TrasaM
Well-Known Member
I've often wondered why very nervous riders put themselves through it, and COMPLETELY agree that many, many people have the wrong horse, which is bad not only for them, but also for the poor misfortunate horse. I am in the process of trying to "save" a horse which has been through this; a very reactive, sensitive PRE which was ridden by a series of very novicey, unbalanced, grabby riders. He is terrified of the rider, his mouth, any slight movement in the saddle, and is totally spooked by everything. This is not his nature, which is calm and trusting; this has been caused by poor riding. I know his previous rider was terrified, but he has become so and may never be right because of it.
I ride a RS horse who has similar issues and for the same reason. I went through a phase of being really worried about him and who was riding him and whether they understood his nature. So sad because under it all he still tries so hard to get it right. If it's any consolation he has improved now that he's not being ridden by total beginners. When I first rode him he was a nervous wreck so I'd spend most of the hour lesson just trying to keep him calm and stop him from rushing off. Not ideal in terms of learning to ride in some ways but he's taught me more about horsemanship than any other horse I've ridden. A few weeks ago I finally got him to do a beautiful collected canter and then extend. I cried.
I'm sure that with gentle handling and considerate respectful riding that your horse will be fine.