JackDaniels1
Well-Known Member
As title! Just from quickly totting it up in my head, it's around £1000 to become an AI!! 
I am an ordinary person , and I assume an AI has a lot of horse related experience,not just passed some exam, so either get a job and pay for lessons and exams, or go to work for a yard. I really do not someone to instruct me when they have no idea.!!!
Blimey MrsD123, OP only asked a question!!!!!
The cost is staggered though OP, if you are starting at stage 1 or via a work placement.
Yep, I could not agree more.Unfortunately you'll still find some people with an AI who have no idea, however they've paid for it![]()
Unfortunately you'll still find some people with an AI who have no idea, however they've paid for itOr those with AIs with loads of experience.
I've gone down the PC route which is loads cheaper, once passing my B test I'm going to take my stage 3, PTT and AI. Still going to be very expensive but haven't had to fork out for stage 1 and 2.
i have my stages 1 and 2, and I am now going to continue by taking my UKCC LEVEL 2 Coaching certificate, the BHS charge far too much money for their exams, and I will certainly not be going down that route again, so I am now applying for a place on the BS coaching course.
I do have to say that I much prefer someone with the relelvant experince teaching me, and not someone with a few letters after their name (no offence to the experinced AI's) but there are a few people who have scraped through the exam but it does not mean in any way they are able to teach.
good luck with your choosen path though, but do look into other avenues first.
My boy got cast once, the lovely girl who had done all the exams, was handy, I always keep a lunge rein hand, popped my helmet on and showed her what to do, turned out she had already had the lesson, just did not know exactly what "cast " was, she was in charge of 35 horses.Yup! I know one of these! Once again the theory is there but the practice is far, far lacking!
I am at a loss, if you want to work as an instructor, do you not need to get experience of working with horses?
Yep, I could not agree more.
The qualification is useless if the person has been trained to pass an exam, btw I think I have all the qualifications, but I would not try to instruct someone who knows how to ride!!!!!
I am at a loss, if you want to work as an instructor, do you not need to get experience of working with horses?
Thank goodness I was only a stable lad, no qualifications, just 20 years getting paid for what I did best.
£1000 is a nothing for a professional qualification!
I was married and was (and still am)pretty much supported by my OH to do mine. I had a PT job which paid for my exams.
If you work in a RS they will pay your way and give you training. But as others posters have said, being a freelance AI is not the job for you if you want a mortgage and actually earn proper money!! You would need to have a yard of your own/ work in a RS to bring in a regular wage.
Yep, I could not agree more.
The qualification is useless if the person has been trained to pass an exam, btw I think I have all the qualifications, but I would not try to instruct someone who knows how to ride!!!!!
Enough of the hilarity, it maybe was written haste, but there is some truth in it, I could teach someone who is a beginner, I mean I think I can show someone how to hold the reins and bob up and down in time to the rhythm of the horse, just a bit short on the BHS lingua franca , so used to posting on this forum, I've forgotten how to do it on a horse!LOL or someone that doesnt![]()