abbijay
Well-Known Member
I've had sharers for my boy for about the last 4 years (ever since I was fairly heavily pregnant). They've generally been hugely successful and I've made some amazing friends along the way. It has taken the pressure off me to keep him fit and not have to be out of the house for stupid hours every day of the week.
I genuinely need help with him (I work very long hours and have young kids to look after) but I can't afford the extra to pay for muck outs 2 days a week on top of my livery bill. Sharers have always been a perfect solution and until he got ill (last year) I was very relaxed about who rode him and what they did with him but now I want to know they will spot signs of lameness straight away and know enough about riding in a school to warm him up properly, not push him beyond his capabilities, have full control and cool him down properly. He is a very nice straight forward kind of a horse but I have worked hard to school him correctly so he is very responsive (not sharp but a heck of a step up from a riding school pony) which seems to make him unappealing to higher level riders but a bit too much for a lot of lower level riders.
I had a lovely lady come to meet him last weekend and she ticks so many boxes - she is happy to do a week day and a weekend day, she is happy to pay me a small contribution, she is happy to muck out on her days, she has a horse of her own so she knows how to care for a horse and should be completely capable of being in charge of a horse unsupervised. Literally this is all the things I wanted in a sharer and she seems really nice to boot.
But she is used to riding riding school horses these days so when she tried him he pretty much picked up the pace and kept going faster because that's what he thought she was after (schooling whip was waving and legs were nudging on every stride). Over the next 15 minutes we got him listening to her a bit better but I could still see him misunderstanding her and trying to canter on every corner in trot. I'd happily let her out on the roads on him but I know it's the schooling in particular that she wants to focus on.
I'm sure she will learn to ride him over time and adapt to schooling on her own but I'm having a seriously overprotective moment and not sure I can relinquish control of my "pony" and all the seriously hard work I've put into his schooling and keeping him sound.
Can someone give me a kick up the 4rs3 and tell me that I'm being irrational?
I genuinely need help with him (I work very long hours and have young kids to look after) but I can't afford the extra to pay for muck outs 2 days a week on top of my livery bill. Sharers have always been a perfect solution and until he got ill (last year) I was very relaxed about who rode him and what they did with him but now I want to know they will spot signs of lameness straight away and know enough about riding in a school to warm him up properly, not push him beyond his capabilities, have full control and cool him down properly. He is a very nice straight forward kind of a horse but I have worked hard to school him correctly so he is very responsive (not sharp but a heck of a step up from a riding school pony) which seems to make him unappealing to higher level riders but a bit too much for a lot of lower level riders.
I had a lovely lady come to meet him last weekend and she ticks so many boxes - she is happy to do a week day and a weekend day, she is happy to pay me a small contribution, she is happy to muck out on her days, she has a horse of her own so she knows how to care for a horse and should be completely capable of being in charge of a horse unsupervised. Literally this is all the things I wanted in a sharer and she seems really nice to boot.
But she is used to riding riding school horses these days so when she tried him he pretty much picked up the pace and kept going faster because that's what he thought she was after (schooling whip was waving and legs were nudging on every stride). Over the next 15 minutes we got him listening to her a bit better but I could still see him misunderstanding her and trying to canter on every corner in trot. I'd happily let her out on the roads on him but I know it's the schooling in particular that she wants to focus on.
I'm sure she will learn to ride him over time and adapt to schooling on her own but I'm having a seriously overprotective moment and not sure I can relinquish control of my "pony" and all the seriously hard work I've put into his schooling and keeping him sound.
Can someone give me a kick up the 4rs3 and tell me that I'm being irrational?