Daniel_Jack
Well-Known Member
My daughter loves horses and has been around mine since a baby.
This summer she regularly rode her - always on the lead rein - either pottering round the school or hacking out.
I decided to get her a few lessons at the local RS. Tried two different schools and was disappointed in the standard of both of them - one had her in tears!
I'm wondering if my horse would be too big for her to learn on - we have a very good instructor who comes to our yard and is great with kids. I'm about to start lessons again and thought perhaps my daughter and I could split a lesson on my horse i.e I'd ride for the first 40 minutes then she can jump on for 15/20 minutes.
My main concern is that she's still too small for a 14.2 — although the ones the RS put her on weren't much smaller.
My horse is a Saint - totally bombproof but a typical lazy cob that even I struggle to get moving sometimes although my hope would be that if I've already warmed her up she'll be more responsive and my daughter won't have to keep kicking lumps out her as they had her do in her RS lessons. Daughter is also very tall for her age - she's only turned 5 this month but is nearer the height of a 6 or 7 year old.
Could this work? Or do I just need to try and find a better RS? Unfortunately my horse is the smallest at my yard so no other options there.
This summer she regularly rode her - always on the lead rein - either pottering round the school or hacking out.
I decided to get her a few lessons at the local RS. Tried two different schools and was disappointed in the standard of both of them - one had her in tears!
I'm wondering if my horse would be too big for her to learn on - we have a very good instructor who comes to our yard and is great with kids. I'm about to start lessons again and thought perhaps my daughter and I could split a lesson on my horse i.e I'd ride for the first 40 minutes then she can jump on for 15/20 minutes.
My main concern is that she's still too small for a 14.2 — although the ones the RS put her on weren't much smaller.
My horse is a Saint - totally bombproof but a typical lazy cob that even I struggle to get moving sometimes although my hope would be that if I've already warmed her up she'll be more responsive and my daughter won't have to keep kicking lumps out her as they had her do in her RS lessons. Daughter is also very tall for her age - she's only turned 5 this month but is nearer the height of a 6 or 7 year old.
Could this work? Or do I just need to try and find a better RS? Unfortunately my horse is the smallest at my yard so no other options there.
