AmyMay
Situation normal
should also relax a bit and have fun with the new boy!
Bottom line
should also relax a bit and have fun with the new boy!
He just sounds like he is doing as he is told. You spent two weeks slowing him down as he was too forward and now you are finding him too slow. Think you just got to get used to him.
some great tips and advice thanks! I disagree with one schooling session a week when schooling is something that needs to be worked on, although I am happy to admit that I couild be riding incorrectly which the lessons will sort out in time.
But you are not going to get anything done in the schooling sessions if your horse isn't mentally up to it... You can quite easily school on hacks, then slowly start to transfer this into the school environment, a little bit more each week. If your horse is mentally shutting down and getting lazy in the school, he isn't going to learn anything. At the least, try and do your warm up as a hack, then you keep the time actually spent working in the school as a minimum...
Nobody has picked up on the yawning.
Could that indicate something?
Perhaps he's not getting enough rest, new enviroment, not able to relax/sleep properly?
Don't we yawn when we haven't been breathing deeply enough, is it the same for horses?
What's the ventilation like in the school if it's an indoor school?
His exercise has been varied - hacking, schooling, jumping, including XC schooling with rest days in between so not bored.
He is definitely not lame. I'll admit that I have recently started nagging with legs but only since his energy/enthisiasm has dwindled. His bit has changed from a waterford (used by previous owners as he was too strong for them) to a snaffle but I made that change from day 1.
Could be the bit change! I have a 17h-er that we purchased in a pelham. He seemed easy enough so we put him into a snaffle, he thinks he doesnt have to work in it! So if I want to do anything more than a hack the pelham goes back in as he then realises he actually has to do something!![]()
Yawning is often a pain reaction in horses.
Op are you sure the sadldle fit
Training is about getting reaction to aids so if he was rushing from nervous energy you now have to train reaction to the aids .
I would first deal with the fact you can't carry a whip.
Carry a dressage whip in all your interactions with him leading him take in the stable when you groom him feed him human there whip is there catching him leave it by the gate and pick it up as you lead him through never use it .
When he's accepted it in handling carry it when riding never use it until the horse is completely relaxed about .
My TB disliked people carrying whips we went through this procedure his relationship with the whip is now completly normal.
Pelhams can send some horses nuts because of the action, then of course they are trying to get away more, so then the bit is used more severely, and it becomes a vicious circle. The horse is uptight and worried the whole time, not pulling but wound up.
It can translate into feeling the horse "has more go". You used to see it with ponies a lot.
For what out of interest?
Interesting - how did you change the contact? from what to what? I start with a loose contact as he is a big boy and needs time to soften so its not even like I am rushing him or forcing him to do anything too strenuous too soon. I am positive though, from the start.
Ventilation seems fine when in work - our yard is extremely chilled out though - only 4 horses and much smaller than the yard he has come from.