metalmare
Well-Known Member
The dear, sweet pony who I have had for a year has had the dentist, had his back worked on, had a new saddle, had a new bridle, had a bitless noseband as he tells me he likes this... You name it, the indulged animal has had it.
Now, a year into ownership, with many bumps ironed out, I dare to fall asleep at night visualising the schooling exercises we could do the following day to help supple and loosen his back. I dream of great things to come. I think of all the well schooled horses I have ridden and I imagine this feeling on my pony.
So this morning we have lovely work in walk and trot, reasonable leg yield, reasonable transitions, a nice active gait and even the beginnings of some bending and lateral flexion. It could almost be called pleasurable. It could almost be called productive... A baby step forward.
Then he just has to go and ruin it all with (yet another) rodeo session, not playful or excited but perfectly hell bent on getting me off and the bitless that he says he likes so much, only served to allow him to really get his head between his knees! He has a wonderful knack of throwing the bucks between darting forward, spinning and twisting... Rather like a balloon when you let the air back out. He has never had me off yet (touch wood) but at no point did this feature in my mental rehearsal last night! How is one to school the feral beast?
I try to give him the benefit of the doubt... Perhaps he's tired from the little lunge work he did yesterday... Perhaps he was resenting being ridden in a different paddock to usual (probable)... Perhaps he couldn't balance on the undulating ground...
Ultimately, I think he just had a different agenda to me and he hasn't heard of the saying, 'you tell a gelding, ask a mare and discuss it with a stallion.'
Remind me why I own a welsh pony?
Now, a year into ownership, with many bumps ironed out, I dare to fall asleep at night visualising the schooling exercises we could do the following day to help supple and loosen his back. I dream of great things to come. I think of all the well schooled horses I have ridden and I imagine this feeling on my pony.
So this morning we have lovely work in walk and trot, reasonable leg yield, reasonable transitions, a nice active gait and even the beginnings of some bending and lateral flexion. It could almost be called pleasurable. It could almost be called productive... A baby step forward.
Then he just has to go and ruin it all with (yet another) rodeo session, not playful or excited but perfectly hell bent on getting me off and the bitless that he says he likes so much, only served to allow him to really get his head between his knees! He has a wonderful knack of throwing the bucks between darting forward, spinning and twisting... Rather like a balloon when you let the air back out. He has never had me off yet (touch wood) but at no point did this feature in my mental rehearsal last night! How is one to school the feral beast?
I try to give him the benefit of the doubt... Perhaps he's tired from the little lunge work he did yesterday... Perhaps he was resenting being ridden in a different paddock to usual (probable)... Perhaps he couldn't balance on the undulating ground...
Ultimately, I think he just had a different agenda to me and he hasn't heard of the saying, 'you tell a gelding, ask a mare and discuss it with a stallion.'
Remind me why I own a welsh pony?