canteron
Well-Known Member
I have had my horse for 10 years, unbeknown to me, she had a really bad start in life, being beaten up, etc. so in the 10 years I have fallen off goodness knows how many times, completely lost my nerve, been squashed, she wouldn't load, be shoed or really do anything initially, but something made me keep faith with her, despite all the people who said 'sell her' 'get rid of her'.
On our journey to being a good girl, I have met masess of different people, some have become amazing friends for life and some have been discarded (or discarded me), I have been forced to continually keep an open mind to new information and new ways of doing things, had to really learn to ride and been to many different places to get the information and techniques I needed. I was lucky enough that she went on loan to a wonderful person who took her out and about and competed her at a high level and that was awesome in its own right.
But this Summer, we have had the best Summer ever. We have hacked out and around and enjoyed the wonderful countryside and had the most complete satisfaction ever of proving everyone wrong. I have felt 100% confident in her whatever we faced and looking back on the journey, it has been something I would't have missed for the world. She has finally become my horse of a lifetime.
So, when I read posts about people giving up on their horse after a few weeks, I sometimes think they have missed the whole point, learning to ride is always a journey, never a destination? And to anyone else on this journey, keep faith, there normally is a way through.
On our journey to being a good girl, I have met masess of different people, some have become amazing friends for life and some have been discarded (or discarded me), I have been forced to continually keep an open mind to new information and new ways of doing things, had to really learn to ride and been to many different places to get the information and techniques I needed. I was lucky enough that she went on loan to a wonderful person who took her out and about and competed her at a high level and that was awesome in its own right.
But this Summer, we have had the best Summer ever. We have hacked out and around and enjoyed the wonderful countryside and had the most complete satisfaction ever of proving everyone wrong. I have felt 100% confident in her whatever we faced and looking back on the journey, it has been something I would't have missed for the world. She has finally become my horse of a lifetime.
So, when I read posts about people giving up on their horse after a few weeks, I sometimes think they have missed the whole point, learning to ride is always a journey, never a destination? And to anyone else on this journey, keep faith, there normally is a way through.