Dumbo
Well-Known Member
Watched the video and agree it seems too narrow and tight. Check with a different saddler though 
It is too narrow. You can see this quite easily by comparing the angle of the tree to the angle of the shoulder. They should be the same, but the angle of the tree is more upright than your horses shoulder angle, so this will cause pinching.
This is bad for two main reasons, one is that the shoulder in that position already has very little room, so in movement, as the blade moves up and back, the will be definite pinching which will be very uncomfortable for the horse.
Also, there is a nerve that runs in the area being pinched and that nerve being pinched can cause a horse to buck and hollow out through the back.
This saddle is also too far back...it is the saddle at fault...I know it is sat behind the shoulder, but being too narrow means any movement of the shoulder will push it back. When pushed back, as in the pictures, it sits ver the floating ribs which is not good. There is a very easy way to determine when a saddle is too long on horses where it is difficult to feel the ribs. The over the flanks, the hair lies in opposite directions. Where the hair from the horses barrel meets the hair coming from the flank, you can see a clear line. Follow this line directly up to the spine and that is the point at which a saddle should never reach. A saddle should always sit in front of that line. This saddle is on the line, not good. Also, when saddles sit this far back, as a horse engages behind and funds through the back, especially in canter, the movement through the SI joint pushes the saddle forwards. In this instance, you would have a saddle being literally squeezed between two very sensitive pressure points and an extremely unhappy pony.
In schooling terms, this saddle would mean that every time your horse worked correctly, it would be punished for it.
I would be really very disappointed with this saddle fitter to be honest.
There are so many different options, if I we you, I would call as many saddle fitters in the area as possible. I would rather have a well fitted second hand saddle and pay for a few different fitters to get there, than a badly fitting expensive new one.
Hope that helps.
Pony looks very wide and round. Saddle looks like a standard A shaped tree. He might be better with a wide hoop tree (i.e upside down U shape to the front) Have a look here to see the difference http://saddlefitter.blogspot.co.uk/2009/10/from-tree-up-hoop-vs-standard.html?m=1
It looks a little too narrow at the front: the balance is fine as the panels are very deep at the back so lift it. If there were the slim wide panels he needed it would be far too high in front.
It looks like it's too far back: because it's too narrow and the wrong shape his big shoulders are shoving the knee rolls backwards. The girth is a good couple of inches too far back. Length is fine if it was in the right place.
I'd was something a little wider, with a wider/round head at the front and much less gusset at the back. I know it's not bedded down yet but it looks very perched and will roll.
I see it's a Native Pony saddle. They do that kind of saddle or could custom make it. For that price Ideal will custom make too. Try their H&C saddles.
Thank you for taking the time to write this. When I sat the saddle onto him today I struggled to 'place' it as any further forward and it was on the shoulder. I moved it back but then it pinched behind the shoulder. I asked them to bring a range of saddles suitable to show/WH/dressage in but that had a small knee block. I said he may well take a 16.5 inch as previous saddlers had measured him up. I've tried the following saddlers:
Robert Jenkins (master saddler)
Melanie Isaacs (master saddler)
Jane Saunders (on recommendation- no idea of her quals)
Jackie Roberts (as above)
Clive Whereatt
I dont think there is anyone left other than a lady called Katy farrell who fits wows- I did contact her in Novemeber and she told me she would bring a small wow to try. Despite leaving another message I've heard nothing from her. This pony has not been ridden consistently due to poorly fitting saddles for the last 18 months.
T
In total I've paid out £245 just in saddle fitters fees!
The saddle needs girthing correctly and riding on to bed it in a little, to give you a full idea of whether you both will like it - the fit IS fine, believe me, though sometimes a tweak is needed once you've ridden in it a few times.
This sounds like a shoe sales person selling a pair of too tight shoes and assuring the buyer that they will stretch once worn.
We only have so many WH models - he brought most of them but the trees weren't right. The Show Hunter alternatives were too straight cut though the tree was right. We can in fact put a WH flap on a SH tree, not a problem as a special order.
This makes it sound that you fitted the horse with the best match you had in stock in order to secure the deal as opposed to advising the client that you could not provide a saddle which was ideally suited to the horses conformation.
It's a lovely saddle and again I'm no expert but it does look wrong on the horses back.
Gosh, I didn't realise HHO had so many sadle fitting experts!!!
Personally, I'd be raiding hte issue with the qualified saddle fitter who fitted the saddle in the first place. I assume you rode in it to begin with??? And as you had a week to ride in it again have plenty of time to try it out and go back to them with your concerns?!?
I really can't see how taking a couple of photos and posting them online for armchair experts to comment on can be the best way forwards???