
but he isn't totally unfit is he if you've kept him ticking over all this time with light hacking and the walk to the field and back. You should assume he has a basic level of fitness and go from there. Sensible trotting and short canters ought to be fine I would have thought?
 
Part of me felt guilty incase it was a subconcious evasion on my part of the boring walking part of the fittening! But he really is full of himself and seems to be overjoyed to be getting back out to work. I initially thought it was just a bit of excitement, but hes been excited for nearly two weeks now, and is still pulling to go faster even at the end of 40 minute hacks.
 
horses when out and even ridden lightly keep themselves fitter more than we think, they keep their levels of fitness up to 12 weeks. i have a fantastic fittening book thats worth a read. carolyn henderson- getting horses fit
 
I'd do the proper fitness programme if I were you. My TB is the same as your boy - would go all day without appearing tired, but that's not fitness, just adrenalin.
TriplesandH is right - you need to give the bones, tendons, ligaments etc time to adjust to gradually increasing stress levels, even if the heart and lungs, and muscles seem fine.
Can you not find more interesting walk hack routes or something?
S
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