legyield
Well-Known Member
before you decide to ride it, should you really have one in the first place?
As some of you may know I have a youngster, Tia, who is still classed as a yearling. She turns 2 in June but is nowhere near mature and I wouldn't DREAM of riding her or anything just yet. We placed a saddle on her back for about 5 seconds to see her reaction, and she's only had a bit in her mouth once. I know I could probably be doing more with her but she's happy enough living out and enjoying her time as a youngster.
When Tia came up the country from Bodin Moor she was stuck to another youngster's side. They both ended up at our yard and they only got split up at the end of the summer last year when I moved Tia. Anyway I've kept in contact with the owner of the other youngster; she's a similar age to me and we spoke a lot with our youngsters being best buddies.
She was never very well informed about horses to be honest and I sometimes wondered whether she was actually ready for a youngster. She was very naive when it came to her youngster... she got away with a lot, her owner didn't know what to do about it and her youngster had turned into a bit of a devil. She didn't know about worming, was unconcerned by the farrier the continuously made her youngster foot sore, couldn't understand why we needed to poo pick the field.. the list goes on.
Now since I moved Tia she has moved her youngster to live on an alpaca farm. She posts photos regularly to Facebook of her and I've been actually quite horrified over the past few weeks (apparently I'm the only one, every comment on the photos have been big cheers for her).
It began with her saying she'd been lunging her youngster. I cringed a bit at that as I know how bad it is for the joints for such a young horse. She then posted a picture of her in a new saddle, which clearly doesn't fit but "it's fine because it was only £20". More damage I thought. The final horror came when she posted a photo of her sat on her 1 year 10 month old cob, who clearly is still very immature, in an ill-fitting saddle wearing no hat.
I just can't get over it! Cobs are slow maturing a lot of the time anyway so to be even sitting on a youngster at this stage.. I'm just flabbergasted. Pick up any decent equestrian book and it will tell you that the last thing you want to be doing is riding your not-quite-two-year-old. It wouldn't surprise me if the next photo was of her schooling her in draw reins.
I know this post must make me sound like an interfering b**ch but it generally isn't in my nature to judge how other people do their horses. What's right for one person isn't necessarily right for another. It's just hit very close to home -- if you can't be bothered to wait, why did you buy a yearling? Isn't it one of the first things you learn when you get a youngster that they need time to mature physically AND mentally before you ask too much of them?
I haven't said anything to her and I don't know if I should. I get the feeling she will just ignore my advice anyway, as she always did. Sorry for the long post - has seriously hit a nerve with me!
As some of you may know I have a youngster, Tia, who is still classed as a yearling. She turns 2 in June but is nowhere near mature and I wouldn't DREAM of riding her or anything just yet. We placed a saddle on her back for about 5 seconds to see her reaction, and she's only had a bit in her mouth once. I know I could probably be doing more with her but she's happy enough living out and enjoying her time as a youngster.
When Tia came up the country from Bodin Moor she was stuck to another youngster's side. They both ended up at our yard and they only got split up at the end of the summer last year when I moved Tia. Anyway I've kept in contact with the owner of the other youngster; she's a similar age to me and we spoke a lot with our youngsters being best buddies.
She was never very well informed about horses to be honest and I sometimes wondered whether she was actually ready for a youngster. She was very naive when it came to her youngster... she got away with a lot, her owner didn't know what to do about it and her youngster had turned into a bit of a devil. She didn't know about worming, was unconcerned by the farrier the continuously made her youngster foot sore, couldn't understand why we needed to poo pick the field.. the list goes on.
Now since I moved Tia she has moved her youngster to live on an alpaca farm. She posts photos regularly to Facebook of her and I've been actually quite horrified over the past few weeks (apparently I'm the only one, every comment on the photos have been big cheers for her).
It began with her saying she'd been lunging her youngster. I cringed a bit at that as I know how bad it is for the joints for such a young horse. She then posted a picture of her in a new saddle, which clearly doesn't fit but "it's fine because it was only £20". More damage I thought. The final horror came when she posted a photo of her sat on her 1 year 10 month old cob, who clearly is still very immature, in an ill-fitting saddle wearing no hat.
I just can't get over it! Cobs are slow maturing a lot of the time anyway so to be even sitting on a youngster at this stage.. I'm just flabbergasted. Pick up any decent equestrian book and it will tell you that the last thing you want to be doing is riding your not-quite-two-year-old. It wouldn't surprise me if the next photo was of her schooling her in draw reins.
I know this post must make me sound like an interfering b**ch but it generally isn't in my nature to judge how other people do their horses. What's right for one person isn't necessarily right for another. It's just hit very close to home -- if you can't be bothered to wait, why did you buy a yearling? Isn't it one of the first things you learn when you get a youngster that they need time to mature physically AND mentally before you ask too much of them?
I haven't said anything to her and I don't know if I should. I get the feeling she will just ignore my advice anyway, as she always did. Sorry for the long post - has seriously hit a nerve with me!