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this is what I meant - amazing the photographer got one of the 3 rears like this 
Nawty pony! I'd have a neckstrap on from now on(I love my neckstrap!!)
It's photos like this where I can hear someone say 'pull on one rein, pull on one rein' - that photo shows that the last thing you'll be thinking is you need to pull on one pigging rein
Well sat![]()
It's photos like this where I can hear someone say 'pull on one rein, pull on one rein' - that photo shows that the last thing you'll be thinking is you need to pull on one pigging rein
Well sat![]()
Actually though if you can feel them starting to go before they've actually gone up, If you yank the head round to one side (so the horses nose is touching your leg) and whip them round really quickly you can stop (and cure) most rears. Also helps with napping too - if they refuse to go forwards whip them round in a circle so quickly that they done know which way is up, and then move them forward quickly while they don't know what's happening . Works well (not great for the legs though)
I know it works, but that is making the assumption you know the horse is going to do it, and you have the opportunity to counteract it. However, the average (as in one that doesn't ride quirky horses for a living) rider will not have the chance to hone the skill of think 'uh-oh, wheelie alert, pull left'.
Yes !! as I stated ! Though I think most average riders would have some idea, (some of the time) of what to expect if their horse started backing off ! and yanking one rein hard is not a difficult skill for the average rider.
Its understanding what skills to have in your tool kit and what to certain ones.
Lévrier;12874378 said:He didn't back off. At all. He was tense, motionless and I was fully expecting him to explode into a bucking fit which is what he has done before. As NLP correctly says, I had no idea at all that he was about to go up like this.
As usual a post that was made as a light hearted addendum to my previous thread has turned into a debate on how I should have psychic powers and should have anticipated this.... sigh....
Lévrier;12874378 said:He didn't back off. At all. He was tense, motionless and I was fully expecting him to explode into a bucking fit which is what he has done before. As NLP correctly says, I had no idea at all that he was about to go up like this.
As usual a post that was made as a light hearted addendum to my previous thread has turned into a debate on how I should have psychic powers and should have anticipated this.... sigh....
Lévrier;12874412 said:Thank you for sharing, perhaps I am unusual as I was already well aware of that technique......if only I had had any chance to implement it! Such is life![]()
Lévrier;12874427 said:I don't think so - can't tolerate rearing horses, if he tries it again he will be history!
I would put that photo in a highly-visible place
Sorry to be a party pooper but from a safety perspective I think this needs said. "Well sat"?! Not well sat at all. You are lucky you didn't pull him over on top of you. You were hairs breadth from absolute disaster, I find your photo and the attitudes on this thread rather disturbing. Does no one see the danger here? You look totally out of your depth with a horse whose attitude is to rear like that if stressed. Your arms should have been round his neck, a neck strap is still potentially going to pull him over because your weight would still be pulling back if you had indeed been holding it. Please think carefully about putting yourself in this sort of situation again. Sitting a rear is something an experienced rider will do naturally.
You could have been killed!
Take it that way if you want but it was said purely with absolute utter fear for your safety. I was not rude, unlike you. And no you shouldn't be "throwing" your weight anywhere.