khalswitz
Well-Known Member
oof, still reeling from the thought of a shetland highland cross these threads rarely contain any middle ground-you either get people saying a 12h can easily take 13stone hunting or people saying anyone over 6 stone should be riding an ID.Of course we should all strive to be as fit as we can for riding but life isn't always perfect.
I don't think it would do the OP's pony any harm once in a while. as for all of you saying no 13.2 should carry this that and the other-what about Highlands?Haflingers?Fells? Dales? Or the small horse breeds such as Fjords and Icelandics? wasted on children IMO. frankly, to my mind the fact that adults don't ride ponies so much any more hasn't done ponies much good. Ponies need to work. My dad, who admittedly was a shortarse and skinny to boot but still an adult male, rode our old fashioned section c for years in the 70s, towing me around on a lead rein on my pony. noone back then thought it strange that an adult would ride a native.
I am an adult, 5'5 and have a monster 13.2h Exmoor for me, to hack and whatever else we feel like doing. He's being backed as a 5yo this year with a lighter weight rider initially, then I will be hacking him. My weight is my business but with tack, we'll be a couple of stone under the old stone per hand rule-he has great bone and a good front, built like the proverbial outhouse.
There are Exmoors doing endurance with adult riders all over the UK, plenty of Fells and itty bitty arabs doing it as well.
Exactly - I know 13hh icelandics that carry men of 15-18st on a daily basis, and are tolt racing too!!
To those talking about eventers - doing a tough sport will obviously want much lighter weights, and anything with a lot of tb is not designed to carry a lot of weight. Tbs are bred to go fast, not to carry weight.
People always say shires, Clydesdales etc are weight carriers - these horses are designed to pull weight, not carry it, and are often long in the back and unsuitable for heavy riders. However a highland is bred for deer stalking, so is bred to carry several full grown stags for hours up and down hills. Arabs are bred to carry men across long distances, dales and fell to be multipurpose riding and driving ponies for farmers in uplands, however many lighter cons are bred for driving, so can pull but not necessarily carry weight.
Equally I know individuals within a breed vary in what they are happy to carry based on conformation, veterinary issues, age, etc, so it becomes a guessing game. However I would expect a highland to comfortably carry more weight than an average lightweight hunter, and that more than a tb or blood horse.