Annagain
Well-Known Member
Some of you may have seen my recent posts about my lame horse, riding my friend's horse which made me realise that mine is really not that easy to jump. As he is pretty easy to do other stuff with I came to the conclusion that, by making him jump what I have been, I'm not being fair to him so I was considering selling him.
Last night I decided to keep him. I realised a few things.
1. Most importantly I love him to bits - just considering selling him had me in tears all weekend.
2. At his age (13) and with melanomas I won't get much for him so what I could buy would be limited and would be likely to have some issues. I'm better off with ones I know about than ones I don't!
3. My friend is incredibly lucky with her horse. She bought him cheaply as a 6 year old from a very novice girl and he didn't even know how to canter. He is a naturally talented and very amenable horse and has turned into a superstar without that much effort from her. Most horses wouldn't live up to him, not just mine.
4. I took her horse for a hack on Friday and all the way round I was wishing I was on my boy - he is a brilliant hack and that's what I do most of. I was constantly nagging at my friend's horse to keep him going and he's not great with big things. I had to get a tractor to stop and turn off its engine to get him past, mine wouldn't have batted an eyelid at it. This is what I do most so that should be my priority. I'm better off with a horse whose jumping is a bit dodgy than one who's dodgy in traffic.
5. His jumping really isn't that bad, he usually goes clear at 2'9" but will put a stop in once it gets bigger and he has a strange jumping style. I think that might be linked to this lameness (first time in 4 years) as with regular lessons he was getting so much better but about 6 weeks before going lame started going backwards again. I think it was nagging away at him before it erupted and once it's sorted I'm hoping he'll start improving again. If I go and do 2'6 for the rest of the time I have him, it doesn't really matter as long we're having fun. If it turns out that he'll never jump I'll find him a loaner to stay at our yard and get something else, but I'll cross that bridge if I come to it!
6. My friend has also said I can take her horse to things when she isn't going - which is most of the time (2 young kids and full time job) so if I want to do the riding club teams I have something more reliable to take.
Now all I need is someone to tell me I'm doing the right thing!
Last night I decided to keep him. I realised a few things.
1. Most importantly I love him to bits - just considering selling him had me in tears all weekend.
2. At his age (13) and with melanomas I won't get much for him so what I could buy would be limited and would be likely to have some issues. I'm better off with ones I know about than ones I don't!
3. My friend is incredibly lucky with her horse. She bought him cheaply as a 6 year old from a very novice girl and he didn't even know how to canter. He is a naturally talented and very amenable horse and has turned into a superstar without that much effort from her. Most horses wouldn't live up to him, not just mine.
4. I took her horse for a hack on Friday and all the way round I was wishing I was on my boy - he is a brilliant hack and that's what I do most of. I was constantly nagging at my friend's horse to keep him going and he's not great with big things. I had to get a tractor to stop and turn off its engine to get him past, mine wouldn't have batted an eyelid at it. This is what I do most so that should be my priority. I'm better off with a horse whose jumping is a bit dodgy than one who's dodgy in traffic.
5. His jumping really isn't that bad, he usually goes clear at 2'9" but will put a stop in once it gets bigger and he has a strange jumping style. I think that might be linked to this lameness (first time in 4 years) as with regular lessons he was getting so much better but about 6 weeks before going lame started going backwards again. I think it was nagging away at him before it erupted and once it's sorted I'm hoping he'll start improving again. If I go and do 2'6 for the rest of the time I have him, it doesn't really matter as long we're having fun. If it turns out that he'll never jump I'll find him a loaner to stay at our yard and get something else, but I'll cross that bridge if I come to it!
6. My friend has also said I can take her horse to things when she isn't going - which is most of the time (2 young kids and full time job) so if I want to do the riding club teams I have something more reliable to take.
Now all I need is someone to tell me I'm doing the right thing!