AengusOg
Well-Known Member
'I'd like to see you try that with MY horse'
I think more people would get it right if they knew one of the uses for 'ménage'
I just thought of one, the use of 'Fulmer' as a synonym for 'full cheek'. Aside from being incorrect (and I suspect used to sound pretentious) and confusing, it makes me a bit sad. The Fulmer School is such an important part of British riding history it's a shame so few people here seem to know about it.
I know my pelvis is out of alignment..you can see one hip is a good inch or so higher than the otger side and if I go to physio they badically do that ramming shoulder into buttock type movement and I walk away level...it takes a few sessions for my muscles tendons and ligamenrs to maintain the new and correct position but it always becomes wonky over time. I really should get it realigned as it gives me sciatica and makes my ankle hurt as it affects my fait.This is what I understand it means but I dont understand how so many horses pelvises end up like this. Mine was because I sledged into a watertrough!
Also hate the term 'cold backed' as the whole idea is just a piece of nonsense!
It doesn't help that I very often see Fulmers and full cheeks mislabelled in tack catalogues or in on-line descriptions. If the people selling the things don't know or use the correct names I'm not surprised the general public get them mixed up. Often you're just buying from sales-people with no real knowledge of what they're selling, and not knowledgeable horse-people.
'I'd like to see you try that with MY horse'
I think more people would get it right if they knew one of the uses for 'ménage'
I just thought of one, the use of 'Fulmer' as a synonym for 'full cheek'. Aside from being incorrect (and I suspect used to sound pretentious) and confusing, it makes me a bit sad. The Fulmer School is such an important part of British riding history it's a shame so few people here seem to know about it.
That's true of a lot of things! I quite often see items mislabeled or with questionable blurbs. Makes me wonder how reliable the information is about stuff i don't know enough about to judge.
I once had a comedy conversation with someone selling an expensive and popular piece of kit, about its effects on 'the muscles of the lower leg'. I listened incredulously for a bit before I pointed out that horses don't have muscles below the knee/hock!! Didn't faze her at all.
Any short whip is a crop and a long whip is a ..whip.
The footfall sequence should be the same although they are often less concerned with the purity of the sequence. But they are different to ride and look at. Western horses do often have a 'trot' and even a 'long trot', performed rising or even standing. I genuinely thought that horses were taught to jog and lope by shutting down what i think of as the natural gaits of trot and canter until I worked with purpose bred QHs and saw the the foals moved.
That said, I wouldn't call a passage a variation of trot, so I'm being likely being pedantic.I just don't see why you would describe a horse with anything other than the vernacular of its discipline? FEI horses 'jog' for the vet because that's what it's called in context, even though they trot. Western Pleasure horses jog because that's what they do.
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Jumps like a stag , I mean have you seen a stag jump , why on earth would you want a horse like that.
That's brilliant. Scary but brilliant :d How did she get past that in the conversation?
Re: Salespeople. There are a couple of really good knowledgeable girls work at our main local saddlery, and they're really excellent, but the other two my OH calls the 'till-monkeys' which isn't very nice perhaps but it's quite apt, ask them any sort of question about the stock and you get a blank look. No idea what they are selling.
On the contrary, I'm being pedantic about the use of the word 'gait' which is a word which refers to the pattern of limb movement. Jog can only be a different gait to trot if the pattern of limb movement is different, which it isn't . So it's not actually a different gait. Extended trot, collected trot, piaffe and passage all feel different to working trot, but they're all types of trot. And so is jog.
But yes, totally agree that when in Rome one should describe a western trained horse performing a western trot as jogging, since jogging is a very particular style of trotting.
Just thought I'd point out this thread is about what phrases annoy us, not what's right or wrong!
TarrrSteps, it's awesome that someone else knows the history of the Fulmer Snaffle.
For those that don't know its history. Robert Hall, once proprietor of The Fulmer Equitation Centre, Fulmer, Bucks brought the bit back from The Spanish Riding School when he returned from his time working and training there. He then asked a Loriner to make the bit for general sale, it was named The Fulmer Snaffle and is traditionally used with a drop noseband.
I too hate seeing bits incorrectly named and labelled in stores, the biggest hate is the 'slotted Kimblewick' or to be correct it should be called an Uxeter.
There are actually quite a few thousand feral donkeys on the Big Island, as well, at least when I lived in Hawaii prior to 1994.
The Hawaiian climate is another example of the mainland in miniature. Except for the freezing temperatures typical of the continental US (and which are possible at altitude on Hawaii's volcanic mountains), Hawaii's climate varies depending on which part of the islands one inhabits. Generally, the north and east coasts of the islands are green and lush. Conversely, the west and south coasts tend to be arid and brown. Just as I would find it difficult to live in California with my horses because water is in short supply and hay must be provided 12 months of the year due to a lack of grass, I would have the same problems living on the south or west coasts of the Hawaiian Islands with horses. Go to the north and one comes to towns like Kamuela where you could be forgiven for thinking you were somewhere in the UK. Not that far from Honolulu and Waikiki on O'ahu, take the coast road to the south near Hawaii Kai and there are prickly pear cacti growing along the roadside. The islands are a melting pot of cultures and climates on tiny dots of land in the Central Pacific ocean.
Especially poo!Phrases that get up my nose - exactly that! I hate to think of anything going up my nose!!
Noooooo!!!! You wouldn't say "lunge crop" or "dressage crop" so why is a normal one a crop?
Oh yes, and the whole "dressage whip" is annoying too. Unless you're actually doing dressage, it's a schooling whip. That said though, is a dressage whip a special type for competition use or is it just a longer one than usual? Like a schooling whip in fact?!
If "whip" offends your sensibilities, call it a stick. Oh wait...
Just thought I'd point out this thread is about what phrases annoy us, not what's right or wrong!
Uttoxeter? ;-)
Any two animals (including us) sharing one parent (sire or dam) are half brothers or sisters.