lrw0250
Well-Known Member
Up until coming in to season last week she has been fine to mess around with her back which makes me think its related to her being in season. She came with no tack so my daughter who is 5 stone dripping wet has been riding her in a Shetland bareback pad but we wanted a proper saddle for more security once we started working her more. It could be she is objecting to it after not having had a "real" saddle on since March.Is she ok for people she knows to fully palpate all over her back, lift up legs etc? Was she better in the old saddle?
I think honestly you can go in two directions at this point. You can decide to keep her regardless, throw the book at finding out what is going on and if nothing veterinary is found, spend the money for someone good to work on behaviour.
Or
Send her back, save your money, time and daughter’s confidence.
Only you can decide which one to do.
Only thing I can really add is that while usually it is vet related, sometimes it isn’t. The people we bought my son’s jumping pony from had a similar experience to you. They did every vet investigation under the sun - and she arrived here spitting fire, angry and dangerous on the ground. We are now two months in, my son is madly in love and she is manageable so long as you accept her preferences. I cannot see how she ever would be happy on a livery yard though - she needs things in her routine you just cannot provide outside of a private setup. Some things are always going to be an issue too: she has saddle trauma for example, so if you even change the colour of the pad she gets suspicious and goes on the attack when you approach.
That said, we were told she jumps, and having got her fit and a saddle she likes, we headed out last weekend to arena hire. Oh my does she jump - and she is so happy doing it! Lit up, bright, ears pricked and confident. We kept them low due to fitness levels but she absolutely flew.
For us, it was worth the work.
I wouldn't say she is angry in any way on the ground, just used to walking all over people when she is stressed which has obviously been quite a lot. Ours also jumps very well, or did in her advert videos by ridden by the dealer and also for my daughter when we tried her. I will try sharing a photo of what she did to the first trotting pole we tried her over a few week ago - its' impressive! So I am hoping it will be worth the work for us too.