For the happy hackers out there.

joshesmum

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20 September 2005
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What is the toughest riding discipline of them all? Which is the most important, the most difficult, the most dangerous? I shall tell you: but first of all let me outline for you the dizzying array of skills necessary.

You need, above all, a sense of calmness and trust. Without that you won’t get anywhere. But you have to combine relaxation with a constant awareness of the considerable difficulties and dangers that surround you. You need to be able to sit in a way that fills the horse with confidence.

You need to master all the basic paces. Horse and rider both need to be relaxed at all of them, from halt to gallop. You need comfortable, instant lateral work, particularly off the right leg. You need calm, soft unfidgety hands. Your aim is to combine calmness and confidence with dynamic and forward-going movement at all paces.

You need your horse to cope with other horses, close by or at a distance. Your horse needs to be sociable when among strangers and friends yet happily independent when on his own. You need balance and control; but with a sense of freedom and adventure.

You need to trust your horse in extreme situations. You must allow your horse to be a wild animal and express himself with joy and abandon and yet you must be able to bring him back to civilisation with a touch, a shift in balance, a word.

But above all, you need to understand each other’s fears; each other’s limits, each other’s strengths and weaknesses. You need to deal with situations that terrify a horse but hold no danger to him; you must deal with situations that terrify you, without imparting your terror to your horse. You must be able to deal with potentially life-threatening situations and to do so with great frequency. You must deal with them in a way that is completely calm and relaxed, as if it were the easiest thing in the world.

The reason you must bring out all these high skills in yourself and your horse is because everybody’s life depends on them. But then you must get used to the fact that your painfully acquired skills are held in low esteem – even despised in some quarters.

The discipline I am talking about is hacking. Nothing is more dangerous – yet more pleasurable – to human and horse alike. If you can hack out safely, alone or in company, you are a real rider!

If you can deal with such things as school buses, Volvo drivers, pheasants flying up at your feet, a long, long canter track, boy racers, fluttering paper bags, gloriously inviting gallops, pigs, cows, overhanging trees, fields of lunatic horses and the most scarey thing of all, the wheelie bin that wasn’t there yesterday, then you can count yourself a hacker. Or to put it another way, a very good rider indeed.

And yet, even if you are the master of all those things, your skills might be sneered at. So you apologise in advance – oh I just hack out. I’m just a happy hacker.

What? Only a master of the most testing and demanding and dangerous discipline in the horsey world, that’s all. You have to defer to obsessive show jumpers, dressage queens of either sex and showing people who prefer polishing horses to riding them – all these people are too precious to take their horse out for a merry hack and who think they’re better than you on that account.

Let’s not be snobbish back, however. Every way of enjoying your horse that doesn’t harm him is alright by me. So we won’t ask what’s so marvellous about going round and round in circles and why it is so superior to a great cantering blast up the hill, and we shan’t point out that while a square halt is hard, it’s far, far more difficult to get your horse to stand still while an articulated lorry goes past. Especially when it then stops and whistles its brakes at you.

So let’s make this Hacker’s Pride Month. Say it out loud; I hack and I’m proud! We won’t be snooty about it though. We won’t say, I know the real reason you won’t hack out. It’s not because you’re Anky von Grunsven and Bonfire come again. It’s because you are ever so slightly scared. And I’m not; so I hack.

No, we won’t say it. We’ll just think it very quietly when someone looks at you with condescension because you’ve been for a hack while they have spent an hour trying to establish a leg yield. I’ve got nothing against leg-yielding myself but I do have a great deal against snobbery.

No one will celebrate hackers for their skills of horsemanship, their mastery of fear, their overcoming of horsey temperament, so it is only right that we should do it for ourselves. Salute the hackers! Damn we’re good.

And if you have any doubts on that score, just ask our horses!"

Simon Barnes
 
^^that^^
lol
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Blimey - well said! You have instantly made me feel loads better about my riding! I love hacking (in fact that's all I do except the odd schooling session in the corner of the field!) My horse loves hacking - he makes the same little winnie noise when I approach with the bridle as he does when I bring him his tea.
I sometimes feel a bit guilty when others say to me that I should take him to a few little shows as he is very good at dressage (he is - I'm not!) but now I shall be a happy hacker and be proud of it!
 
I suddenly feel a lot better about my riding skills and gives me confidence to work harder at the other stuff. I do agree that hacking out gives you a more secure seat as you learn to sit to all those bucks, naps, shys, jumps sideways and i think it also helps me to read my horse well and for us to build trust in each other. Thank you ;-)
 
woooo i am also a fabulosly talented happy hacker (if you squint at my riding or watch me in the dark
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i love hacking and so does my horse best thing in the world
 
Well a big gold star to my OH for *hacking* out my snorting monster the last couple of days.Yesterday thought it was school hols and it wasn't so had to wait for streams of cars go past. He hasn't been properly worked for a couple of weeks. Whilst hacking today which had to be turned into a mini schooling session as the big grey pet was so naughty and full of himself and turning himself inside out. Hackers unite
 
Priceless words -written from the heart by a true horsewoman by the sounds of it.

We all have those friends who spend hours doing Dressage, yet could not handle their horses fine bounding paces for one ten minute trot round the block, let alone allow them a thundering blast of a canter up a hill!

I' ve always believed that those who never hack out on their horses - can't really ride.

And its always these horses that seem blighted with soundness problems. Probably from going round and round in endless circles jumping grids and bounces, or searching for the "Perfect Half Halt" to quote another post here today.
All my horses have been happy hackers first and formost and they have always been super fit and sound, and gone on forever.
Absolutely brilliant and spot on Joshesmum!!
 
i love my hacking, my own pony is no where near ready to face the world like that, poor lassie.But there's always the otherhalfs. i love riding out up here. They're happiest hacking out and fill with life, 23 years old is 7 and very lively.
Away schooling basics are in hacking and it works the other way around.
 
I hack out on Ellie all the time although it is off road as we are by an airport so roads are crap. Have been told that Ellie hasn't been so fit or full of life since I started riding her *head starts to swell* We do a bit of jumping now and then too. Went over 2ft one the other day and she jumped it so big I shot out of the saddle so far you could see all four counties between my arse and the saddle
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Gotta say that reading that post made me feel so good about my riding skills
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In September 2006, after taking one injury too many, I finally retired from the Martial Arts after close to twenty five years of study and training. I am a swordsman, I have studied Japanese swordsmanship since I was in my early twenties, I also studied empty hand arts, and was an instructor at one of those, lastly I studied a very old school of Karate, very tough, very precise and much much more cerebral than any non Martial Artist could imagine.

For a year I kicked about healing and wondering what to do with my time until in November last year my OH said I should start riding again with her.

We are hackers, and I have to say that this is one of the hardest physical and mental tasks I have ever undertaken.

I am a happy hacker and pleased to be able to ride out alone or in the company of other hackers.
 
Although all my horses are competition horses i do enjoy hacking and so do they but before i bought them they had never hacked because there previous owners either thought they were to precious or scared of what might happen they also look at me as though i am barmy when i mention taking my Grade B showjumper for a gallop around the stubble field!
 
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